Posts Tagged ‘Miley Cyrus’

Tennessee Teen Hacked Miley Cyrus

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Miley Cyrus’s Seductive Photo’s

Miley Cyrus, a.k.a Hanna Montana born Destiny Hope Cyrus’s phone was hacked by 19 year old, Josh Holly. Holly, who is from Murfreesboro, Tennessee hack the pop star’s phone and post the picture on the internet.

The seductive picture were for her boyfriend at the time, Nick Jonas of the Jonas Brothers.

Holly, who went by the screen name TrainReq, was raided by the FBI. They seized three computers and Holly’s phone but was not arrested or charged.

The teenager was busted by his bragging to his friends online.

Holly hacked into a gmail account that Cyrus’s had used named, (messagemebaby@gmail.com). Not long ago University of Tennessee student David Kernell was arrested for hacking into Sarah Palin’s emails. Cyrus was only 15 years old at the time she took these photos of her self.


References

1. collegeotr.com

2. Zimbio.com

Death or Hoax?

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

With all the legitimate and unexpected celebrity deaths in the past few weeks, it seems that some people are beginning to post celebrity death hoaxes online. Claiming that yet another famous person has met an untimely end can be great for driving traffic to a website or starting a Twitter frenzy, even if it’s not remotely true. So what’s real and what’s fiction among celebrity death reports? Let’s break it down:

Michael Jackson: Deceased. Not a hoax

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Miley Cyrus: Still alive. Death reports are a hoax

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Farrah Fawcett: Deceased. Not a hoax

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David Carradine: Deceased. Not a hoax

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Louis Anderson: Still alive. Death reports are a hoax This hoax has been around for years!

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Gale Storm: Deceased. Not a hoax

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Britney Spears: Still alive. Death reports are a hoax

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Ed McMahon: Deceased. Not a hoax

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Billy Mays: Deceased. Not a hoax

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We hope this has cleared up the rumors/questions about recent celebrity deaths. If you see a “tweet” about a celebrity death or receive a forwarded email about it, check news sites like www.CNN.com and hoax sites like www.snopes.com to verify before passing the news along.