November 26, 2024

Information reaching Kossyderrickent has it that Nigerian women are calling for ‘jail term’ for men who leaked and shared nude videos and pictures of minor teenage girls in viral Lagos Dropbox Link. (Read More Here).




Yesterday on social media, some anonymous Nigerian men (we presume), began to share and leak pictures, IG handles and videos of young girls from Nigeria.


The leaked videos and pictures contained the nudes or nakedness of the young girls. The nude pictures involved, their breasts, nipples and private parts and some showed their real faces.


The Dropbox linked also contained their real names, alongside their Instagram and Twitter page handles.


Now, Nigerian women are calling for these unidentified men to be tracked and sent to jail for doing such an evil thing to the man young naive girls.


Reactions:


Amanda: Every man behind that Dropbox shit should be jailed and arrested for revenge porn.


Cyan: This Dropbox thing just shows how you shouldn’t trust anyone to send your nudes to them.

Even if you’re dating, please ladies don’t send your nudes to him 🙏🏾 please & please. People are mean & vindictive.


Bami: I can’t believe the same men asking for the pictures are saying it’s their fault for taking nude pictures. It’s never a minor’s fault first of all. As for the others, they obviously shared them with people they trust who betrayed them.


Kafayat: Anybody with that Lagos Dropbox link is disgusting and vile. There is currently a Dropbox link going around of girls’ nude pictures with their names and Instagrams attached… and apparently a lot of them are minors. This is so frightening and disgusting.


Jooste: And the fact that some people are on Twitter begging for someone to send them the link…. You’re so sick in the head. What kind of horrific shit is this.


Mirabel: The Dropbox thing jus confirms my worst fears that the future is not brighter at all.


About Dropbox and some of its employees:


Back in 2007, making work better for people meant designing a simpler way to keep files in sync. Today, it means designing products that reduce busywork so you can focus on the work that matters.


Most “productivity tools” get in your way. They constantly ping, distract and disrupt your team’s flow, so you spend your days switching between apps and tracking down feedback. It’s busywork, not the meaningful stuff. We want to change this.


We believe there’s a more enlightened way to work. Dropbox helps people be organised, stay focused and get in sync with their teams.


Drew Houston, Co-founder and CEO

Drew co-founded Dropbox in 2007. He’s led our growth from a simple idea to a service used by hundreds of millions of people around the world. Drew is responsible for the direction and product strategy of our company.


Bart Volkmer, Chief Legal Officer

Bart leads our legal, risk and compliance and public policy teams. Before Dropbox, he practised law at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where he counselled early-stage and established technology companies.


Tim Regan, Chief Financial Officer

Tim oversees our financial operations and strategy, accounting, corporate development, investor relations, financial planning and analysis, tax and property. Prior to Dropbox, Tim was at Pandora, Dolby Laboratories and Ernst & Young.


Melanie Collins, Chief People Officer

Melanie oversees our global people team, including people operations, recruiting and diversity, equity and inclusion. Prior to Dropbox, she held HR leadership roles at Apple and GE.


Saman Asheer, VP of Communications

Saman leads internal and external communications and analyst relations at Dropbox. Previously, she advised clients across industries on corporate and financial communications at the Brunswick Group.


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