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#NY man claims a scammer plastered his sex videos on Pornhub

#NY man claims a scammer plastered his sex videos on Pornhub

He was porn star and didn’t even know it.

A New York man who likes anonymous, online-only sex claims scammers hacked his computer and demanded cash after one amorous 2015 episode of internet intercourse — then plastered hot and heavy videos of him on Pornhub, iPornTV and XVideos without his knowledge.

The man didn’t find out he was a sexy screen star until August, he claims in an $11 million Brooklyn Federal Court lawsuit, which identifies him only by the pseudonym “Victor Voe.”

His “private images and videos likely have been accessed by millions of users of these websites” before the victim was able to get them taken down, he said in the litigation filed against his unknown, unnamed tormentors.

At the time, the man claims he worked “in a position of trust whereby the revelation of compromising videos and images of a sexual nature would be damaging to his employment and professional status.”

The man’s sexy screen habits began five years ago when he went to sites like chatroulette.com and omegle.com for what he described in court papers as a “modern form of ‘safe sex’ — anonymous, consensual and conducted entirely through video chat.”

Then one meeting with what he thought was a woman also seeking sex went south.

The victim claims he moved their interaction to Skype in a bid to be more private, but the “woman” sent him a link to a website he didn’t know, a link the man now believes infected his computer with a virus and allowed hackers access to his files and personal information, including his home address, job and bank info.

At the end of their session, the “woman” told him she’d recorded him, had gotten into his computer, knew who he was and said she’d release the clip if he didn’t pay up, he said in court papers.

The man refused and “deleted all information he could think of that may trace back to him,” according to the legal filing.

The scammers made good on the threat and even posted the victim’s social media pics on gay porn sites, said the man, who is heterosexual.

When he realized what happened, the victim said he spent $5,000 to “wipe” his digital record and increase his cybersecurity.”

The sextortion scam, in which con artists threaten victims seeking online sex with public exposure if they don’t pay up, has been on the rise with the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, and the lockdowns and shutdowns which followed.

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