This is honestly one of those digital privacy cases which feels scary because it can happen quietly and suddenly ruin someone's personal life . 28-year-old employee from private firm in Karnataka has alleged that his intimate videos and photographs with female friend were uploaded on multiple pornographic websites without his consent .
According to complaint,he first discovered this on June 13,2026 . Imagine opening internet and suddenly finding your own private content on such sites… not small thing ah. He then approached East Division Cyber Crime Police seeking action .
He reportedly found content on websites known for indexing such material and quickly contacted administrators of two websites,asking them to remove videos immediately . Thankfully,those videos were taken down from those platforms soon after.
But problem did not stop there .
On June 15,he allegedly found another website still hosting same content . He believes this website may be original source from where videos were spread to different platforms. And tbh,this is where situation becomes even more worrying because once something spreads online,controlling it becomes extremely difficult .
Few things standing out clearly in this case:
- Case has been registered against unidentified individuals under relevant sections of Information Technology Act.
- Victim suspects his mobile phone may have been hacked after showing abnormal behavior weeks before incident.
- He has reported severe emotional turmoil and impact on professional life due to unauthorized sharing.
Police have now started investigation to trace where leak began and who uploaded content without permission . Victim has also asked police to ensure removal of material from all online servers and stop further distribution.
And honestly,this is not just about one phone or one hacked account . Private content being stolen and uploaded like this can destroy person's peace,work life and relationships within hours.
At same time,it again shows how unsafe digital space can become when personal data is not protected properly . Who accessed phone,how content moved out,and how many copies are still floating online… these are questions which are still hanging .




