Eilidh Scott’s private photos have been leaked online.
FORMER Premier League ace Anthony Stokes and his girlfriend Eilidh Scott have become the latest victims of illegal hacking after an X-rated video and hundreds of intimate pictures were leaked online.
The video of the ex-Celtic player was shared after cyber crooks gained access to Scott’s iCloud and stole over 200 explicit images and videos, The Sun reports.
The X-rated footage was stolen from Stokes’ lover Eilidh Scott in an illegal cyber hack — along with hundreds of other personal photos and videos.
It is the second time Eilidh, from Lanarkshire, Scotland, has been targeted by online hackers.
In October, her iCloud was raided and an image posted online revealing her affair with the Irish striker.
The leaked picture led to the breakdown of Stokes’ relationship with his ex-fiancee Debbie Lawlor, 27.
It emerged that Stokes and his 25-year-old lover had got together while Debbie was pregnant with the former Hibernian star’s second child.
Anthony Stokes’ affair with Eilidh Scott was publicised after a previous iCloud hack.Source:Supplied
Scott, a business studies graduate, was said to have felt “completely violated” in the last attack and was devastated when she discovered that her private images had been nicked.
It was later revealed that another 20 women in the Lanarkshire area had also been targeted in the cyber raid.
Police were called in to deal with the incident.
Last week it was revealed that the former Hibernian and Celtic star Stokes hadn’t played for new team Blackburn Rovers for months because of “personal issues”.
Rovers boss Tony Mowbray insisted that the player, 28, was sorting out his personal life.
In February Stokes was told that he had pay out nearly $330,000 after he headbutted an Elvis Presley impersonator on a night out.
Stokes is in the headlines for the wrong reasons.Source:Getty Images
This article originally appeared on The Sun and was republished with permission.
How to See If Hackers Stole Your Password2:10
Nobody is 100% hack proof, but you don?t have to make it easy to become a victim either. WSJ?s Nathan Olivarez-Giles explains how to see if your personal info has been taken in a hack, and what you can do to be safer. Photo/Video: Emily Prapuolenis/The Wall Street Journal
- July 15th 2016
- 9 months ago
- /video/video.news.com.au/Technology/
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