Miley Cyru’s Phone Got hacked and she had naughty pictures on there!
You want to know how to do it? Maybe get back at your Ex? Or Just want to be a creep?
Here is are the “ALEGED PICTS”
I DID NOT…lol Repeat DID NOT Get Them From an XXX Website I just google searched and they same up!
Trust me XXX @ Work Would Not Go Over Good!




AGAIN….I Repeat I DID NOT Get These From an XXX Site I google searched!….please Believe Me!
The guy who hacked Miley’s iPhone Confessed!
If you’ve seen how this works in the movies, you might think hacking a cell phone involves complex sessions of password cracking, heavy-duty computers, and dark underground lairs filled with custom equipment, but that’s not the reality at all. In fact, says K, to get the pics off a cell phone, he barely has to touch a computer. The hack is almost completely done via the telephone, as K simply calls the cell phone company and pretends to be a supervisor, then simply requests a customer service rep give him the information he needs to access the account. In the case of a T-Mobile Sidekick like Cyrus’s, he says, it’s even easier since T-Mobile stores notes, contacts, and, yes, photos on a server instead of just on the phone, for use as a backup in case the phone is lost.
After obtaining the account information, K can call back and claim to be Cyrus (or another account holder) and switch the account to another phone he has handy, giving him instant access to all the original phone’s contents. What if the rep asks for personal information to authenticate the call? If K needs additional data, like a Social Security Number, he says he usually calls the electric company, which usually has it on file, and pulls a similar trick to get them to give him the information, then calls back the cell phone company.
K says T-Mobile is hardly alone. This simple social engineering hack works the same way on any ISP, cellular carrier, or web-based email provider. The same basic techniques are responsible for the hacking of Paris Hilton’s and Lindsay Lohan’s cell phones (though some say Hilton simply used a password that was simply too easy to guess). In fact, K says he’s been pulling these hacks since 2000, and little has changed since then. (I last interviewed K (then using a different handle) in 2003 regarding similar hacks of AOL accounts, which also relied on heavy telephone use and simply “mumbling” when the account rep asked for security information.)
Now for the sad part: I asked K what the average user can do to protect himself from these attacks, and aside from getting rid of your cell phone or computer, the answer seems to be “not much.” “It’s in the provider’s hands for the most part,” says K. Nor is anything likely to change. “I’ve been doing this for years,” says K. “It just always works. It isn’t new to the industry… both law enforcement and the ISPs know about it. They just choose to do nothing about it, at all.”