“She” will flirt with you, send you naughty pics of "her"self and ask for pics of you. Then she need money and threaten to send your naughty pictures to your family and your work unless you pay her.
Sorry, it’s an industry like the other internet scans.
It means your profile is public. I’d lock that down, if I were you.
“Would you like table dance, Comrade Pervert Sugardadikov?”
Not neccesarily. He may have picked one of those “people you may know” choices that Facebook constantly throws up at you. Then he may have clicked on something in thier profile, like more pictures of her. And then they got that he was a possible target.
I beleive that once you click on one of those people you may know choices, that Facebook starts adding you to their people they may know list. I also think that if you start trolling someone you may know Facebook page to see what they are posting (without being a friend) it adds you to their list of people they may know. That way they may get a hint that someone is stalking them, someone they haven’t associated with in a long time.
In short, Facebook is evil.
Some number or years ago I had just started dating a girl. I sent her a picture of an elephant head; the lower abdomen, from one side to the other, was the forehead & ears of an elephant. Let’s just say that the that was the entirety of the elephant’s head (owww!) I can assure you, if I lift up my shirt you’ll only see my skin, no ink.
Sadly, I tried searching for it on the intertubez again after telling someone that story but was unable to find it again because I would love to ‘fall’ for one of those scams with that photo. I can’t imagine sending noods, or money to come visit me, to my new ‘gf’ that I had yet to meet in real life, yet I’ve heard that people fall for these scams somewhat regularly.
But that doesn’t give that person free access to your own locked-down private page to troll through your pictures and like them, does it?
I just reviewed what people can view on my Facebook account, the ones she replied to were prior to when I changed my settings to private back in 2020 and the only public post I made a few months ago. Looks like a loophole to me, as Facebook should be able to handle this.
But then again, Facebook is evil.
Scambook is bad bad bad.
I think your “stripper name” is the same as your “porn star name” - Your first pet, and the street where you grew up.
Sincerely Yours, Skip Reynolds.
You’ve made my whole day. Thank you.
My career as Minnie Walleye doesn’t look bright.
I remember Facebook giving an option at some point to allow you to change the privacy settings for all past posts. I’d google for it to see if there’s an easy way to do it now.
Maybe we could team up.
Princess Bright Eyes Weiner
Whereas I could probably set up an OnlyFans account solely on the strength of my porn name.
Regards,
Molly Elmcrest
“Fluffy 112th” doesn’t seem very promising.
I recently acquired a Twitter follower, a young woman whose bio identified her as a high-ranking executive of an international investment firm, based in Germany, although from her photo I would have guessed “dominatrix”.
I was mildly tempted to contact her to see if she could, um, manage my portfolio. But alas, her pro-RFK Jr. tweets indicated a fundamental incompatibility.
My “stripper name” sounds like a CPA: Carla Vinton.
Could just be a fashion statement. You did say Germany.
I’m very rarely on Facebook anymore, but I occasionally get a similar “fan” on Strava. Which weird, since Strava isn’t really a social media site, a la Facebook or Twitter or Instagram. It’s a site for runners, swimmer, and bikers to post their workouts - shows routes, splits, terrain, that sort of thing. I mean, you can comment on other people’s posts, but most people don’t - they only give each other “kudos”, which is Stravese for “like”.
Nevertheless, I’ll occasionally get a message that some hardbodied 20-something in Estonia or South Africa is now following me. Usually when I go to her profile, she’s got no activities but is following a bunch of people, although I have also gotten follows from active runners, and even unknown men. I would assume a honeypot scam, save that none of them ever attempt to do more to my profile than follow it and give me the occasional kudo on a run.
Cat State Highway 22 is even less catchy.