Very little disappears from the Internet. Hence the appeal of a service like Snapchat, which ostensibly allows users to take photos that will only be viewable by a select group of recipients for a limited amount of time. Once that time runs out, the image disappears into the ether. Or at least that’s the idea.
Turns out the reality, as of last week, is substantially uglier. Thanks to a recent security breach, hundreds of thousands of old Snapchat pictures have been posted online. The leaked data reportedly includes some photos of underage nudity.
Snapchat’s security does not appear to have been compromised. Instead, hackers gained access to the photos by raiding the servers of a third-party application called Snapsaved, which allows Snapchat users to take advantage of the service on their desktop computers — and to save the photos they receive, without the knowledge and consent of the people sending them.
Snapsaved.com is down, but the company confirmed that its security had been breached in a Saturday Facebook post. The company also said that 500 megabytes of images and “0 personal information” had been affected by the breach.
For its part, Snapchat confirmed on Twitter that its security had not been breached and said that the use of third-party apps like Snapsaved is banned by the company’s terms of use. People whose photos had been leaked, according to Snapchat, “were victimized by their use of third-party apps.”









