Taylor Swift Fans Track Down ‘Culprit’ Who Shared ‘Explicit Pictures’

This week, fake NSFW photos and pornography with Taylor Swift went viral, shocking the internet. You do not mess with Taylor Swift, as the X (formerly Twitter) user who shared these photos discovered the hard way. Why? The singer’s fans retaliate no matter what.

Zubera Abdi, the Canadian who first shared Taylor Swift’s A. I generated NSFW pics.

Uncertainty surrounds the exact origin of the non-consensual pornographic A.I. photo trend featuring Swift. Nevertheless, @Zvbear, an X user, was one of those who shared these pictures, incurring the wrath of Taylor enthusiasts—and possibly legal action.

But @Zvbear was not afraid, and he boasted that Swifties would never be able to uncover his true identity.

However, his 8chan-esque boasting was quickly disproven when wannabe Joker @Zvbear, or Zubear Abdi, 28, realized that you should not mess with Swifties because they will doxx you to hell.

Zuber Abdi aka @zvbear
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
studied: University of Toronto Scarborough
Somalian but lives in Canada

One Taylor fan wrote, “I wish my name was Zubair Abdi (not to be confused with “Zubear”),” along with images of the influencer’s residence, contact information, and phone number.

“I also wish I could get this nice house with this exact address in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. This is ‘my’ number for anyone who can help.”

Swifties are raging now

The user is in potential legal trouble. “They got that full government (name) in headlines now, dawg, he’s FINISHED,” another one commented.

“Zubear Mohamed Abdi is cooked,” they wrote with a news report that said the White House was “alarmed” by the fake images of Swift. Facing this huge doxxing campaign—and upsetting the President of the United States—Abdi finally gave up, saying he would make his account private in a “tactical retreat.”.

“The Infamous Deep-fake”

The fake pornographic pictures of Taylor Swift were predominantly circulating on the social media site X, previously known as Twitter. The photographs, which show the singer in sexually suggestive and explicit positions – were viewed tens of millions of times before being removed from social platforms. But nothing on the internet is truly gone forever, and they will undoubtedly continue to be shared on other, less regulated channels.

Swift’s spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.