Laptop thieves accidentally upload their pix to victim's Flickr account -- HOAX?
Update: Jane McG sez, "The photos on the Flickr "someone stole my laptop" set were clearly borrowed from the Top Shop fashion-cam. This must be a clever prank or art project."
Update 2: Daniel sez, "I'm not sure that this is a HOAX. True, those photos appear on the TOPSHOP website, but I think that is part of the automatic uploading function. TOPSHOP links to their Flickr page, where the photos are being uploaded, and which clarifies (slightly) with this statement:"
To clarify: This is not a Hoax. Two computers were stolen from the Topshop London Fashion Week, Covent Garden Venue, London, UK, during 11th to 13th February 2007. These computers were set up to automatically upload photos to the Topshop London Fashion Week Website via the Topshop Flickr Account. About a month after the theft new photos appeared on our flickr account and london fashion week website.
A Flickr user whose computer was stolen has posted a gallery of the (unidentified) thieves, who have inadvertently uploaded dozens of photos of themselves to Flickr, not realizing that the MacBook had a photobooth program set up that uploaded photos taken with the built-in camera to the Web.
Our black apple macbook was stolen recently. It had an automatic upload to flickr set up from photobooth.Link (via Gizmodo)These photos appeared on our flickr a few weeks after it was stolen.
Have you seen these people? Do you know who they are?


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