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Women who fell prey to the self-styled ‘king of revenge porn’ have detailed the trauma of discovering their naked photos and videos on his pornographic website in a new documentary. 

is a three-part series about Hunter Moore, the founder of the revenge porn site IsAnyoneUp.com, and one determined mother’s battle to take him down.  

Moore, now 36, launched the now-defunct website in 2010, allowing spurned lovers to anonymously post sexually explicit images of their former flames without their consent.  

‘Me and my friends would post [photos of] a bunch of girls, and I was like, «Yo, I can make money of f****n’ people over,»‘ he explains in the archival footage featured in the trailer. 

Netflix's upcoming documentary The Most Hated Man on the Internet is a three-part series about Hunter Moore, the founder of the revenge porn site IsAnyoneUp.com

Netflix’s upcoming documentary The Most Hated Man on the Internet is a three-part series about Hunter Moore, the founder of the revenge porn site IsAnyoneUp.com

Moore, now 36, launched the now-defunct website in 2010, allowing spurned lovers to anonymously post naked images and videos of their former flames

Moore, now 36, launched the now-defunct website in 2010, allowing spurned lovers to anonymously post naked images and videos of their former flames

The docuseries features interviews with the women and men who were horrified to discover their nude photos and videos on IsAnyoneUp.com. 

One woman says she woke up to 200 notifications after her image was unknowingly posted on the site. Another recalls how she begged Moore to remove her images, https://bvespirita.com/ saying she has a family and a little boy.   

‘The response that I got: «LOL,»‘ she claims. 

There are also key interviews with Charlotte Laws and her daughter Kayla, who was 24 when her topless photos were stolen from her computer by an anonymous hacker and posted on the sleazy website in 2012. 

The docuseries features interviews with the women and men who were horrified to discover their nude photos and videos on IsAnyoneUp.com

The docuseries features interviews with the women and men who were horrified to discover their nude photos and videos on IsAnyoneUp.com

The docuseries features interviews with the women and men who were horrified to discover their nude photos and videos on IsAnyoneUp.com

One woman says she woke up to 200 notifications after her image was unknowingly posted on the site

One woman says she woke up to 200 notifications after her image was unknowingly posted on the site 

‘There I was topless. Multiple photos,’ she recalls. ‘I felt violated.’ 

Kayla had taken the photos in front of her bedroom mirror and stored them on her laptop, never intending to share them publicly. 

The images had been accessed remotely by a stranger and uploaded to Moore’s site. For Charlotte, this triggered a two-year battle to bring the man responsible to justice.

‘He came after my daughter,’ she says in the trailer. 

‘He needed to be brought down,’ Kayla agrees. 

Another recalls how she begged Moore to remove her images, saying she has a family and a little boy

Another recalls how she begged Moore to remove her images, saying she has a family and a little boy

She claims Moore simply responded, 'LOL,' after she sent her heartfelt plea

She claims Moore simply responded, ‘LOL,’ after she sent her heartfelt plea 

Moore shows little remorse when he is asked if he has ever felt sorry enough for someone to the point that he has taken something down. 

‘No. It’s just too much fun,’ he boasts in the archival footage. 

‘I don’t know why all these people, you know, hate me,’ he adds. ‘I’m just making money off your nude pictures.’

Charlotte opened up about how she tracked down Moore in an interview with that was published earlier this month.  

The mom, who was working as an investigator for an insurance company, got little help from the police because there weren’t any laws against sharing these types of images at the time. 

There are also key interviews with Charlotte Laws and her daughter Kayla

There are also key interviews with Charlotte Laws and her daughter Kayla

Kayla (pictured) was 24 when her topless photos were stolen from her computer by an anonymous hacker and posted on the sleazy website in 2012

Kayla (pictured) was 24 when her topless photos were stolen from her computer by an anonymous hacker and posted on the sleazy website in 2012

A search revealed that the pictures had been posted on IsAnyoneUp.com, which Moore was running anonymously at the time.

But it was his bravado that eventually gave him away, and it wasn’t long before Charlotte found his real name. She learned he had set up his website from the basement of his parents’ home in Woodland, California.  

‘He was bragging all over the internet. This sleazeball was sitting in his parents’ basement, having found he could work with a computer hacker to steal pictures of innocent girls and make money,’ she says. 

Charlotte believes Kayla’s pictures may have been used because she was Facebook friends with another girl whose intimate pictures had been posted on the site.

'There I was topless. Multiple photos,' Kayla recalls in the trailer. 'I felt violated'

‘There I was topless. Multiple photos,’ Kayla recalls in the trailer. ‘I felt violated’

For Charlotte, this triggered a two-year battle to bring Moore to justice

For Charlotte, this triggered a two-year battle to bring Moore to justice

Once she had Moore’s name, she found a phone number and rang the address, but whoever answered repeatedly hung up.

Undeterred, Charlotte and her lawyer husband sent a series of ‘cease and desist’ letters to Moore, but they seemed to only embolden him.

‘He was laughing at us,’ she recalls. ‘He replied to one legal letter with a picture of his penis.’

As Moore attracted more attention, his notoriety grew. He had 600,000 Twitter followers and claimed his website had 350,000 subscribers with 30 million page views a month, earning him a salary equivalent to $360,000.

Moore shows little remorse in the archival footage that is featured in the trailer

Moore shows little remorse in the archival footage that is featured in the trailer 

'I don't know why all these people, you know, hate me,' he says. 'I'm just making money off your nude pictures'

‘I don’t know why all these people, you know, hate me,’ he says. ‘I’m just making money off your nude pictures’

‘He became something of a celebrity and was hosting parties where he worked as a DJ. So I went undercover in disguise to serve him papers,’ Charlotte says. I tried to find someone who would take my case on. But there was no one. 

‘I went online, went public about who this man was and what he’d done to my family. Meanwhile, this slimeball was giving magazine interviews and being portrayed as a hero.

‘At first, Kayla and my husband begged me not to get involved. They said he was dangerous and I couldn’t win. But I was determined to bring him down.’

Charlotte’s investigation took a sinister turn when she started receiving death threats. Meanwhile, Kayla was harassed and called a ‘slut for taking the pictures. 

However, other victims began contacting her, which helped her add to her collection of evidence against Moore.  

In 2014, the FBI finally had enough to charge Moore with aggravated identity theft and aiding and abetting in the unauthorized access of a computer They shut down his website, raided his parents' house, and seized his computers

In 2014, the FBI finally had enough to charge Moore with aggravated identity theft and aiding and abetting in the unauthorized access of a computer They shut down his website, raided his parents’ house, and seized his computers

Moore pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail. He was released in 2017 and is believed to be back living in his parents' home

Moore pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail. He was released in 2017 and is believed to be back living in his parents’ home

The mom got her big break in 2014 when the FBI started investigating the hacking of celebrity nude photos, including images of Scarlett Johansson and Jennifer Lawrence. 

Charlotte pushed the FBI for help until she was put in contact with a detective, but the investigation dragged on for two years. 

In 2014, the FBI finally had enough to charge Moore with aggravated identity theft and aiding and abetting in the unauthorized access of a computer. They shut down his website, raided his parents’ house, and seized his computers.

Moore pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail. He was released in 2017 and is believed to be back living in his parents’ home.

A co-conspirator was also jailed for hacking into Kayla’s computer.

The Mail on Sunday made repeated attempts to contact Moore, but he failed to respond. He has also refused to co-operate with filmmakers.

The Most Hated Man on the Internet premieres on Netflix on July 27

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