Okay, so yesterday I’m scrolling, right? And tons of these ads pop up screaming “Rihanna leaked photos!” or “Unseen Rihanna pics!”. Obviously sounds sketchy as hell, but I thought, “Heck, let me poke at this and see how bad it actually is.” I needed to figure out how to spot the fakes quick.

First thing I did was click one of those shady ads
Pure curiosity, I admit. Straight away, the site looked like garbage. Colors all messed up, weird flashing banners everywhere pushing gambling stuff. Huge red flag: they demanded I turn off my ad blocker before seeing anything. Nope, not happening. Immediately closed that tab.
Started paying attention to the URLs
Checked a couple of these sites in my history. Total nonsense names, like random letters mashed together, sometimes with “Rihanna” or “nude” crammed in. Real ones? Simple and clean. These looked like a toddler typed them blindfolded. If the address bar looks messy and stupid, just bounce.
Checked what they actually wanted from me
Tried another link – this time they let me “preview” a super fuzzy pic that looked fake. Then it hit me with walls of text and multiple “DOWNLOAD NOW” buttons. Classic scare tactics saying stuff like “Virus detected! Click here to scan!” Trying to force panic clicks. Real tip: if a free “leak” site asks for your email, credit card, or wants you to install some “safe viewer” file? Hell no. Run.
Looked at the comments section (or lack of it)
On one site pretending to be a forum, the “comments” were all generic garbage like “Wow amazing pics!” posted by users named “User3482” five minutes ago. Zero real interaction. Total bot farm setup. Real communities have messy, varied comments with usernames that look human.
Trusted my gut feeling
Clicked on one last site promising “exclusive” Riri content. Auto-playing loud porn sounds blasted my speakers, and pop-ups exploded everywhere trying to shove fake lottery wins in my face. Closed everything and shut down the browser entirely. That headache wasn’t worth it. If something feels aggressive or chaotic? Your gut’s yelling at you. Listen.

Final takeaways after this mess
- If it screams “LEAK” or “FREE” with tons of ads? 99.9% scam.
- Weird URLs and demands to turn off adblockers? Bad news.
- Asking for personal info or downloads? Malware trap.
- Dead comment sections? Fake engagement.
- Loud sounds, pop-ups, panic messages? Just close it fast.
Most important lesson? Celeb pics from “secret sites” are almost always fake and dangerous. Save your sanity and don’t bother clicking. Stay safe out there.