Less high profile than the previous victims, this bout features Nick Hogan, son of Hulk, as well as Winona Ryder, 90210 actress AnnaLynne McCord, and Victoria's Secret model Erin Heatherton.It comes four days after a lawyer for more than a dozen targeted celebrities issued Google with a threat to sue for $100 million for 'failing to act' and 'making millions and profiting from the victimization of women'.Many have surmised that the controversy may be coming to a close given the lower profile of the hacker's latest victims. The first wave of explicit, personal images were released on August 31, featuring Jennifer Lawrence, Kirsten Dunst, and Kate Upton.Since, images have surfaced of singers Rihanna and Avril Lavigne, TV actress Kaley Cuoco, American goalkeeper Hope Solo, and socialities Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton. The images have been cached by thousands of users all over the world and shared on other blogs and websites, meaning many still appear on Google Images.Reddit closed the forum titled Fappening, a lewd reference to masturbation, a week after the first hit on receiving a warning that the images violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).Last month, during a previous leak of stolen, naked pictures, Twitter said it was shutting down accounts disseminating the images.Despite stringent rules against abusive and explicit content, the firm has struggled to control the wave of cached images shared by thousands of users.In response to a request for comment, a Twitter spokesman said in August: 'We do not comment on individual accounts, for privacy and security reasons,' and referred MailOnline to the company's content boundaries web page.MailOnline was also awaiting a comment from Facebook - although the naked pictures did not appear to be on the site.In their online help guide, Facebook suggests that if users come across a harmful photograph to click on the image and select the 'report photo' tool.An online legal expert previously told the OCRegister that despite celebrities' legal complaints, it was really a game of 'whack-a-mole' as it was near impossible to completely scrub the private pictures from the Internet. (dailymail.co.uk)Bakudaily.Az