US politician tries to explain porn tabs on screenshot

Congressional candidate Mike Webb pens 2,000 word justification for Facebook post

A screenshot posted by Mike Webb on Facebook. Photograph: Facebook
A screenshot posted by Mike Webb on Facebook. Photograph: Facebook

An American congressional candidate wants you to know that the porn tabs he had open in a screenshot posted to his Facebook page are absolutely nothing to be concerned about.

Mike Webb, Republican candidate for Virginia's 8th district, posted to his Facebook page on Monday, discussing an odd phone call he had had with a staffing agency in Alexandria, Virginia. Accompanying the post was an even odder screenshot.

The tabs in the top left-hand corner of the image at the top of this page, in case you can’t make them out, read “LAYLA RIVERA TIGHT BO[OTY]” and “IVONE SEXY AMATEUR”.

A lesser congressional candidate might have hastily removed the images and apologised. Not Webb, however. Despite taking down the original post, shortly after he reposted it to his page alongside an explanation of where the images came from.

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The explanation is 2,000 words long. It does not make a huge amount of sense, but apparently blames the pornographic images on an experiment Webb was performing to see whether or not someone was using malware embedded on porn sites to infect electoral candidates with malware that would prevent them from filing their candidacy before the deadline.

Maybe. It’s honestly hard to parse. Webb writes, in part: “Curious by nature, I wanted to test the suggestion that somehow, lurking out in the pornographic world there is some evil operator waiting for the one in a gazillion chance that a candidate for federal office would go to that particular website and thereby be infected with a virus that would cause his or her FEC [federal election commission] data file to crash the FEC file application each time that it was loaded on the day of the filing deadline, as well as impact other critical campaign systems.

"Well, the Geek Squad techs testified to me, after servicing thousands of computers at the Baileys Crossroads location that they had never seen any computer using their signature virus protection for the time period to acquire over 4,800 viruses, 300 of which would require re-installation of the operating system."

On the plus side, however, he wants supporters to know that “what does not kill you does make you stronger. . . Today, in just one day on Facebook, we grew in page likes by 25 per cent”, he writes. So perhaps Layla and Ivone helped a man achieve his dream. We’ll find out in November.

Guardian