



It apparently had a section dedicated to service members, which was used as a photo request-and-exchange forum since at least last May. Sources pointed Business Insiderto the site, called AnonIB. US Naval authorities immediately began investigating hundreds of Marines, but more details have emerged in the days since - including the discovery of another image posting board where users traded photos of women from all service branches, even requesting some by name. Last Saturday, the California-based Center for Investigative Reporting revealed that a Facebook group, Marines United, had been distributing nude photos of servicewomen for some time.
