
The love story of a woman’s Twitter account: A hacker steals thousands of tweets in order to love her online
A love story that started with a single tweet and a few thousand words turned into a viral hit on social media after a hacker stole the woman’s personal tweets and used them to love another woman.
Amber Tamblyn, 24, is an American journalist who lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Her tweets are a mix of love stories, stories about a love for her family, and stories about love and relationships.
Tamblyn’s tweets have garnered over 300,000 likes since they were posted last week, according to a Twitter analytics site.
Tomboyish love storyAmber’s story began when a woman who used the Twitter handle @Mysqwot, who was also a writer for Mashable, tweeted a photo of her wearing a red dress with a red bow.
“I’m a tomboy,” she wrote.
“I like red.
I’m a fan of the Beatles.”
Her tweet quickly went viral.
Within a few hours, the tweet had been retweeted over 20,000 times, and her followers have gone wild.
A user named @Myscwot posted the tweet, writing that she liked it because she wanted to make her mother proud.
Trampling over her mom’s dress is the latest twist in the love story between Amber and @MYSqwut, and it’s a perfect example of the power of sharing a love story on Twitter.
The Twitter user’s mother is Amber, and the woman in the photo, @MyrtleTambly, is Amber’s mother, Tambly told ABC News.
When Amber posted the photo on her Twitter account, she was overwhelmed.
The response was overwhelming.
Within hours, Amber had tweeted and liked and retweeted thousands of times, retweeting thousands of others.
The story was instantly trending on Twitter, and Tamblen told ABC news she’s never seen anything like it.
She said the story had gotten so popular, she even heard from other people in the Twitter community who shared the same feelings.TAMBLIN: So I’m just amazed by all of the reactions I’ve gotten.
I mean, it’s just amazing.
A lot of people really liked it, and I think the stories that people shared on social are just amazing and we really appreciate that.
But Amber’s story is far from unique.
“This has been happening a lot on Twitter,” said Tamblin.
The social media site allows people to create a love account and share a love conversation online.
Tambyn said she’s seen a lot of love story with a hashtag and love story about a cat, but she said she doesn’t believe that there are a lot more.
Tamar Alsbury, a senior at New York University who has a degree in journalism, said the popularity of the love stories on Twitter is partly because it’s easier to share on Twitter because people are more willing to share it.
“It’s a lot easier for people to be honest about their emotions, to be willing to let someone know that they are sad, that they’re upset, that something happened,” Alsburysaid.
“It’s also a lot safer, because people don’t have to fear that someone will take advantage of them.”
Alsbury said Twitter is also allowing users to “post anything they want on Twitter and see if they’re liked or not,” and there are also options to “re-post your tweets.”
Alas, Alsboroughs love story ended with Amber.
She wrote on her Facebook page that her mother had been diagnosed with cancer in June and was going through chemo and radiation treatments.
Her mother was on the waiting list for a terminal diagnosis.
“When my mother was diagnosed, she started seeing me at the hospital and she was crying and she just couldn’t get her body to respond to the treatment that she was receiving,” AlSbury wrote.
“After my mother passed, she became so devastated that she left the hospital.
She couldn’t go back to her job.
She had to move into a hotel room with me.””
It was very difficult for her to see me because I was the only thing she had,” Al Sbury said.
“And I didn’t want her to miss a single second of the moment that she spent with me, so I wrote a message to her and wrote that I was sorry that I had to leave her, I’m sorry I had this terrible news, and that I’m going to miss you so much.”
She wrote that she loved her mother so much that she would go out of her way to help her if she needed anything.
“She never did get her wish,” she said.
Troubled by cancerThe love stories are a form of love, and not just for the people involved.
Alsworth said it’s important to be able to see that people are experiencing things, and she’s concerned that they can be manipulated