Cameron Diaz and Jason Segel are currently starring as a couple who have their x-rated home movie leaked online for the world to see so it's no huge surprise that the actors have no desire to film their own sex tapes, ironically admitting that they actually hate being in front of the camera despite their day jobs.
The pair will be hitting UK cinemas later this week starring as married couple Annie and Jay who decide to spice up their relationship by stripping off and filming their sex session, only for it to go missing and end up in the wrong hands. It's basically a deterrent for anyone thinking of documenting their naughty antics and it seems to have worked for the film's leading stars Cameron and Jason who will never have any of their intimate moments leaked.
Jason told the Press Association: "We spend so much time on camera, I think the idea in our regular lives, the idea of having a camera near me... I don't need to have one. It's not me. I don't like cameras in general," to which Cameron agreed: "I don't do selfies, like I hate selfies. I don't like having my picture being taken in general. The rest of my life is not documented, I don't take pictures of things going on in my life. I try and be present for them."
Rather coincidentally, this week saw a number of high-profile celebrities such as Jennifer Lawrence and Kate Upton fall victim to a group of hackers who infiltrated their iCloud accounts and leaked nude photos of the stars. Jason and Cameron say it highlights the dangers and rapid advancement of modern technology.
Addressing the highly-publicised scandal, Jason commented: "I think it just goes to show there's a real Wild West element to the frontier of technology. You really don't know what to expect and yeah, you have to be really careful. It's a terrible crime and because we use the word computer or hacker and celebrity... this is a person doing something terrible to another person and that's highly illegal and wrong."

Real life won't be imitating art for Sex Tape stars Cameron Diaz and Jason Segel (Apega/WENN)
Cameron chimed in: "It's very chauvinistic and I feel like it always is a violation of women, you know? We focus so much on women and it's misogynistic really. It's a direct attempt to hurt women and I think it's unfair and as Jason says it's a human being who's being violated in a very personal, private moment that is being used to hurt them. I think it's a crime absolutely and the people who did it should be made examples of."
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