It's not clear if soul singer Jill Scott was a victim of the massive celebrity hacking scandal, but she took to Twitter to address a semi-nude photo of her floating around the Internet, CBS News reports. On Wednesday evening, Scott admitted to fans that one of the photos circulating did belong to her, but slammed a second, fully naked photo as a fraud.

"I def took the 1st pic w/a robe; weight loss chronicle but the 2nd, sorry freaks, is not me. I wish I had that space between my thighs," Scott tweeted.

On Aug. 31, hundreds of nude and racy images belonging to celebrities flooded the Internet as part of a hacking scandal. Scott's name was not on a master list released by the hacker. Regardless, her name became a trending topic on Twitter because of the semi-nude picture making the rounds.

According to reports, more than 60 photos of "The Hunger Games" actress Jennifer Lawrence were released and posted to a thread on 4chan. BuzzFeed reported that the unidentified hacker posted the photos in exchange for Bitcoins. The person also said he was in possession of a video containing a naked Lawrence.

"I know no one will believe me, but I have a short Lawrence video," the hacker wrote, according to the Daily Mail. "Is way too short, a little over 2 minutes and you only get to see her boobs. Anyways, if somebody wants it let me know how I can upload it anonymously (I don't want the FBI over me, and you don't wanna know how I got this video)."

Lawrence's rep confirmed the photos were real and said the actress had already contacted the authorities.

"This is a flagrant violation of privacy," her rep told TMZ. "The authorities have been contacted and will prosecute anyone who posts the stolen photos of Jennifer Lawrence."

Other celebrities involved in the hacking scandal include Kate Upton and her boyfriend baseball player Justin Verlander, Victoria Justice, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Rihanna, Kim Kardashian, Ariana Grande, Kirsten Dunst, Hope Solo, Cara Delevingne and McKayla Maroney.