Earlier this month, "revenge porn" entrepreneur Craig Brittain sat for an on-camera interview with CBS4-Denver, where he explained how his website IsAnybodyDown is nothing more than "entertainment." Brittain's site shows nude pictures of people, mostly women, without their consent, along with their personal contact info. The website advertises links to a service called "Takedown Hammer" which promises to get victims off the site if they pay $250. Many assume the "Hammer" is Brittain, since its e-mails come from the same IP address; Brittain denies it. In any case, to many of the victims, Brittain's site looks like a simple extortion scheme.

Now, Brian Maass, the same CBS4 reporter who investigated Brittain in that piece, has a new piece up in which he may have caught Brittain in an even more serious lie. Late Friday, CBS4 broadcast Maass' interview with a woman who met another woman on Craigslist named "Jess Davis." Davis corresponded and sent nude photos of herself, and she asked the other woman to send her racy photos in return. Davis also asked for her date of birth and phone number, saying she was looking to have "just some fun." The victim went along with the exchange, believing she was interacting with a woman.

Five days later, the woman's photos were on IsAnybodyDown, along with her contact info. "This is something I didn't want all of the world to see," she told Maass in the interview, in which her face and voice were obscured.

Turns out, the e-mails from jessdavis877@gmail.com came from the same IP address as Craig Brittain's e-mails—just like e-mails from the "Takedown Lawyer" named "David Blade III," which also apparently originated at Brittain's Colorado Springs home.

If Brittain created fake identities to acquire womens' photos and then posted them online himself, it's pretty clear that he won't be protected by the federal law that he believes shields him currently, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. That law protects website owners from liability for material posted by their users in certain situations. An attorney who speaks with Maass in the new piece says that by creating fake identities to populate his site with new photos, Brittain's behavior enters the criminal realm.

Brittain—who sat for an hour-long interview with Maass as recently as a few weeks ago—was nowhere to be found for this piece. CBS4 repeatedly contacted him about the "Jess Davis" revelations but got no response.

While Brittain may have gone fishing (or "catfishing" as the case may be) for nude photos on Craigslist, at least some of the victims on Brittain's site appear to have been betrayed by ex-lovers. That's a pattern that appears to have been repeated elsewhere, and it has spawned the name "revenge porn." The practice of posting nude photos of people against their will has also been called "humiliation porn" or simply "involuntary porn."

Brittain Uncut: Blaming victims, who “want people to see”

The full, uncut interview of Craig Brittain from the last interview has also been posted online, in two parts. In it, Brittain maintains that all the pictures originate with voluntary submissions. Brittain makes some statements about his site that beggar belief, calling it a "safe environment" that offers a "completely neutral" portrayal of the people in the photos. "Whereas some of these other sites are disparaging, or they're shaming,.. our site is a completely neutral portrayal of the people. Just the images, that's all we show."

"You're saying, all those people want to be on your website?" asks Maass.

"I would say so," answers Brittain. "I would suggest they want people to see their pictures... What they don't want is some of the shame, some of the discrimination from people. I would suggest they took the pictures, they obviously want people to see them. They sent a lot of them to random strangers that they had never met."

"How do you know they sent them to random strangers?" asks Maass.

"Craigslist is very popular," says Brittain. "They'll send e-mails to 20, or 30 people like it's nothing. Not a lot of background checks. They don't even know who they're sending the pictures to. They'll just send them out. And in turn, a lot of those people will forward those pictures to us."

Whether or not they "support the website itself," the people in the photos "want to be seen," he insists.

"I think they want somebody to see the pictures, but they didn't want you to see, or the world to see," notes Maass.

"There's some ambiguity there," responds Brittain. "Not every case is the same."

As for women who say their pictures were sent by an ex-lover, Brittain gets very close to calling them liars.

"I'm suggesting they're bending the truth," he says. "They have a tendency to paint things in their own way. It's not so easy to admit, hey, I was out looking for a casual hookup and I sent these to a stranger. It's a lot easier to say, oh, I sent these to an ex-boyfriend."

At points in the interview, Brittain makes the incredible assertion that he actually has a positive "social goal" of removing the shame and stigma associated with nude photos.

"We actually think the fact they're taking these pictures is a good thing, and an acceptable thing," he says. "We're not trying to shame them or scrutinize them. We're trying to entertain the world. And also to take away a lot of the stigma that's associated with this, because we don't believe these people should be shamed. It may be tough for some of the first people that have been posted. But as time goes on and this gets bigger, this will become more and more of an acceptable thing in society."

Later in the interview, when Maass suggests that he is "takedown lawyer" David Blade III, Brittain immediately answers that he is not.

"Are you saying that David Blade is a real person?" asks Maass. "Nobody can find him."

"I don't know. I don't know if David Blade is a real person or not," says Brittain. "I post what people pay me to post, in terms of advertising."

"How is he paying you?"

"Ah, PayPal. The contact pays me through PayPal. His name is James. He's the guy that is behind Takedown Hammer, and a lot of the stuff that's up, as a contact. That's the guy I talk to, and then they have a team, who does all the work."

"[Why do] you have the same IP address as David Blade?"

"I don't," says Brittain. "What you're looking at are falsified e-mails. It's false. Bogus, absolute forgery."