JABALPUR: Person who had threatened a 30-year-old woman in Jabalpur district while demanding to pay Rs 2 crore in Bitcoins if she wanted to stop him from uploading her pictures on pornographic portals claiming to be a Pakistan based ISIS man, has turned out to be a teenaged boy.“Accused is a 16-year-old boy who had secured email ID of the woman from website of a school that she runs in the town,” said ASP (crime) D S Rajput. He is a tech-savvy boy, said the officer adding he was booked under various sections of juvenile justice and Information technology (IT) Act. He was bailed out in the evening. Police have seized his email ID.Police had registered a case after receiving the complaint on November 28. After initial investigations, the origin of the email was traced to Philippines and later to the laptop of a school boy. “At the bottom of the mail sent to the victim, he had written Pak-ISIS,” said the officer.The woman, who belongs to an influential family, was terrified after receiving the ransom email. “She was told that her personal information, including her pictures will be released to their (blackmailers) social media contacts, family, and friends besides being uploaded on pornographic sites if a ransom is not paid. The recipient was instructed to pay in Bitcoins with an extremely tight deadline,” said a police officer.However,investigations in this case was not so difficult as in other cases that are pending. “In such cases it has been found that accused use TOR web browser, making it harder to trace their servers. Using Bitcoins as payment option makes tracing the money more complex. Here, it was different. IP address was traced to his laptop,” the police officer said.TOR is a web browser which aims to conceal its users' identities and their online activity from surveillance by separating identification and routing.Cyber blackmailing cases are soaring in Madhya Pradesh. Cyber cell cops in the state claim that many individuals have received such mails, but only a few turned up to lodge complaints. “Though India is the fifth most ransom-ware infested country in the world, people in Madhya Pradesh are still unaware of how this virus is worming its way into their computers,” said a police officer.