Hundreds of celebrities have reacted following Sunday night's nude photo hacks that involved Jennifer Lawrence and several other Hollywood A-listers, according to People Magazine.

"Girls" star Lena Dunham tweeted, "The way in which you share your body must be a CHOICE. Support these women and do not look at these pictures."

In another tweet, Dunham wrote, "The "don't take naked pics if you don't want them online" argument is the "she was a wearing a short skirt" of the web. Ugh."

Victoria Justice tweeted, "These so called nudes of me are FAKE people. Let me nip this in the bud right now. *pun intended*."

"Pitch Perfect" star Anna Kendrick shared a message from her brother Mike that read, "I have never been happier to not see your name on a list."

Kendrick replied and tweeted, "Don't worry bro, it would just be photos of food and other people's dogs anyway."

Comedian Seth Rogen tweeted, "Posting pics hacked from someone's cell phone is really no different than selling stolen merchandise."

In another tweet he wrote, "I obviously am not comparing women to merchandise. Just legally speaking, it shouldn't be tolerated to repost stolen pics."

Alexandra Daddario wrote, "The Internet is scary. Thank god all my personal photos are only of dogs and cats and food, and I'm only naked on tv."

Tom Arnold added, "If there was an Internet in 1988 people would've stolen and leaked nude pictures of Roseanne and me and no one would've ever done it again."

Ariana Grande tweeted, "to every1 going about my "nudes" & my "m&g prices" neither are real! My lil ass is a lot cuter than that lmao & tour details r comin soon."

"Harry Potter" star Emma Watson wrote, "Even worse than seeing women's privacy violated on social media is reading the accompanying comments that show such a lack of empathy."

Patricia Arquette wrote, "Every time someone opens a stolen intimate nude photo of anyone. They are becoming a sexual molester. Participating in a group molestation."