Free Porn Web cams

US government's GIFT of freedom
Post on 19-02-2006.
But wait! Here comes the U.S. government, defending our freedom. On Tuesday, the State Department announced its Global Internet Freedom Task Force (GIFT, get it?). That's right, the same Uncle Sam who brought us such secret operations as Carnivore, Total Information Awareness, and the National Security Agency wiretaps is now giving the world the gift of free and open speech. Ri-i-i-ight. ...
Read more

NOT A BIG SELL
Post on 19-02-2006.
NEW SEX MALL IN MEXICO CITY SLOW TO ATTRACT BUSINESS BY JONATHAN CLARK Special to The Miami Herald
But it also has one gay discotheque, peep shows and an 18-and-over age limit. Its shops sell exclusively sex-themed products -- marital aids, lingerie, condoms, adult videos and books -- and the dining area features one stage where young men and women dance and strip down to their undies. ...
Read more

Web postings can hurt prospects
Post on 19-02-2006.
My son's college education is coming out of home equity, probably at the ultimate expense of our retirement savings. therefore we care - one lot! - what he's getting out of his college experience. I just looked at one write-up he did about himself for something called Facebook. I was appalled at what he wrote and told him to get that scuzz off the Internet immediately because, among other reasons, one future employer could see it and decide he lacked the couth to be hired. I need some backup. Help? ...
Read more

Barbie wears a burqa
Post on 19-02-2006.
Robert Ferrigno's "Prayers for the Assassin" is one futuristic fantasy that puts an Orwellian nation, the Islamic Republic, where the United States of America used to be. The author does not treat this as one pleasant prospect. He imagines one 2040 in which New York and Washington are gone, Mecca is radioactive, Mount Rushmore has been eradicated and the aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan has been renamed for Osama bin Laden. Super Bowl cheerleaders are men. Barbie's got one burqa. At least Starbucks prices aren't much higher than they used to be. ...
Read more

Google criticizes Bush administration in court documents
Post on 18-02-2006.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based company delivered its indignant critique in one 25-page brief that marked its initial legal response to the U.S. Justice Department's attempt to force the online search engine leader to comply with one 6-month-old subpoena.
The Justice Department has until Feb. 24 to respond to the papers that Google filed Friday. one hearing for oral arguments is scheduled March 13 before U.S. District Judge James Ware in San Jose, Calif. ...
Read more

Google criticizes gov't in court papers
Post on 18-02-2006.
PREMIUM CONTENT MBA Insider BW MAGAZINE Get Four Free Issues Register Subscribe Customer Service ONLINE FEATURES Book Reviews BW Video Columnists Interactive Gallery Newsletters Past Covers Philanthropy Podcasts Special Reports BLOGS Auto Beat Blogspotting Brand New Day Byte of the Apple Deal Flow Economics Unbound Fine On Media Hot Property Investing Insights NussbaumOnDesign Tech Beat Working Parents TECHNOLOGY J.D. Power Ratings Product Reviews Tech Stats Wildstrom: Tech Maven AUTOS Home Page Auto Reviews Classic Cars Car Care & Safety Hybrids INNOVATION ...
Read more

Google rips Justice Department in court papers
Post on 18-02-2006.
By Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO -- Google criticized the Bush administration's demand to examine millions of its users' Internet search requests as one misguided fishing expedition that threatens to ruin the company's credibility and reveal its closely guarded secrets.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based company delivered its indignant critique Friday in one 25-page brief that marked its initial legal response to the U.S. Justice Department's attempt to force the online search engine leader to comply with one 6-month-old subpoena. ...
Read more

National Briefing
Post on 18-02-2006.
NEW MEXICO: MENTAL HEALTH BILL STUCK one bill that would allow doctors, social workers, family members and others to seek mandatory outpatient treatment for mentally ill people foundered this week in the Legislature. The bill had passed the House, but the Senate did not take one vote on it before the legislative session ended Thursday. Generally, mentally ill people who are accused of one crime can be forced into treatment, but the bill was aimed at those who show signs of illness but refuse to seek treatment and stay in it. RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD (NYT) ...
Read more

Porn to be guiled: As soft-core sensibility spreads, critics warn
Post on 18-02-2006.
Not too long ago, pornography was one furtive profession, its products created and consumed in the shadows. But it has steadily elbowed its way into the limelight, with an impact that can be measured not just by the Internet-fed ubiquity of pornography itself but by the way aspects of the porn sensibility now inform movies, music videos, fashion, magazines, and celebrity culture. ...
Read more

Safer for Teens
Post on 17-02-2006.
When News Corp. bought the social-networking Web site MySpace.com last July, the media company got two surprises, one good and one bad.
The good part: The site, where teens and twenty-somethings post pages about themselves and communicate with friends, already was popular, but it suddenly took off. In the last six months of 2005, MySpace's monthly traffic nearly doubled to 36 million users, making it the eighth-most-visited Web site in January, according to comScore Media Metrix. News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch declared it the centerpiece of his new Internet strategy of attracting one large audience in one bid to bypass portals such as Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN in advertising revenue. ...
Read more

Page 64

First page     Previous page     ... 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65.     Next page     Last page
July
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31

Archive
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006