She had a file on X-tube for several years, but took it down. Pitty, she was one of those gals genuinely into wetting her pants and could really soak them.
That is the modern Nazi regime.
They know what is best for you and what makes the world worse. If you make the world worse, they defend the good world by killing you.
Here in the UK there are plans to force ISPs to block any sites deemed 'porn' and force customers to 'opt in' if they want to view such things. It's to protect the children, of course. The papers are full of stories like 'my son looked at porn and now he's a serial sex killer' and such like. There are also plans to force ISPs (again) to keep records of customers web and e-mail activity for 12 months, and phone companies to keep records of all calls.
Here in the UK there are plans to force ISPs to block any sites deemed 'porn' and force customers to 'opt in' if they want to view such things.
I wouldn't worry about that. What they're trying to do is a technical nightmare but the government spin people don't realise that. When they actually sit down and try and implement it, they'll soon work out that it's a thousand times more difficult, expensive and unreliable to divide the internet into "adult" and "non-adult" than they thought and it'll be quietly swept under the carpet.
It'll never happen.
The Chinese government try to divide the internet in two for slightly different reasons (politically censored vs non-censored) and look how well that works - it doesn't stop anybody who is even slightly determined to get around it.
The Australians tried something very similar to what the UK gov is proposing (I think they called it "Cleanfeed internet") and, as far as I know, eventually realised it was impossible and killed it off and simply required computers to ship with parental control software (which they already do anyway...).
Finally, look at the whole Pirate Bay thing. All they've been able to do is block it's main IP address and stop domain name lookups. Result? Dozens of complete mirrors of the entire TPB site popped up overnight (link is to a news report, not a TPB mirror itself ). The internet is by design resilient to any attempt to harm it's function, whether physically (the old "nuclear war proof" idea) or logically (data duplication, mirroring, caches, etc). No one country will ever be able to police the internet fully, no matter how hard they try.
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