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Blazewada
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Blazewada
Post Number: 8041 Registered: 08-2008 Posted From: 218.186.8.238
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Friday, March 12, 2010 - 7:12 pm: |
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Kalki:bajji gaa weekend ala chiki figures tho gaaliki tiragocchugaaa
chinki fugures aa,.... Real Bewarse
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Kichidi
Kurra Bewarse Username: Kichidi
Post Number: 620 Registered: 01-2010 Posted From: 161.181.53.10
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Friday, March 12, 2010 - 6:55 pm: |
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Kalki:chiki figures tho gaaliki tiragocchugaaa ....
corresttttttttttt They pretend to pay and I pretend to work
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Kalki
Bewarse Legend Username: Kalki
Post Number: 27594 Registered: 04-2005 Posted From: 98.26.78.123
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Friday, March 12, 2010 - 6:44 pm: |
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bajji gaa weekend ala chiki figures tho gaaliki tiragocchugaaa ....itta beku posts ese badulu Hasta La Madre!
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Blazewada
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Blazewada
Post Number: 8038 Registered: 08-2008 Posted From: 218.186.8.238
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Friday, March 12, 2010 - 6:32 pm: |
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WASHINGTON: Leading search engine Google said on Thursday that the company was prepared to leave China, the world’s biggest online market and would Top 10 internet passwords Some happily avoid social networking sites Secure Net privacy by erasing your tracks not compromise on the censorship of its web search engine. A top Google official told US lawmakers that the company was firm on its stand that it will not allow censorship of its contents in China. “We are currently reviewing our business operations in China as we no longer feel comfortable censoring our search results in that country,” Nicole Wong, vice-president of Google, said in his testimony before a Congressional committee. Wong’s remarks of his company being prepared to leave China came as it said that it was in talks with Beijing on the future of its internet services. In his significant testimony, the Google official told the lawmakers that the Gmail accounts of dozens of activists, who advocate human rights in China, have been accessed by the third party, originating from within that country. He said, in mid-December the company had detected a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on its corporate infrastructure, originating from China, with a primary but unsuccessful goal to access Gmail accounts. “However, it soon became clear that what at first appeared to be solely a security incident was something quite different. Other companies from a range of businesses — finance, technology, media and chemical — were similarly targeted,” he said. Wong said the company in its investigations had discovered that the accounts of dozens of Gmail users around the world, who advocate for human rights in China, appeared to have been accessed by third parties. This, he said, happened independent of the attack on Google, through phishing or malware placed on those users’ computers. “These circumstances, as well as attempts over the past year to limit free speech online, led us to conclude that we no longer feel comfortable censoring our search results in China. We are currently reviewing our business operations there,” Wong said. Google threatened to leave China in January over what it said were cyber attacks at its source code and Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. Google said the US government should promote internet openness as a major plank of US foreign policy. Free flow of information is an important part of diplomacy, foreign assistance and engagement on human rights, Wong told the Congressional committee. He also cautioned that internet censorship should be part of US trade agenda because it has serious economic implications. “It tilts the playing field towards domestic companies and reduces consumer choice. It affects not only US and global internet companies, but also hurts businesses in every sector,” Wong said. Real Bewarse
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