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Links to Nude Erin Andrews Video Lead to Virus Instead


When nude footage of ESPN reporter Erin Andrews hit the Web last week, you could hear keyboards clicking and clacking around the world. The video, which was taken through some sort of peephole in a hotel room without Andrews' knowledge, instantly became Google's most searched item. Now, some of these virtual voyeurs are paying a heavy price.

According to ABC News, hackers have begun embedding viruses into links that supposedly lead to the video. Hundreds of computers have already been infected by the malware, which can allow hackers to steal personal information or render a hard drive useless. Gary Warner, the head of computer forensics at the University of Alabama in Birmingham, told ABC News that Twitter is spreading the links like wildfire, largely via shortened URLs. Many places took down the video after Andrews's lawyers stepped in and promised to take civil and criminal action against those involved. However, there still are some cached versions out there.

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Audio/Video, Computers, iPhone

Apple App Goes Nude, Gets Pulled, May Go Nude Again

It's been an up-and-down day for porn-loving iPhone owners. Reports began breaking last night and this morning that the app 'Hottest Girls,' which formerly featured nubile lasses dressed in bikinis and lingerie, would be providing photographs of nude models. The nudity news shouldn't come as too much of a surprise since Apple implemented parental controls for its newly released iPhone 3.0 SDK, which many believed would lead to the availability of pornographic apps.

Strictly for research purposes, and to maintain journalistic integrity (is that still a word?), we browsed the app store to verify the new release. (It wasn't just to catch a glimpse of boobies, we promise.) We left disappointingly unfulfilled, though, when we received a message that the app was not available.

Now, some might be worried that Apple pulled the racy app due to negative publicity, but, according to AllenTheGeek.com, the app is merely temporarily sold out. Afraid the porn rush of prospective buyers would crash their servers, distributor ATG has temporarily halted the app's sale, but has assured the porn-loving public that the titillating images will return. Until then, you'll have to continue getting your iPhone porno fix with Safari. [From: TechCrunch and Engadget]

Web, Social Networking

High-Brow Sex Site Nerve.com to Cut Back on Nudity


High-brow smut lovers who turn to Nerve.com for artistic nude photography and lascivious essays and personals will have to soon look for new sources of nubile nudes. According to Business Week, new Nerve CEO Sean Mills has decided to make the site more mainstream by moving some of the its more lewd material, including the majority of Nerve's images of naked flesh, to a new, and so far unnamed, subscription-only site.

Hoping to attract more ad revenue, Mills told Business Week that the new site will be "better for more conservative companies," adding, "You can have something that's very hot and sexy and compelling without having to show nudity." Yeah, but will the loyal followers agree? So far, comments left on Business Week's article have been highly critical of the policy change, accusing the new CEO of selling out and ruining the bohemian feel of the site.

Making Nerve's prudish turn even more surprising is the fact that Mills was previously the president of fake news outlet The Onion, known for its irreverent, satirical attacks on pop culture. We expect some companies, like MySpace for instance, to sell out for exorbitant amounts of money. But for someone with a history at The Onion to compromise a well known site's reputation for the sake of ad dollars is somewhat sickening. At least he'd left The Onion, and had left intact its motto of "America's Finest News Source," before he started listening to overtures from The Man. [From: Business Week]

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Video Games

More Sex in Video Games Please, Says MSNBC Blogger



With all of the recent uproar over a lesbian's being banned from Xbox Live and a cartoon penis in 'Grand Theft Auto IV,' we've grown accustomed to the media's stern look and wagging finger. But Winda Benedetti, MSNBC's 'Citizen Gamer,' is using all ten of her fingers, not to reprimand, but applaud.

"Penis! Penis! Penis!" the blogger cries, charging the video game industry with a boyish, immature vision of sexuality.

"If all was right with the world," Benedetti explains, "depicting sex and sexuality in video games meant for adult players would raise nary an eyebrow. After all, adults in the real world have sex." If anything, Benedetti believes that GTA's inclusion of the male member levels the gaming field, as it were: "After all the jiggling jubblies, a gal gamer can't be blamed for cheering the appearance of some man meat."

As gamers grow up and mature, and their tastes with them, we think it stands to reason that the games, themselves, should follow suit. Even if it is a birthday suit. [From: MSNBC, via Joystiq]

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Video Games

Total Male Nudity on New 'Grand Theft Auto IV' Episode



Rockstar Games is back with a new episode for 'Grand Theft Auto IV' and boy, does it bring the heat (and by "heat," we mean nudity).

'The Lost and Damned' is the first downloadable extension of 'GTA IV' created exclusively for Xbox 360, and it has boldly chosen to go where few (if any) mainstream video games have gone before. Where has it boldly gone, you ask? Why, to male full-frontal town, of course!

The add-on episode includes an awkward conversation between protagonist Johnny Klebitz and a shady, very naked politician named Mr. Stubbs. They talk while Mr. Stubbs is receiving a massage, and then -- bam! -- Mr. Stubbs is up and walking around completely in the buff. The final seconds of the clip we saw consisted of Mr. Stubbs, a "member," and a mirror. Well played, Rockstar Games!

What's your stand on male nudity in video games?

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Cell Phones

Naked Photos Shared Via Cell Phones Land Teens In Hot Water



A spur-of-the-moment decision mixed with a lapse in judgment, plus a dose of modern technology, is landing a lot of teens in hot water. No, this is not the heartwarming tale of some 15-year-old kid engaging in the time-honored tradition of trying to get an adult to buy beer from the local convenience store. This is about the much less honorable practice of snapping some nude photos, sharing them via cell phone with a boyfriend or girlfriend, and then (lo and behold) finding those pictures shared with just about everyone across the Web.

But just as buying alcohol underage is illegal, so is sending photos of a naked teen across cell phones and Web pages, which has led to some teens facing charges of child pornography, sexual exploitation of a child, and defamation. Big words that carry serious implications for actions taken basically on a lark, you might say.

Psychologists say the decision to snap racy shots with a cell phone and then share them is the result of simple, and typical, poor judgment among teens. Today, these poor judgement calls can lead to a very public exposure because of the photo-sharing capabilities of cell phones and social networking sites like MySpace. Cases are cropping up all across the country, from Colorado to Alabama. Sometimes, the photos are shared by an upset ex-boyfriend, and other times, it just seems the kids want to expose themselves. As one of them puts it: "If you look at people's MySpace, all the pictures are slutty." (Editor's note: All our MySpace photos are perfectly demure.)

And lest you think this is just about young girls allowing themselves to be exploited, it seems boys are also known to take some candid shots of themselves.

The solution to this revealing problem? Awareness by both teens and the parents. Of course, the parents could take away their kids' cell phones – but then we may be reading about revolution instead. [Source: CNN]

Cell Phones

Sprint Employee Sends Nude Photos to Customer's Phone



Customer service may have reached a new low at a Dayton, Ohio, Sprint store. In a lawsuite, a Sprint wireless customer claims that when she bought a new phone for her plan, she was courted via text and picture messages -- by the employee who sold her the device. He even sent nude photos of himself to the woman.

One problem: She's married, with kids, and says the, um, "romantic" advances were uninvited and certainly unwelcome. Another problem: the Sprint employee allegedly used his knowledge of the woman's cell phone number and plan in a way that certainly goes against Sprint policy. A third problem: the woman's service plan does not include picture messaging! We can only imagine the extra costs incurred each time the Sprint employee sent one of his revealing photos.

Now she's suing the employee and Sprint for more than $1 million, claiming emotional distress, loss of sleep, nervousness and more.

We're pretty sure this isn't what Sprint CEO Dan Hesse had in mind when he said he wanted to change the customer service culture of the company. [Source: Dayton Daily News]

eBay

Naked Canadians Consider Class Action Lawsuit Against Paypal




Today a group of naked Canadians are considering a class action lawsuit against PayPal. The Federation of Canadian Naturists (FCN) -- an organization for Canadian nudists-- claims that PayPal suddenly cut off its services to them, refusing to process their magazine subscription payments after four years of business.

The FCN are not the first business to get denied services for supposedly breaking the acceptable use policy. Since 2003, PayPal has excluded so called "sexually oriented Web sites" from using their services for the purchase of digital goods like membership or subscription fees. However, any Web site is allowed to use PayPal for the sale of sexually oriented physical goods, like DVDs or magazines that are then delivered by hand to the customer. PayPal claims this is due to the immense administrative cost of doing business with an industry riddled with criminal schemes and frequent "charge backs" (when a customer disputes a charge to their paypal account.) In addition to this discrepancy between physical and digital goods, PayPal further reserves the right to deny Web sites that are distributing sexually oriented material involving minors or for Web sites that "facilitate meetings for sexually oriented activities." These two lines from the Mature Audiences section of their Acceptable Use Policy are what PayPal claims the FCN has violated.

While the nudists object to being considered sexually oriented in the first place, the government affairs director for the federation, Judy Williams, says "PayPal's decision about Going Natural and its claims about the FCN are unfounded embellishments born of ignorance."

According to the history, naturists base their practice on a nineteenth-century reform movement that believed the cure for the ailments of industrial society "was exposure to the natural healing elements or fresh air, sunlight, and water--preferably with loose or absent clothing." In addition, they don't believe that the naked body is inherently erotic, which anyone who has been to a nude beach can attest to. While the images in Going Natural magazine might include pictures of naked minors, a court would probably deem them no more pornographic than those baby pictures of you with a shampoo mohawk.

The last line of the PayPal's Mature audiences policy says that "PayPal will not include sexual preferences or viewpoints as a factor in determining what goods or services are prohibited under the Mature Audiences Policy." We think the FCN might not agree.

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