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Thread: general internet news - February 25




general internet news - February 25
country flaguser name
Germany
2008-02-24 10:30:39
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om.au/ - for daily updates in between postings.


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Facebook sees first dip in UK users
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/21/fac
ebook.digitalmedia

Australian judge on privacy: Computer code trumps the law
http:
//news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6231713.html

NZ privacy review finds technology outpacing the law
http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/new
s/0C3F5A9FC7C20905CC2573F000176D31

UK government targets illegal downloading
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/22/digitalmedia


UK filesharing law 'unworkable'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/feb/22/fil
esharing

UK ISPs must not be turned into police
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/69302c5a-e17a-11dc-
a302-0000779fd2ac.html

Close of Wikileaks website raises free speech concerns
h
ttp://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0222/p02s02-usgn.html

au: Conroy: Internet has parents out of their depth
http://www.zdnet
.com.au/news/communications/soa/Conroy-Internet-has-parents-
out-of-their-depth/0,130061791,339286211,00.htm

European privacy advocates to issue report in April
[Bloomberg]
http://iht.com/articles/2008/02/20/business/google.php

nz: Ex-MP candidate to face child porn trial
http://www.stu
ff.co.nz/4410280a10.html

**********************
RESEARCH PAPERS
**********************
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID): A Focus On
Information Security And Privacy
The deployment of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) in a
large number of application areas is promising. This paper
introduces the main characteristics of RFID technologies and
focuses on the information security and privacy aspects of
RFID in the short term. It will be complemented by an
overview of RFID applications and an analysis of economic
aspects of RFID carried out by the OECD Working Party on the
Information Economy (WPIE). Later on, and based on both sets
of work, a common set of policy principles related to RFID
will be developed. This report represents the first step of
OECD work related to sensor-based environments. Follow-up
work will address security and privacy issues raised by a
number of possible longer-term trends such as the
generalisation of object tagging (pervasive RFID), of open
loop RFID and of other sensors and sensor networks that can
monitor the environment.
http://www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2007doc.nsf/LinkTo/NT0
0005A7A/$FILE/JT03238682.PDF

Anonymous Blogging and Defamation: Balancing Interests of
the Internet by Betsy Malloy [University of Cincinnati
Public Law Research Paper]
Abstract: As more and more people create personal websites
and blogs, courts are more frequently asked to rule on
questions related to the Internet boom. Specifically, an
issue has arisen concerning what standard to apply in
defamation suits brought against anonymous bloggers. Courts
have wrestled with producing an appropriate standard for
revealing the identity of an anonymous blogger who posts
allegedly defamatory material on a message board or website.
Recently, in Doe v. Cahill, the Delaware Supreme Court
created a strict standard that makes it extremely difficult
for defamation victims to bring suit against anonymous
bloggers. The standard created is far too sympathetic to
anonymous bloggers and fails to address important issues
facing victims of defamation. It is important not to silence
communication on the Internet, but it is just as important
not to silence victims of defamation. Therefore, this
comment argues for the protection of libel
 plaintiffs facing defamatory comments from anonymous
bloggers.
http://ssrn.com/abst
ract=1093525

The Future of International Law: Cybercrime by Henrik
Stakeman Spang-Hanssen [Annual Survey of International and
Comparative Law]
Abstract: This Article first deals with the question of to
what extent the Convention on CyberCrime have unreasonable
implications for the individual Cybernauts, specially the
convention's basic principle of aut dedere aut judicare -
the duty of each party to extradite or to prosecute. Next,
it deals with the problem that the convention pursuant to
article 22(4) does not exclude any criminal jurisdiction
exercised by a Party in accordance with its domestic law. It
then describe when a state under public international law
has jurisdiction over public international computer networks
(the Internet), including the problem of where the offence
is committed and who is the offender. In addition it deals
with the problem of a minor being the offender and mention
some Internet related cases involving juveniles. Finally, it
deals with what public international law should embrace in
relation to public international computer networks.
http://ssrn.com/abst
ract=1090876

Regulating Cyberbullies Through Notice-Based Liability by
Bradley Allan Areheart [Yale Law Journal]
Abstract: With the growth of the Internet's uses and abuses,
Internet harassment is making headlines. Given its
immediacy, anonymity, and accessibility, the Internet offers
an unprecedented forum for defamation and harassment. The
salient problem with such cyberbullying is that victims are
typically left without adequate recourse. The government
should provide recourse by curtailing the near absolute
immunity Internet Service Providers (ISPs) currently enjoy
under the Communications Decency Act (CDA) and implementing
a notice and take-down scheme similar to that for copyright
infringement under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
(DMCA) for certain torts.
http://ssrn.com/abst
ract=1081634

Congress, Content Regulation, and Child Protection: The
Expanding Legislative Agenda by Adam Thierer [Progress &
Freedom Foundation Progress Snapshot Paper]
Abstract: Though not yet complete, the 110th session of
Congress has already witnessed an explosion of legislative
proposals dealing with online child safety, or which seek to
regulate media content or Internet communications in some
fashion. More than 30 of these legislative proposals are
cataloged in a new joint legislative index that was released
today by the Center for Democracy and Technology and the
Progress & Freedom Foundation, compiled to help keep
track of the growing volume of legislative activity on these
fronts. Many of the measures highlighted in the index raise
serious free speech concerns. The proposals can be grouped
into Analog Era (pre-Internet) versus Digital Era (post-Net)
platforms or forms of content that they would affect.
Meanwhile for bills introducing education initiatives, while
it would probably be more sensible for the Department of
Education or the FTC to be awarding appropriate grants, the
focus on education and
 empowerment is commendable. Finally, a significant number
of the measures introduced this session call for stepped up
enforcement efforts aimed at combating online child
predation or child pornography, for which the provisions are
relatively uncontroversial, but can run into dangerous
territory when they call for sweeping data collection
mandates on Internet Service Providers.
http://ssrn.com/abst
ract=1092163

**********************
INTERNET USE
**********************
Facebook sees first dip in UK users
Facebook has suffered its first fall in UK users, with a 5%
drop between December and January, according to new figures.
However, Facebook still had 8.5 million unique users in
January and remains the most popular social networking
website in the UK, according to Nielsen Online, the internet
research company behind the results. And Facebook's nearest
rival, MySpace, also saw a 5% drop in UK traffic between
December and January, according to Nielsen Online.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/21/fac
ebook.digitalmedia

Facebook 'sees decline in users'
Social networking site Facebook has seen its first drop in
UK users in January, new industry data indicates.
http:
//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7257073.stm

Is Facebook finally losing its glow?
Facebook, the UK's most popular social networking site, has
suffered its first monthly drop in visitor numbers,
according to figures published today.
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/
tol/news/tech_and_web/article3410287.ece

Record traffic for UK news websites
The US presidential elections and a bumper celebrity news
month, with the death of Heath Ledger and Britney Spears'
ongoing problems, produced record traffic for the UK's
newspaper websites during January.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/21/abcs.di
gitalmedia

**********************
SOCIAL NETWORKING
**********************
Facebook bows to protest and allows account deletion
Social networking website Facebook claims to have fixed the
privacy problems that have dogged it in recent weeks.
http://out-law.com/page-
8882

**********************
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
**********************
Japan blasts satellite into space
Japan's space agency has launched an experimental
communications satellite designed to enable super high-speed
data transmission in remote areas.
h
ttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7260673.stm

Japan launches experimental Internet satellite [Reuters]
Japan has launched an experimental communications satellite
as part of an ambitious space program that could help ensure
super high-speed internet access in remote parts of Japan
and elsewhere in Asia.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/23/2170807.h
tm
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKT5071
20080223
ht
tp://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/T5071.htm

**********************
SPAM
**********************
Money for spam
It began with the promise of enhanced sexual performance
and, ergo, a rosy future. Such is the world of
pharmaceutical spam.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/st
ory.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10493997

**************************
ONLINE CRIME, SECURITY & LEGAL
**************************
au: Police unveil $1 million internet scam
Police have uncovered a $1 million internet scam with links
to Nigeria during a raid at a home in Perth's southern
suburbs. Western Australia Police Computer Crime Squad
detectives arrested a Nigerian citizen after raiding the
house in Treasure Road, Queens Park about 7pm (WDT)
yesterday.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/02/23/1203467446
367.html

**************************
PRIVACY
**************************
Australian judge on privacy: Computer code trumps the law
Technology has outpaced legal system's ability to regulate
its use in issues of privacy and fair use rights, says
Australian High Court judge. Australian High Court Judge
Justice Kirby says computer code is more potent than the
law--and that legislators are powerless to do anything about
it.
http://w
ww.news.com/2100-1029_3-6231713.html
http:
//news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6231713.html

NZ privacy review finds technology outpacing the law
Our world is very different from that of 1993, when the
Privacy Act first came into force, says the Law Commission
in a lengthy report that forms the first stage of a
“Review of the Law of Privacy”.
http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/new
s/0C3F5A9FC7C20905CC2573F000176D31

**********************
FILE SHARING
**********************
Hollywood and the internet: There will be blood - Hollywood
is doing its best to ignore the internet. That is a big
mistake
In 1948, when only one in ten Americans had seen a TV, Time
magazine sized up the new medium. Its quiz shows, cooking
lessons and vaudeville were perfectly watchable, it said,
but the films were awful. “The ancient cabbages that are
rolled across the telescreen every night are Hollywood's
curse on the upstart industry,” it wrote. “Televiewers,
sick of hoary Hoot Gibson oaters and antique spook comedies,
wonder when, if ever, they will see fresh, first-class
Hollywood films.”
http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory
.cfm?story_id=10723360

Hollywood and the internet: Coming soon - The internet could
be a boon for Hollywood—but only if it can conquer its
fears
To see what the future of film distribution might look like,
go to a website called ZML.com. It offers 1,700 films for
download to personal computers, iPods or other hand-held
devices, or to burn to DVD. It is inviting and easy to use,
with detailed descriptions of each movie, editors' picks,
customer reviews and screen stills. And the prices are
reasonable: “Atonement”, for instance, costs $2.99.
http://www.economist.com/opinion/displaystory
.cfm?story_id=10723360

UK government targets illegal downloading
The UK government is to consult on legislation to punish
internet service providers if they fail to take action
against the illegal downloading of music, films and TV
programmes. The culture secretary, Andy Burnham, made the
proposal to crack down on illegal downloading today as part
of a wide-ranging strategy paper designed to support the
UK's creative industries
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/feb/22/digitalmedia


UK filesharing law 'unworkable'
Any move by the government to introduce legislation that
forces the UK's broadband providers to police the internet
by clamping down on illegal sharing of copyrighted music and
movies would be technologically unworkable and create a
legal minefield, experts have warned.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/feb/22/fil
esharing

ISPs given deadline for file-sharing crackdown
Whitehall has told ISPs they have until April next year to
crack down on file-sharing of copyrighted material. The
Department of Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform
(BERR) said on Friday that while the emphasis was on ISPs
and industry working together voluntarily, the deadline
would apply if that failed to happen.
http://news.zdnet.
co.uk/internet/0,1000000097,39336514,00.htm

UK ISPs must not be turned into police
For the average teenager, about the only thing worse than
losing a supply of free, pirated music from the internet
would be losing access to the internet altogether. That may
happen under plans in France, and now in the UK, to make
internet service providers responsible for stopping users
who illegally download copyright material. But sanctions
against users should only be allowed after legal due
process.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/69302c5a-e17a-11dc-
a302-0000779fd2ac.html

Euro MPs want criminal penalties for downloaders
The European Parliament has asked EU member states to press
ahead with a plan to criminalise copyright infringement. The
Parliament wants a proposal it agreed last year to be
approved by ministers from each member state. The proposed
EU directive would create new rules on copyright protection,
and would require each EU country to pass laws criminalising
intellectual property infringement. It must be approved by
the Council of Ministers before it takes effect.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/22/eu_wants_ip_a
ction/

MySpace seeks joint ventures for iTunes rival
MySpace, part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corp empire, is
trying to tie up deals with a number of record labels to
produce its own digital music service to compete with
Apple's iTunes. Tentatively dubbed MySpace Music, the
service would let users of the MySpace site play music on
their computers while logged onto the site. They would also
be able to buy and download tracks free of copyright
protection.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/feb/21/m
yspace.apple

uk: ISPs could face piracy sanctions
ISPs must take concrete steps to curb illegal downloads or
face legal sanctions, the government has said. The proposal
is aimed at tackling the estimated 6m UK broadband users who
download files illegally every year.
htt
p://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7258437.stm

**********************
CENSORSHIP
**********************
Close of Wikileaks website raises free speech concerns
Internet activists this week gave a Swiss bank and a San
Francisco judge a powerful demonstration of the
"Streisand Effect." That's Internet jargon for any
effort to suppress online information that backfires by
drawing much wider publicity.
h
ttp://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0222/p02s02-usgn.html

Stifling Online Speech
[New York Times editorial] Wikileaks claims to have posted
more than a million corporate and government documents that,
it says, expose wrongdoing. It has posted, among other
things, a 2003 operations manual from the Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba, military prison. Julius Baer Bank and Trust, a Cayman
Islands branch of a Swiss bank, sued Wikileaks charging that
it had illegally posted documents stolen by a former
employee. The site said the documents “allegedly reveal
secret Julius Baer trust structures” for money laundering,
tax evasion and other misdeeds.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/21/opinion/21thu3.html

Pakistan blocks YouTube website
Pakistan has blocked access to the popular YouTube website
because of content deemed offensive to Islam. Its
telecommunications authority ordered internet service
providers to block the site until further notice.
htt
p://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7261727.stm

China asks Web sites to eradicate porn and violence
[Reuters]
China has called on domestic Web sites to sign a voluntary
pact governing online video and audio content, saying they
should exercise self-censorship to ensure a "healthy
and orderly" cyberspace.
http://computerworld.co
m/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9
064059
http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/id
UKPEK2316520080222
http:
//news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-6231699.html

Jail for Facebook spoof Moroccan
A Moroccan computer engineer has been sentenced to three
years in jail for setting up a Facebook profile in the name
of a member of the royal family.
http://
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7258950.stm

Malaysian bloggers warned being monitored: report [AFP]
A Malaysian government minister has accused bloggers, who
have been writing avidly on upcoming elections, of being
cowards and warned they are being monitored, a report said
Friday.
http://news.smh.com.au
/malaysian-bloggers-warned-being-monitored-report/20080223-1
u3c.html
http://news.theage.
com.au/malaysian-bloggers-warned-being-monitored-report/2008
0223-1u3c.html
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/afp/2008
0222/ttc-malaysia-vote-internet-0de2eff_1.html

Europe makes moves toward Internet censorship
Privacy advocates worry that filtering Internet sites
related to piracy, terrorism, and child pornography will
have serious effects on the freedom to communicate
http://www.infowo
rld.com/article/08/02/22/Europe-makes-moves-towards-Internet
-censorship_1.html

Japan's pornography laws - Fleshing it out
Penises protruding from leather stirrups. Testicles tied up
in twine. Sometimes violent, sometimes serene, the
homosexual erotic photography of Robert Mapplethorpe is
anything but easy. But is it obscenity or art? On February
19th Japan's Supreme Court ruled that it is the latter, and
that Takashi Asai of Uplink, the publisher, could legally
sell a book of the artist's black-and-white
portraits—mostly of flowers and stars, such as Arnold
Schwarzenegger showing off in his swimming trunks in 1976.
http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displa
ystory.cfm?story_id=10727970

************************************************
CHILD PROTECTION, FILTERING & CONTENT REGULATION
************************************************
uk: 'Happy slapping' teenager convicted
Police warned yesterday that those who take part in the
trend of filming violent attacks on their mobile phones will
not escape the law, after the first conviction was secured
against a teenager who recorded a so-called "happy
slapping" incident.
http://www.independent.c
o.uk/news/uk/crime/happy-slapping-teenager-convicted-782558.
html

Crack down on cyberbullies - MP
Social networking websites are being used by
"cyberbullies" and do not remove offensive
material fast enough, an MP has claimed.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/7255897.stm

au: Conroy's filtering can't fix Web 2.0 demons
Web 2.0 services pose the biggest risk to Australian kids --
and current filtering technologies aren't up to the job of
protecting them, according to a report released yesterday.
"Risks to Australian youth are primarily the risks that
are associated with Web 2.0 services -- potential contact by
sexual predators, cyber-bullying by peers and misuse of
personal information," the Australian Communications
and Media Authority's (ACMA) report said.
http://www.zdnet.co
m.au/news/communications/soa/Conroy-s-filtering-can-t-fix-We
b-2-0-demons/0,130061791,339286225,00.htm

Conroy: Internet has parents out of their depth
Parents expect the government and the tech industry to give
them a hand in protecting their children from inappropriate
content, according to Federal Broadband Minister Stephen
Conroy.
http://www.zdnet
.com.au/news/communications/soa/Conroy-Internet-has-parents-
out-of-their-depth/0,130061791,339286211,00.htm

au: Police warn parents about networking site dangers
Queensland police are urging parents to ensure children are
more security conscious when using online social networking
sites.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/22/2169895.h
tm

au: Netalert a “Failure”
The Howard government’s Netalert software filtration
scheme is on the chopping block, with the Rudd government
declaring the $84 million initiative a failure.
http://www.id
m.net.au/story.asp?id=9338

Conroy green-lights ISP filter and $4.7B broadband plan at
first industry address
Senator Stephen Conroy gave his first major address to the
IT industry as the new Minister for Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy at a gala dinner
event Thursday night where he outlined the Government’s
future ICT goals including its fibre-based broadband plans,
digital education reform and ISP-level filtering.
http://www.itnews
.com.au/News/70633,conroy-greenlights-isp-filter-and-47b
-broadband-plan-at-first-industry-address.aspx

**************************
GOVERNMENT & PUBLIC POLICY
**************************
"Intellectual property" is a silly euphemism
"Intellectual property" is one of those
ideologically loaded terms that can cause an argument just
by being uttered. The term wasn't in widespread use until
the 1960s, when it was adopted by the World Intellectual
Property Organization, a trade body that later attained
exalted status as a UN agency.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/
feb/21/intellectual.property

European privacy advocates to issue report in April
[Bloomberg]
Search engine powers like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft will
have to wait until April to find out what changes they must
make to comply with European Union privacy laws. Data
protection officials from 30 European countries ended a
two-day meeting Wednesday and agreed that search engines
needed to make changes, but would not release a final report
until April, said Hans Tischler, a member of the Article 29
Data Protection Working Party.
http://iht.com/articles/2008/02/20/business/google.php

EU data privacy regulators say Internet search engines must
follow EU rules [AP]
European data privacy regulators said Thursday that Internet
search engines based outside Europe must also comply with EU
rules on how a person's Internet address or search history
is stored.
http://w
ww.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_8325933
http://news.smh.com.au/eu-data-privacy-regulators-say-i
nternet-search-engines-must-follow-eu-rules/20080222-1tt6.ht
ml
http://news.theage.com.au/eu-data-privacy-regulators
-say-internet-search-engines-must-follow-eu-rules/20080222-1
tt6.html
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bi
n/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/02/21/financial/f115423S36.DTL

UK orders broadband future review
The government has said it will review the future of
broadband internet in the UK amid calls that it should help
firms pay for installing new infrastructure.
http:
//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7258934.stm

*********************************
COMMENT, MICROSOFT & DEVELOPMENTS
*********************************
Microsoft Speaks Out on Yahoo
Jerry Yang, Chief Executive of Yahoo!, has made good use of
e-mail and video to give his colleagues pep talks about why
he isn't ready to team up with Microsoft. Now it seems
Microsoft executives are taking a cue and doing the same.
Friday afternoon, Kevin Johnson, president of Microsoft's
Platforms & Services division--the group that would be
most intimately affected by the proposed merger--sent this
note to Microsoft employees.
http://www.forbe
s.com/technology/2008/02/22/microsoft-yahoo-google-tech-ebiz
-cx_ec_0222msft.html

Rivals flag up market share to fight Microsoft-Yahoo! merger
A successful Microsoft bid for Yahoo! would create an
internet company with a three-quarters share in web mail and
instant messaging – figures that rivals are expected to
use in an attempt to derail any merger between the two
companies. Microsoft and Yahoo! have roughly equal shares of
the webmail market, with each attracting about 260 million
visitors worldwide in January, according to data supplied by
Comscore. Yahoo! Mail is the market leader, with
Microsoft’s Windows Live Hotmail close behind.
http://business.tim
esonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/arti
cle3419923.ece

Microsoft to Share More Technical Secrets
Seeking to satisfy European antitrust officials, Microsoft
said Thursday that it would open up and share many more of
its technical secrets with the rest of the software industry
and competitors.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/21/technology/21cnd-s
oft.html

Microsoft set to open up software
Microsoft has announced that it will open up the technology
of some of its leading software to make it easier to operate
with rivals' products.
http:
//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7257411.stm

Microsoft commits to sharing with open source, rivals
Microsoft Corp. today made public more than 30,000 pages of
documentation for Windows protocols and APIs -- information
previously available only under special licenses -- one of
several changes in how it deals with open-source developers
and software rivals.
http://computerworld.co
m/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9
063838

**********************
MOBILE/WIRELESS
**********************
Femtocells or Wi-Fi? That is the Question
Femtocell frenzy is how one paper described the Mobile World
Congress Show in Barcelona last week, but at the Portable
Computer and Communications Association meeting held Tuesday
and Wednesday in Plano, Texas, the solution to the fixed
part of fixed-to-mobile convergence seemed to be Wi-Fi.
http://gigaom.com/2008/02/21/femtocells-or
-wi-fi-that-is-the-question/

**********************
VoIP
**********************
T-Mobile Gets Scrappy With Cheap VoIP Service
T-Mobile confirmed Thursday it is testing an Internet-based
calling plan meant to replace traditional land lines, a move
that came just a day after it joined key rivals in
announcing a flat-rate mobile plan that could help change
the economics of the wireless industry. The new VoIP
service, Talk Forever, lets mobile customers pay an
additional $10 per month for unlimited at-home calling. It
would require the users to purchase a router from T-Mobile,
but the low price point could prove appealing.
http://ecommercetimes.co
m/story/T-Mobile-Gets-Scrappy-With-Cheap-VoIP-Service-61783.
html

**********************************
ARRESTS/COURT CASES FOR CHILD PORN
**********************************
Sydney man arrested after FBI tip off
A Sydney man has become the second person to be charged with
child pornography offences after a tip-off from the US
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
http://news.theage.com.au/sydn
ey-man-arrested-after-fbi-tip-off/20080221-1ton.html

nz: Ex-MP candidate to face child porn trial
Strict bail conditions have been imposed on a former
parliamentary hopeful sent for trial today on child
pornography charges.
http://www.stu
ff.co.nz/4410280a10.html

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