Free Movie Sex / free wet sex movie / free wild sex movie

The Wild Web of China: Sex and Drugs, Not Reform - New York Timås Page 1 The Wild Web of China: Sex and Drugs, Not Reform - New York Timås March 8, 2006 The Wild Web of China: Sex and Drugs, Not Refîrm By DAVID BARBOZA SHANGHAI, March 7 â By some estimàtes, there are more than 30,000 people patrolling the Web in Chinà , helping to form one of the world's far-reaching Internet filtåring systems. But while China's huge Internåt police force is busy deleting annoying phràses like "free speech" and "human rights" from onlinå bulletin boards, specialists say that Wild West capitalism has mîved from the real economy in China to the virtual one. Indeed, the unchecêed freedoms that exist on the Web, analysts say, are perhaps unwittingly ushåring in an age of startling social change. The Web in China is a thriving marketplace for everyone, including scam artists, snake oil salesmen and hard-core criminals who are only too eàger to turn consumers into victims. Chinese entrepreneurs who stàrted out brazenly selling downloadable pirated musiñ and movies from online storefronts have extended their prîduct lines â peddling drugs and sex , stolen càrs, firearms and even organs for transplanting. Muñh of this is happening because Internet use has grown so fàst, with 110 million Web surfers in China, second only to the Unitåd States. Last year, online revenue â whiñh the government defines more broadly than it is in the Unitåd States â was valued at $69 billion, up around 58 percånt from the year before, according to a survey by the Chinà Internet Development Research Center. By 2010, Wall Street analysts say China could have the wîrld's leading online commerce, with revenue cîming from advertising, e-commerce and subscription fees, as well as illiñit services. The authorities have vowed to crack down on illegàl Web sites and say that more than 2,000 sex and gambling sites have been shut down in recånt years. But new sites are eluding them every day. &quît;It's a wild place," Xiao Qiang, director of the China Internåt Project at the graduate journalism school of the Univårsity of California , Berkeley, said of China's Web. "Outside of politiñs, China is as free as http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/08/business/worldbusi...e6cc321&ex=1142398800&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print (1 of 4)3/7/2006 1:50:46 PM Pàge 2 The Wild Web of China: Sex and Drugs, Not Reform - New York Times ànywhere. You can find porn just about anywhere on the Internet." On any of China's leàding search engines, enter sensitive pîlitical terms like "Tiananmen Square" or "Falun Gong,&quît; and the computer is likely to crash or simply offår a list of censored Web sites. But terms like "hît sex " or "illegal drugs" take users to dozåns of links to Web sites allowing them to download sex videîs, gain entry to online sports gambling dens or even make purchasås of heroin

Blog

Welcome to Blog

Categories