Posts tagged YouTube

Tahiticora XBox Video | Geekosystem

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f you’ve been following the gaming blogs lately, you may have come across the semi-NSFW video of a scantily clad, giftedly-bootied model called Tahiticora suggestively playing a racing game on the XBox (video after the jump). The video has gone viral: since it was posted on YouTube on February 19th, it has already netted more than 150,000 pageviews.

But the video left many questions unanswered: Is it a viral ad of some sort? Does anyone really play XBox like that? And is Tahiticora really a bona fide XBox fan? Geekosystem investigates:We briefly chatted with Tahiticora (real name: Coralie Teraiefa), who said that:

via Tahiticora XBox Video | Geekosystem.

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In the Internet TV race, Boxee and Roku could get a boost from adult video | Technology | Los Angeles Times

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YouTube on the big screen is great, but what about YouPorn?

Relative newcomers to the battle to bring the Internet into the living room could get an unexpected boost from the adult entertainment industry. The current competitors in the set-top-box space are in a slow push-and-tug, tit-for-tat exchange from which no clear winner has emerged.

Apple TV has the advantages of a brick-and-mortar distribution channel, the digital distribution of iTunes and the still-underutilized advertising might of Apple Inc.

via In the Internet TV race, Boxee and Roku could get a boost from adult video | Technology | Los Angeles Times.

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The iPhone app that lets you see your friends naked | Technically Incorrect – CNET News

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People need many things right now, but surely nothing more than the ability to spontaneously see through the clothing of another.

You know this is true. So do the other-oriented folks at Presselite. For they want you to share their pride in an application creation called Nude It, which was approved by the Apple store Komsomol Tuesday.

Antoine Morcos, co-founder of Presselite, admitted in a press release that the creators’ inspiration in the development of this astounding technology came from the WhoIsTheBaldGuyBlog. I have embedded a YouTube video in order to give you some relief from feeling that you inhabit a strange planet called Nexus One.

via The iPhone app that lets you see your friends naked | Technically Incorrect – CNET News.

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YouTube – Best Budlight Commercial Ever – Beer & Porn


Budweiser made this video exclusively for the web as part of their viral marketing campaign. Big time marketing firms understand the power of the web and are quickly jumping on board. If you doubt …

via YouTube – Best Budlight Commercial Ever – Beer & Porn.

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YouTube – This Week in Unnecessary Censorship

Jimmy Kimmel is no fan of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the regulatory body in charge of policing the airwaves. So each week he does a segment called “This Week In Unnecessary Censorship,” that takes normal every day language and makes it seems lewd by bleeping out words or phrases. As a result everything from “American Idol” to Elmo comes out dirty…and hilarious.

This week, Jimmy looked at incest on reality television, some inappropriate talk of police dogs on local news, and stripping on live TV. It’s all pretty disturbing for a Saturday morning.

– Huffington Post

YouTube – This Week in Unnecessary Censorship.

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YouTube – It’s like baseball, 3 Strikes & You’re Out!!

Hi all, we’re back!! Sorry we’ve been missing in action for a while, but things have been very busy for both of us lately, and now things have settled down & we are able to make videos again!! This video answers 2 questions from Anime9100 and Airlim. Enjoy!!

via YouTube – It’s like baseball, 3 Strikes & You’re Out!!.

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YouTube besieged by porn videos | Media | guardian.co.uk

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YouTube is deleting thousands of sexually explicit videos after it was hit by an organised attack yesterday in a prank known as “Porn Day”.

The video-sharing website, owned by Google, has removed most of the porn clips but some content could be available for days as YouTube deletes the offending material. The pranksters hid the porn amid innocent footage of celebrities such as Hannah Montana and Jonas Brothers.

Members of the 4Chan message board, which focuses mostly on Japanese anime and manga, have claimed responsibility for uploading the porn, apparently in response to YouTube’s stance on copyright music videos.

via YouTube besieged by porn videos | Media | guardian.co.uk.

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YouTube – Sasha Grey on Hustler’s This Ain’t Star Trek XXX

Sasha Grey on the set of Hustler’s “This Ain’t Star Trek XXX”

via YouTube – Sasha Grey on Hustler’s This Ain’t Star Trek XXX.

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Online Video – GigaOM – Salon.com

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By Liz Shannon Miller

According to legendary 19th century Russian playwright Anton Chekhov’s primary principle of drama, when two characters make a sex tape, it is an invariable conclusion that said sex tape will get accidentally sent to everyone they know. OK, yeah, Chekhov was actually talking about loaded guns, but when Steve (Brian Rabinowitz) convinces Katelynn (Beth O’Neill) to get intimate in front of their new digital camera in the first episode of Sexperts, you know this isn’t going to go well.

Developed and produced by the TV department of Columbia College Chicago (which offers a concentration in Internet and Mobile Media, if you’re considering a return to academia), Sexperts is so far a pretty tame sex comedy with a new twist on the sex tape reveal. Because as it turns out, the average small-town couple at the heart of this series is so amazing at sex that in subsequent episodes, the two of them become gurus for their orgasm-challenged friends, who only wish to learn from their example.

Unfortunately, in the first episode all we get is a taste of this premise, with the focus instead being put on Steve and Katelynn’s discovery that their private interlude has become much more public than anticipated, thanks to Steve mixing up his email attachments. How they discover this is also Sexperts‘ one big stab at innovation; when Katelynn installs Skype so they can video chat with other people in their small town, the couple finds out how far the tape has spread from their friends. Because their friends only need appear in the form of on-screen video, the producers were able to cast those roles from a geographically diverse range of YouTube celebrities, including Michael Buckley, Valentina of Val’s Art Diary, and Tony Huyin (thewinekone).

via Online Video – GigaOM – Salon.com.

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Facebook’s ‘Porn Cops’ Are Key to Its Growth | Newsweek Enterprise – Technology | Newsweek.com

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It’s just before lunchtime in the sunny, high-tech headquarters of Facebook in Palo Alto, Calif., and Simon Axten is cuing up some porn. A photo of a young couple sloppily making out pops onscreen. It’s gross, but not against the rules, so Axten punches a key to judge the image appropriate. Next up: a young woman in panties only, covering her breasts with her hands. “That’s pretty close,” Axten says, pondering the image. There’s nothing arbitrary about his judgments: at Facebook, they have developed semiformal policies like the Fully Exposed Butt Rule, the Crack Rule and the Nipple Rule. In this photo there’s no visible areola, he decides, so it stays. The next photo is a male clad only in a black thong and angel wings. Utterly nonplussed, Axten OKs the picture. After delivering a verdict on 75 of the 438,848 outstanding photos flagged by Facebook users—buff guy soaping up in the shower (OK); girl blowing an epic cloud of pot smoke (he deletes it); an underage user drinking from two liquor bottles at once (ditto)—Axten is off to a meeting. It’s just another day at the office of the world’s fastest-growing social-networking site.

At Facebook, Axten isn’t some fringe employee doing unmentionable work. The 26-year-old Stanford grad is one of some 150 people the young company employs to keep the site clean—out of a total head count of 850. Facebook describes these staffers as an internal police force, charged with regulating users’ decorum, hunting spammers and working with actual law-enforcement agencies to help solve crimes. Part hall monitors, part vice cops, these employees are key weapons in Facebook’s efforts to maintain its image as a place that’s safe for corporate advertisers—more so than predecessor social networks like Friendster and MySpace. “[They were] essentially shanghaied by pornography and sexual displays,” says David Kirkpatrick, author of the forthcoming book “The Facebook Effect.” It’s a tricky job: by insisting that users sign up under real names and refrain from posting R-rated photos, Facebook hopes to widen its user base to include upscale professionals, but at the same time it’s aware that too much heavy-handed censorship could upset its existing members. “If [Facebook] got polluted as just a place for wild and crazy kids, that would destroy the ability to achieve the ultimate vision, which is to create a service for literally everyone,” Kirkpatrick says—and then its potential for profits would disappear, too.

Internet companies have long grappled with illicit postings. As far back as 1993, AOL’s “community action teams” were reviewing e-mail and chat-room activity. Craigslist has long been beset by ads for prostitution; in November, the site began cooperating with attorneys general to curb posts to its “Erotic Services” section, and last month Boston police apprehended a med-school student later charged with murdering a woman who’d placed a “massage services” ad on the site. In 2005, as user-generated content platforms exploded at sites like YouTube, Flickr and Digg, the need to screen content grew rapidly as well, increasing demand for online cops.

via Facebook’s ‘Porn Cops’ Are Key to Its Growth | Newsweek Enterprise – Technology | Newsweek.com.

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