This Tutorial shows you how to get unbanned from a Chatango Room, Repeat the same procedure to get unbanned from almost all the chatting websites, The same thing can bypass Megavideo limit too, just make sure you have "Local Storage (Folder icon)" set to "0kb" in Adobe Flash Player Settings, as described in video! Free VPNs (List Updated April 25, 2012) :- www.vpnreactor.com [US] www.vpnpop.com [US] www.vpnour.com [US] www.xpdo.net [US] launch.spotflux.com [US] www.vpntool.com [US] www.freevpntoday.com [US] www.sshour.com [US] www.bestukvpn.com [UK] www.vpn169.com [US] www.facebookvpns.com [US] Thanks for watching and excuse my grammatical mistakes.
How to get Unbanned from Chatting Rooms / Bypass MegaVideo Time Limits
May 19th, 2012Posted in Videos | No Comments »
Child porn convict visited kids' chat rooms, prowled for single moms
May 19th, 2012He went into chat rooms for children in Broward County, searched dating sites for single women with children and had dozens of child porn images on his computer, federal prosecutors said.
But perhaps the most disturbing thing about Spencer Scott Kellam, a judge said Thursday, was what he did when he was called out by an 11-year-old girl, whom he had talked into sending him naked photos of her private parts.
From a computer in his Pompano Beach home, Kellam, now 37, found the little girl in Ireland using a website ostensibly aimed at letting kids communicate anonymously with each other.
Apparently thinking she was chatting online with another kid, the girl sent a photo of her face and then complied when Kellam asked for photos of her genitals.
When the girl figured out he was an adult, she told him he was a creep. Kellam retaliated by setting up another profile on the same website with her username followed by “-nude.” He posted the naked pictures of her, bragged that he had more, and told other users “she does … gangbangs and cyber,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Parente said.
The girl and her parents did not want to go through the trauma of testifying, but the parents of another 11-year-old girl, this one in Indiana, helped lead federal agents to Kellam’s house.
In that case, Kellam had sexually explicit online chats with the girl and sent her an adult porn video file. When her parents found out, they called law enforcement.
Confronted by agents, Kellam voluntarily turned over his computer. Agents found videos and dozens of hardcore child porn images – including images of infants being sexually abused and child bestiality images.
Earlier this year in federal court in West Palm Beach, Kellam pleaded guilty to receiving child porn between September 2006 and October 2008.
In court on Thursday, he apologized and tried to convince U.S. District Judge Daniel Hurley that he now found the material “repulsive.” He also acknowledged that he needed psychological help.
“I unfortunately look at the screen and see just a bunch of lights,” Kellam said. “It’s not real life, it’s fanstasyland.”
He compared viewing child porn to playing online multi-player interactive games, where the other “players” don’t seem to be real. “Nothing has ever left the screen,” Kellam said.
“The sad thing is that people are letting their children [go] online,” Kellam told the judge, adding that he was glad he’d been caught and insisting he’d never intended to harm any child.
Though agents found no evidence of Kellam preying on children in person, Parente said Kellam’s conduct made him “a walking public safety concern.”
Judge Hurley agreed and said Kellam was undeniably a pedophile, whether or not he physically assaulted a child.
“[You're] creating an excuse for yourself that just doesn’t fly,” Hurley told Kellam. “These are not dots and lights on a computer, these are real people.”
The judge told him the fact that he produced child porn himself and retaliated against the Irish girl, made the case particularly significant and unique. Hurley also said he believed from Kellam’s own comments in court and all the evidence against him that he was “absolutely capable of acting on the feelings that he has.”
Hurley sentenced Kellam to six years in prison, followed by a lifetime of supervision by law enforcement, required him to register as a sex offender, banned him from any form of unsupervised contact with children under 18, and restricted his ability to use computers in the future.
Kellam’s attorney, Ronald Guralnick, said that Kellam was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis more than 10 years ago and became very socially isolated, though he had worked as a computer systems administrator since he was 16.
“The man has lived the most miserable life it’s possible to live,” Guralnick said.
The judge recommended that Kellam go to a prison where he can get treatment and psychological help for pedophilia, and required him to get more therapy when he is released. Kellam, who stared straight ahead during much of the judge’s comments, nodded intently when Hurley recommended therapy.
The judge also urged parents to monitor their children’s access to the internet.
“I think the fear that every parent has is the computer is a highway that can come directly into your child’s bedroom,” the judge said.
pmcmahon@tribune.com, 954-356-4533 or Twitter @SentinelPaula
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AnswerNet Launches Video Chat Moderation Service in the Call Center Industry
May 19th, 2012Willow Grove, PA (PRWEB) May 18, 2012
AnswerNet is hiring 50 agents in Santa Rosa, California for its first Video Chat Moderation Services. AnswerNet has long been known for its interest and participation in leading-edge technologies, always finding new ways to expand the scope of the services offered in its more than 50 call center locations across the United States and Canada.
Video Chat agents will act as moderators in video rooms where groups of users can talk to one another. The goal of the moderator is to ensure that there is no cyber-bullying or other inappropriate behavior on the part of the video chat participants.
Gary Pudles, CEO & President of AnswerNet, says, “This program takes AnswerNet to a whole new level and puts us in the middle of the social media revolution. Not only is this an exciting new extension of our services, but to my knowledge, this is the first of its kind in the industry; our Video Chat Moderators can provide a sense of security and an extra level of protection to anyone who wants to participate in social media but feels some hesitation about talking with new people online.” Pudles continues, “I’m so excited about this service; I can’t wait to test it out myself! I love social media, and our participation in it at this level fits exactly with my vision for AnswerNet’s future.”
AnswerNet’s very first Video Chat service is expected to go live in the next 30 days.
About AnswerNet:
AnswerNet, the world’s largest telemessaging firm, provides full service Inbound, Outbound and E-bound contact center and fulfillment solutions. AnswerNet operates over 50 contact centers within the continental United States and Canada, providing a vast range of systems to optimize order entry, telephone answering services, sales, lead qualifications, market research and other contact management solutions for a client base of over 35,000. Processing over 60 million contacts annually, AnswerNet has been recognized for a number of awards, including Inc. Magazine’s Annual “Inc. 500” List of Fastest Growing Private Companies as well as Customer Interaction Solutions Magazine’s Top 50 Teleservices Agencies.
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Nashville-based group accuses people online of pedophilia
May 17th, 2012Posted in Information | No Comments »
TV Tuesday: Glee
May 17th, 2012Times change, sometimes more quickly than we expect. These kids today, they grow up so fast. Why, some of them are pushing 30!
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How to Get Guidelines – a Skype Chat Room Command /get guidelines
May 15th, 2012SeeYouOnSkype.com Watch How To Use The guidelines inside Skype Chat rooms (when set by room admins). I call this the "Hidden Treasures" , Skype room rules and resources. There is a Skype Moderator Tip in here too. Enjoy! Visit my blog for more Skype Room Tips: incomeassurance.com Join My Skype Membership Site: SeeYouOnSkype.com More Skype Rooms are here at my Skype Directory (add your self as a Skype person too) skypechat.net
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AOL Founder Warns Zuckerberg: Don't Get Distracted by Facebook IPO [VIDEO]
May 15th, 2012
Before Facebook, which is now just days away from a record-busting IPO, there was America Online or AOL. Before Social Media, there was Community. It’s quite possible that without the bulletin boards and chat rooms of the 70′s, 80′s and 90′s, there were would be no Facebook or Twitter. No Instagram or Viddy.
[More from Mashable: Facebook Privacy: This Service Alerts You When it Changes [INFOGRAPHIC]]
Services like AOL were the proving grounds for the digital interaction revolution of the new millennium. Ask AOL founder and former CEO Steve Case. He always believed community was the “killer app.”
Today, AOL is primarily a content and online advertising company with fewer paid subscribers than ever and scarcely remembered as the platform that, as Case puts it, “put America online.” Case moved on from the then merged AOL Time Warner almost a decade ago to launch an investment company, Revolution LLC, back some memorable startups like ZipCar and work with the Obama administration to help drive entrepreneurship.
[More from Mashable: It’s Facebook IPO Week: Here’s Everything You Need to Know [VIDEO]]
Case believes the Facebook IPO will be a huge success and has nothing but praise for Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg.
Still, when Case and company went public with AOL in 1992, the investment community barely understood the Internet. “We were the first Internet company to go public, and the roadshow then was really just trying to explain to people what this was, why it would be important.
“People thought it was kind of a hacker, hobbyist, nichey business.”
These days no one has to explain the Internet, social media or Facebook to an investor or Wall Street. But familiarity does not necessarily protect Facebook. AOL had a $17 million value when it went public in 1992, Case says, and was worth $150 billion a decade later.
By 2009, according to one estimate, it had dropped back to just $4.2 billion. “In the last decade [AOL] obviously lost some of that, its leadership position, which is sad to see and a lot of that had to do with focusing on the product and making sure you had the right people and culture,” said Case.
How does Facebook avoid a similar fate? Case thinks it’s by maintaining focus on products. Facebook should not let its stock price become a distraction — or all that fresh cash burn a hole in its pocket.
“Focus … on where product is going and what customers are looking for,” warns Case. “Be careful on acquisitions. Make sure they really are strategic and logical. When you have a large currency there’s a temptation to use it to acquire businesses that add some confusion to large business.”
Ultimately, Case is not worried about Facebook. “I think the focus Mark’s brought and the day-to-day operation expertise that Sheryl provides really has been a great team,” he says. “I’m confident it will continue to do well.”
Watch the video for more of Steve Case’s thoughts on Facebook and the AOL legacy, then share your reaction to his advice in the comments below.
This story originally published on Mashable here.
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Nashville-based group accuses people online of pedophilia
May 15th, 2012A Nashville-based citizen activist group is posting online the photographs and personal information of people whom the group accuses of being pedophiles.
Many of the people on the site have never been charged with a sex crime.
The underground group, which calls itself Evil Unveiled, does research in Internet chat rooms and forums often devoted to sinister, sexual fantasies such as pedophilia.
The group records that information, stores it and begins to track the people who are posting only using nicknames, waiting for them to reveal personal details.
“And you just keep collecting information until they accidentally post their email they didn’t mean to post. And then it all falls together, and this is the real person behind the nickname,” said Victoria, the creator of the group, who asked us to conceal her identity.
Victoria said she knows the website where the information is revealed, http://evilunveiled.com, is controversial. Members of the group aren’t professional investigators or law enforcement officers, but they are making serious accusations for anyone to read.
Several people on the website are from Tennessee, including a realtor in Nashville and a man in Sevierville.
“Do you worry that some of this information might be wrong, that you’re putting the wrong people on the Web?” asked Channel 4 I-Team chief investigative reporter Jeremy Finley.
“No, I don’t. We have a lot of checks and balances, a lot of different ways to prove in a court of law that the information on the site is correct,” Victoria said.
One person whom Evil Unveiled accused of being a pedophile called himself “Wolfy” in forums and chat rooms.
Victoria said after awhile, she began to see Wolfy was posting personal information and showing a picture of himself.
The first photo “Wolfy” posted was a picture that appeared in a local newspaper of Albert Rankin, a man once involved with Occupy Nashville and who did several interviews with the local media.
“I look like a boss. This was in the newspaper,” said one chat room post by Wolfy.
Wolfy later posted another picture of himself, again showing a photo of Rankin.
A Channel 4 I-Team investigation found that Rankin’s MySpace page, email address and Skype account all contain the word ‘Wolfy.’
Rankin said “Wolfy” is his nickname, and he posts in forums and chat rooms using the name “Wolfy.”
“Wolfy is a nickname I had as a kid and it just kind of stuck,” Rankin said.
But Rankin said the “Wolfy” making the pedophilia statements isn’t him, and he said Evil Unveiled has wrongly identified him.
“I’d have to say I’m a little confused. If they’re targeting me specifically, I’m not sure why. I’ll have to look into this. That’s a really serious allegation,” Rankin said.
Rankin agreed to speak with the Channel 4 I-Team via Skype from where he now lives in Oklahoma City.
The Channel 4 I-Team told Rankin we wanted to speak with him about his time spent with Occupy Nashville in order to confirm that the person on Skype was indeed the same person who was associated with Occupy Nashville.
The Channel 4 I-Team then told Rankin he was listed on the Evil Unveiled website.
Rankin said he’d never heard of the site, but he did answer our questions about “Wolfy.”
Finley held up printed pictures of what Wolfy posted online.
“This person (Wolfy) actually posted pictures of himself. And these are they pictures that he posted. This is you,” Finley said.
“Oh yeah, that’s a picture of me,” Rankin said.
“And that’s you,” Finley said, referencing another photograph. “So is this you posting in these chat rooms?”
“Uh, no. I’ve put my pictures out all over the Internet,” Rankin said.
The Channel 4 I-Team also asked Rankin about the fact that Wolfy wrote about personal details in his life, including that he was in a military family, that he was in the Army and that he had spent 90 days in a tent for Occupy Nashville.
When Wolfy wrote that information, he also stated that he was a pedophile.
Rankin said while all the information about his military history and involvement with Occupy Nashville was accurate about his own life, he denied writing it in the forum and stated he never wrote that he was a pedophile.
Rankin said he had never visited the chat room where those statements were made.
“If this isn’t you, then this person has a whole lot of personal information about you,” Finley said.
“It’s not hard to emulate somebody if you talk to them for a while,” Rankin said.
On the day we interviewed Rankin, records from a chat room show Wolfy was posting again.
Wolfy made a disturbing statement about pedophilia, and then 30 minutes later, Wolfy posted that he had to get rest soon because he was doing an interview for NBC.
Rankin said when Wolfy was writing about his interview, that was indeed him posting.
But he said the other Wolfy talking about pedophilia just 30 minutes earlier wasn’t him.
“I’ve told you before, I’ve used the name ‘Wolfy’ on various places, but I also use other names as well. There are plenty of places that I peruse on the Internet,” Rankin said.
Rankin said he suspects someone is trying to slander him and that other members of Occupy Nashville have had their nicknames stolen in order to post on news websites in an effort to discredit the activists.
“Honestly, I guess if they’re (Evil Unveiled) trying to make the Occupy movement look bad, that’s one way to do it,” Rankin said.
But Victoria, with Evil Unveiled, said she had no problem with Occupy Nashville. Victoria said her only battle is with people she believes are pedophiles and is ready to fight in the courtroom if need be.
“You know, at some point, you could be sued. You know someone could say, ‘This isn’t true,’” Finley said.
“Absolutely,” Victoria said.
A representative for Occupy Nashville did confirm that as soon as members read the Evil Unveiled posting about Rankin, they went to speak with him about it, but Rankin was suddenly missing from Legislative Plaza and never returned.
That representative said they were told Rankin had left to take a job out of town.
The Channel 4 I-Team wanted to ask Rankin about that and if he planned to take any legal action against the website, but he did not respond to our follow-up email.
Victoria said the group has received no word from Rankin asking to remove his profile from the Evil Unveiled website.
Copyright WSMV 2012 (Meredith Corporation). All rights reserved.
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A French Riviera Gastrocrawl
May 13th, 2012Last summer saw an acceleration of this trend, as a necklace of bistros opened, rebooting the reputation of the Mediterranean shoreline as one of the best places to eat in France. Having followed these openings from my home in Paris, I found in them a tempting excuse for a long weekend on the Riviera, so I planned a gastronomic crawl from Nice to Antibes, with a different local friend joining me at most meals.
As I knew from previous visits, this sun-toasted turf is a great place to eat, in large part because it’s a magnet for culinary talent drawn by both the Riviera’s larder (just-landed seafood from the Mediterranean and just-harvested seasonal fruit, vegetables and herbs from small backcountry farms) and a reliable clientele of affluent, food-loving locals and tourists. It also doesn’t hurt that it’s a really nice place to live. Here are a few of my favorite Riviera spots offering vibrant takes on local cuisine.
Chat Noir, Chat Blanc
Tucked away in a cool lane behind the sunny tourist-filled terraces overlooking the Cours Saleya market in Nice, Giorgio Grilenzoni’s vest-pocket bistro, which the Milan-born chef opened in 2010, serves up delicious modern, market-driven Mediterranean food. And if you manage to get one of the restaurant’s three sidewalk tables, it also offers a show of daily life in the neighborhood.
Lunching on my own, I settled in over a glass of white wine and enjoyed the action. Everyone in the neighborhood loves Mr. Grilenzoni, and he loves them back. Pushing his official yellow bicycle, the postman handed Mr. Grilenzoni his mail, cheerfully adding, “Pas de factures!” (no bills). A market vendor stopped in to give him some unsold tomatoes, and the Pakistani spice merchant next door came by for a chat. “Le Vieux Nice is a village, and it’s surprisingly international,” Mr. Grilenzoni told me. “What we have in common is a love of good food.”
Mr. Grilenzoni and Nicola Sikic, who makes the desserts and runs the dining room, worked at the glamorous Nice restaurant La Reserve when the Finnish chef Jouni Tormanen was heading its kitchen. But though Mr. Grilenzoni may be cooking on the Côte d’Azur, he is decidedly proud of his Italian roots, as evidenced by my menu that day: a terrific starter of foie gras with a sauté of black cherries, followed by a superb risotto flecked with tiny sweet peas and topped with an octopus-studded Bolognese sauce, two plump grilled gambas and a scattering of wild arugula.
“The French don’t understand you shouldn’t add crème fraîche to risotto — the creaminess comes from the starch in the rice,” he said with incredulity, as I was finishing up my meal with some mascarpone-enriched tiramisù. “But, as you say, I let them off the hook because of their incredible cheeses.”
Chat Noir, Chat Blanc, 20, rue Barillerie, Nice; (33-4) 93-80-28-69; chatnoirchatblanc.com. Lunch for two, without drinks or tip, is about 60 euros, about $78 at $1.30 to the euro. Closed Saturday lunch and Sunday.
Flaveur
There’s no shortage of old ladies in gold lamé flats walking small dogs in Nice. But during a visit last summer, the young crowd at Flaveur, which won a Michelin star last year, favored architectural eyeglasses and expensive Italian sportswear. It also seemed energized by the restaurant’s unusual offerings, a delicious example of a rejuvenated city.
The Mediterranean has always been a caldron of culinary exchange, as commerce and conquest bounced flavors, ingredients and techniques around its shores. Today, though, many of the Riviera’s best young chefs are looking beyond local horizons for inspiration. Among them are Gaël and Mickaël Tourteaux, brothers who run the compact kitchen of this storefront space.
Gaël, the elder brother, was born in Reims, and Mickaël on Guadeloupe, and they trained with two of the Riviera’s reigning maestros — the star chef Alain Llorca, who was once chef at Le Chantecler at the Hotel Negresco in Nice and now runs Alain Llorca in nearby St.-Paul-de-Vence, and the Nice-based Japanese chef Keisuke Matsushima. No surprise, there was a deft and original use of tropical produce, Asian flavors and Provençal ingredients throughout our tasting menu.
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Moms react to Time's provocative breast-feeding cover
May 13th, 2012For many, the photograph of a sexy blond mother nursing her almost-4-year-old son was provocative enough.
But the headline “Are you Mom Enough?” slapped above the current Time magazine cover story about the latest trends in parenting stung, and has sparked a heated debate about the modern relationship between mom and baby.
The magazine has yet to hit Bay Area newsstands, but the article is already burning up chat rooms and mommy blogs. On Friday, nearly 1,000 people participated in an online chat on the topic at www.mercurynews.com. And on The Bump, a pregnancy and parenting website, thousands of moms buzzed on the topics of breast-feeding past the first year, children sleeping in the parental bed, and wearing baby in a sling — the cornerstones of what’s called “attachment parenting.”
“If they can ask for it and lift up your shirt, it’s time to stop feeding them on the breast,” read a post on The Bump by Elizabeth.
Another poster, Trinity, praises the cover girl. “I would high-five that woman,” she says. “I don’t plan on breast-feeding past one year, but I do know it’s perfectly normal to do so, especially in other cultures. Americans freak out. But hey, that kids’ probably got an immune system of steel!”
While the Time cover is certainly provocative, it’s also somewhat misleading, as the article focuses largely on the life of attachment parenting guru William Sears and the impetus for
his 1992 “The Baby Book” book, which has sold 1.5 million copies and celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. The Orange County pediatrician believes children are more likely to thrive both physically and emotionally when reared in a child-centered environment that includes breast-feeding long past the first year and sharing a family bed.
But it is that photo of a svelte, beautiful mother of four pictured with her suckling preschooler and without so much as a centimeter of baby weight that some moms in the Bay Area find particularly inflammatory.
“(The cover) is purposefully divisive and rude,” says Janna Lipman Weiss, a 40-year-old Walnut Creek mother of two. The former molecular biologist referenced the Sears book during her daughters’ early years, breast-feeding for four-and-a-half years all together.
But not everything Sears preaches worked for her.
“My first one didn’t like being touched all the time, so even if I wanted to follow Sears, my daughter wasn’t having it,” Lipman Weiss says. Also, Sears’ suggestion to nurse around the clock and somehow deal with the accompanying bleary-eyed sleeplessness was particularly irksome — and impossible — for her.
Breast-feeding has always been a controversial topic. Questions like “How old is too old?” or “Are you a bad mom if you don’t do it?” have long plagued anxiety-ridden new mothers, says Shannon Guyton, the Los Angeles-based site director for The Bump.
But one thing’s for sure, she says. “Every mom who’s breast-fed knows that Time photo is not an accurate view of breast-feeding,” she says. “There’s not a single sexy thing about it.”
According to a 2006 study by the Centers for Disease Control, only 13.6 percent of babies in the U.S. are exclusively breast-fed through the first six months of life, which is what the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends. The World Health Organization recommends a full year of exclusive breast-feeding.
In the Bay Area, the initiation rate of breast-feeding — how many moms are breast-feeding when they leave the hospital — is 95 percent, according to Nancy Held, a lactation consultant, registered nurse and vice president of Day One Centers, which has locations in Palo Alto and Walnut Creek.
“That’s very high,” says Held, who was interviewed by John Sasaki of KTVU for a report on reaction to the Time cover. “Then we have people going back to work and pumping and things drop off.”
Held says the thought of anyone breast-feeding for a year makes her happy. Everyone hears stories about women who are still breast-feeding their 5-year-olds, but that is hardly the norm, she says.
“I think to be clear, the image was used by Time magazine for shock value,” Held says. “Dr. Sears has been around for 20 years, so there’s nothing new about him. Parents have become much more anxious in the past 10 years, so our job is to support them and give them the confidence that only they can decide what’s right for their baby.”
There are varying degrees of attachment parenting: Some believers would never leave their babies for a date night or let them utter a cry without running to their side. Others take a more moderate approach, believing in the research-based studies that show how skin-to-skin contact improves the emotional well-being and development of an infant and helps increase mom’s milk production.
Naysayers claim that extreme attachment parenting such as breast-feeding into toddlerhood — or Sears’ gentle prodding that staying home with baby is best — threatens to rewind the feminist movement.
Samantha Cook, a freelance educator and Oakland mother of three, disagrees. She has been a proponent of the attachment parenting style a decade and believes it is about creating strong family bonds.
“I think it’s empowering for women to be able to parent in the way we want,” says Cook, 35. But she admits she has received criticism from friends, particularly on the East Coast, for her parenting choices, which include breast-feeding each child for a minimum of two years and co-sleeping with her 7- and 9-year old boys.
“That’s when our king-sized bed comes in handy,” she says.
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