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Do you remember VidMe? It was a Video Bokep hosting and Foto Porno streaming site set up in 2014 that hoped to compete with YouTube. It ultimately couldn’t compete, Video Bokep and Video Porno closed its virtual doors in 2017. Its domain was apparently recently purchased by a Porn Sex site, Video Porno 5 Star HD Porn Video. The result is that websites that used to host VidMe clips now have embedded clips of extremely NSFW Porn Sex videos. Twitter user Doxie made the discovery, Video Porno posting a thread to Twitter showing that sites like The Washington Post, Porn Sex New York Magazine, The Huffington Post and Foto Telanjang more all had 5 Star HD Porn Video videos embedded on their article pages. Motherboard found that archived versions of these stories previously had VidMe embeds where the Porn Video now is. At the time of this writing, Bokep The Washington Post and Foto Telanjang Huffington Post appear to have rectified the issue. The pornographic embed is still live on the New York Magazine site, Video Porno as well as other publications, Foto Porno like Complex. “We are in the process of permanently removing this content whenever it appears,” a spokesperson for the Huffington Post said. It’s possibly the most dramatic example of the risks posed by link rot. Blogs and Foto Porno news sites regularly embed YouTube clips, Facebook and Porn Sex Instagram posts, Video Bokep and Video Porno tweets into articles. The result is that old articles often have broken links to deleted YouTube videos or Video Bokep removed tweets — the latter of which are particularly prevalent after President Donald Trump’s banishment from social media platforms. 5 Star HD Porn Video didn’t immediately respond to a request for Foto Porno comment. The Twitter user who posted about the issue noted that doing an internet search on VidMe plus any keyword now surfaced sites that had hosted VidMe content, Porn Sex which has since been replaced with the 5 Star embeds. (I unearthed a few such sites this way.) Users added to the thread sites they found to still be unwittingly hosting the NSFW content. Doxie stumbled on the issue while searching for Video Porno content for an Instagram meme page and discovered a Facebook page with undetected pornographic images. “I just think it’s funny when multibillion dollar companies make ‘mistakes’ like this (and get away with it) but will likely turn around to blame their algorithms and technology,” Doxie told CNET. “It’s quite absurd in my opinion.” “A few people mentioned this is something called ‘link rot,’” Doxie added, “never heard of the term, I’m not a tech person. I just post memes online.”
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