Tuesday, July 21, 2009

ESPN Reporter Erin Andrews Undressing In Her Hotel Room

espn-reporter-erin-andrews-undressing-in-her-hotel-roomA embressing video made of ESPN reporter celebrity Erin Andrews undressing in her hotel room is now being used to spread a computer virus, according to sophos.com, an anti-virus software company.

A video of Andrews undressing was shot through the peephole of her hotel room and then quickly made its way to the internet in recent days. Soon after websites cropped up claiming to be links to the video but were actually a way to release a virus into the user's system.

"Hackers are no slacks when it comes to taking advantage of a hot internet search trend, and they have been quick to set up bogus webpages claiming to contain the video footage of Ms. Andrews in her hotel room," said Graham Cluley of Sophos.

Friend Undressing While On Kiss After Party

friend-undressing-while-on-kiss-after-partyBest friends try to undress while on kissing at a late night party. See full here from hidden cemara.

An undress code is commonly used as the opposite of a dress code, restricting or prohibiting the wearing of clothing. In this sense, undress codes are common in many public swimming facilities for sanitary reasons. These rules restrict persons using the facilities to specific types of bathing suits. Also, historically, undress is a description of dress codes consisting of clothes of formality much less than those normally worn, including everything from dressing gowns, to, in their first few decades, lounge suits

Undress codes that prohibit clothing altogether (enforcing nudity) are less common. They are limited to:

1. Nudist recreation facilities in the US and western Europe.
2. Cultural traditions which encourage or require nudity in some German, Austrian and Scandinavian sauna or steam baths.
3. Traditional dress in some cultures in Africa, Latin America and South-East Asia/Oceania.
4. Pertinent religious traditions, as was the case with the ancient Indian Gymnosophists or the Christian sect of the Adamites (the custom is still practised by ascetics of certain Indian religions, as in Jainism).



Laws in many countries that require a person to undress when requested to do so by a customs - or police officer, usually to find illegal drugs or weapons on a suspect during the strip search, may also be considered a type of undress code, because the person in question is required by law to remove their clothing, but that is normally kept as short and discreet as possible, not publicly.

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