I want a women of understanding and caring to spend time with and maybe really get to know each other and who knows anything can happen.
I wanna hear from you single ladies out there..email me: [email protected] me: I like hanging around with my friends cracking jokes and listening to music and the thing i hate most i hate is people gossiping about me and my friend s.
Two porn websites have made that fantasy a reality, using facial-recognition technology to match user-submitted photos of people to porn stars.
But there doesn't appear to be any mechanism for consent on the part of the people whose images are submitted.
"What we've developed is a system where users can visually show us exactly what they want and then see similar images."" data-reactid="26""We think [facial] matching is the future and we stand behind it," Naughty America chief executive officer Eddie Arenas said when his company's "Face Match" feature went live in June.
"What we've developed is a system where users can visually show us exactly what they want and then see similar images."face.(the front page is safe for work), lets you upload, link to or email a JPEG file from a computer or mobile device." data-reactid="27"Face Match, available at face.(the front page is safe for work), lets you upload, link to or email a JPEG file from a computer or mobile device.
It called on the PNG Government to open family support centres in every PNG province, to create more specialised police squads to deal with the problem and to implement child welfare laws passed last year.



"Domestic violence is actually socially perceived as a normal aspect of a woman's life, strangely, and in their perspective, remains wholly a family matter and shouldn't be discussed publicly," she said."It's a frustrating issue that exists in the country and its relative to the Wantok system, the conversation and the ethnic divisions, there's cultural beliefs and practices such as the 'bride price', which just perpetuates the issues because essentially it condones the men's control of the women."Men literally believe they own the woman, that it's their right to treat them how they feel and some come into the office and they express pride at times, like "well, I didn't hit her, you know, I could have, that's my right, but I didn't do it on this occasion" but that's not to say it couldn't happen on other occasions." She said because abuse was so intrinsically linked to culture, women were often ashamed to report violence."It is underreported and often women and girls do not know where to seek help," she said.And what happens if someone uses the matches to harass an ex-girlfriend, an ex-husband or a friend's mother?Gee, you look familiar" data-reactid="25"Gee, you look familiar Eddie Arenas said when his company's "Face Match" feature went live in June.Officer Harris said she found there was a serious lack of support services available to the huge number of women who experienced abuse, and they often had nowhere to turn.Domestic violence in Papua New Guinea is an epidemic, with two in three women having experienced abuse, while half have experienced forced sex.MSF nurse Aiofe Ni Mhurchu said most patients were forced to return to abusive homes because there were no support services or refuges available to them."They're at a loss really about what to do because they have nowhere to go," she said."They really feel trapped, they feel fearful for their lives, these women who keep coming back, and we see their injuries escalate with each visit."The charity said its results were specific to its two clinics and could not be applied at a national level, but said the figures suggested family and sexual violence were "clearly widespread and destructive in Papua New Guinea".