Some 18 months after a group of activists began fighting the exclusion of women from billboards in Jerusalem, the fighters have declared victory.
Just one day after tweeting pictures of herself in nothing but a black bra and pantyhose, Amanda Bynes decided it would be a great idea to tweet topless selfies to her more than 870,000 followers.
Called Projecteo, the pocket-size projector, uses real 35-millimeter film reels to display your Insta-memories on any surface.
World famous Emma Watson, who became a household name after starring in eight “Harry Potter” films, has earned a new distinction: her name has topped the list of the most dangerous celebrities in the world wide web. A study released by the McAffee Inernet Security company says surfers searching for “Emma Watson and hot pictures” or “Emma Watson and videos” run the highest risk of encountering online threats designed to steal personal information. Watson is followed by nine more women in the high-risk search category, according to the report. They include Jessica Biel, Eva Mendes and Selena Gomez. Last year’s “winner” was Heidi Klum. McAfee’s sixth annual report said that queries for Emma Watson pictures and downloads have a better than 12 percent chance of taking an end user to a malicious site containing some sort, including spyware, adware, spam, phishing, viruses and malware.
Crossposted from Samuel Gruber’s Jewish Art & Monuments
Is a rabbi’s picture dangerous?