Kgirldelights busted in Seattle

Thought everyone should be aware of this. Hope it does not affect our local providers.

http://www.king5.com/story/news/crim...bust/78423470/
endurance's Avatar
Ugh - 2nd case of recent bad news from the pacific nw. Good reminder to keep the cuties on the qt
dodger's Avatar
Ugh - 2nd case of recent bad news from the pacific nw. Good reminder to keep the cuties on the qt Originally Posted by endurance
not sure this qualifies as bad news

i admit ... didn't read all the stuff ... but the drift here seems to focus on human trafficking ... which is bad shit and should be stopped.

has nothing to do with the way most of us hobby ... stopping the exploitation of human trafficking is not an intrusion into the hobby.
Precious_b's Avatar
Why I don't frequent Asian Spas or those relentless BP ads with fake pictures.
endurance's Avatar
The thing is, the only thing the article really said was where they were from - not that they had proof that the girls where here under duress or anything.

LE loves labeling things in the evilest manner - they have no credibility for being accurate.



not sure this qualifies as bad news

i admit ... didn't read all the stuff ... but the drift here seems to focus on human trafficking ... which is bad shit and should be stopped.

has nothing to do with the way most of us hobby ... stopping the exploitation of human trafficking is not an intrusion into the hobby. Originally Posted by dodger
Toyz's Avatar
  • Toyz
  • 01-12-2016, 08:26 AM
Look at the pic of the 3 guys in front of the King County podium. Have you EVER seen 3 people in more need of a BJ in your life? No wonder they are involved in this.
let's say no personal information was ever handed over. yet, could they still track your IP address? or learn your number from saved phonebooks or logs? is that enough for them to either release your information or act upon it legally? just a hypothetical question.
tron's Avatar
  • tron
  • 02-07-2016, 09:09 PM
It depends on how your ISP operates and you have a fixed IP address or not.

A fixed IP address is pretty rare these days - unless you are willing to pay for it. Assuming you don't have a fixed IP address, it would probably take a court order to get your ISP to provide the details of who had the first public IP address in the chain at the time a website was accessed - since ISPs reuse the addresses. Even then, all that reveals is who the subscriber is. Assuming you have a router, it would not identify who was actually connected at the time.

See the section on 'Private Addresses' here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_address

If you have Windows, you can run traceroute from a command prompt to see what the info would look like, eg:

tracert www.intel.com