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Local media said the video started appearing in early June after Ariel's laptop was stolen and many similar tapes, with other celebrities, are still out there. Then a second eight-minute video emerged, purportedly showing Ariel with a former girlfriend, also a well-liked model and television presenter, further fanning public appetite for more. As the tapes were downloaded onto Facebook and YouTube (they have since been removed by the sites' administrator) and distributed from mobile phone to mobile phone, the country tottered on the verge of sexual hysteria. Fifteen-year-old Bintang Irvano, a student at a high school in south Jakarta, huddled around a mobile phone with his two friends to look at the video "for about the fourth time." He said after teachers started launching daily raids, teens started removing the footage from their phones ahead of class only to later upload it. "It's easy to get it back again," said Raikhan Daffa, 16. "We just pass it to one another by Bluetooth." "Hey, it's one way to learn about sex!" he said, laughing. Work grinded to a halt at some offices last week, as employees discussed the scandal on Facebook or forwarded a steady string of jokes, the punch lines all tied to the scandal. The country of 240 million has seen an explosion of social networking as more people have access to the Internet, prompting the government earlier this year to propose a bill to regulate content. Public pressure forced it, eventually, to be shelved. But, in the wake of the sex-tape saga, Minister of Information and Technology Tifatul Sembiring renewed calls for content control, and teams immediately set out to deploy firewalls for more than 2,000 Internet cafes around the country. He said it was a "race against time" to protect children from harm. Others argued while it is important to protect the young, new media has a key role to play in helping democratize the country, and curtailing content does not come without risks. "The government may have good intentions," said Roy Suryo, an information and technology analyst. "But freedom of information and personal access rights have to be protected as well."
[Associated
Press;
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