Twitter users urged to stay calm during Fry drought

DAILY SMSGRAPH, King’s Lynn, Saturday (NTN) — The international press has urged Twitter users to “keep calm and carry on” during Stephen Fry’s break from the service to write his autobiography.

The 52-year-old author, television presenter, wit, bon vivant, cheese board, Swiss army knife, well-stocked cellar and ineffable genius’s break was occasioned by the promise of “rather large dumptruck of £££ sweeties, toodle pip!” should he manage to finish writing his “book” — an experimental literary form involving a paper printout of several thousands of tweets’ worth of text, intended to be read more than a single time — without exercising his F5-pressing finger. He has also taken time out from television, writing and public appearances, but Twitter was, obviously, the matter of pressing international concern.

President Barack Obama sought to calm the agitated masses in his State of the Twit speech — “We’ll teach Oprah to love again” — and Winston Churchill rose from the grave to bolster Britain’s resolve with stirring oratory: “Your Courage, Your Cheerfulness, Your Resolution Will Bring Us Fry! Also, braaains.” Peter Mandelson smiled a little smile that the Internet appeared to be falling apart according to plan.

US actor and comedian Ashton Kutcher, who has 4 million followers, also threatened to quit the site in reaction to talk of a Twitter-fueled reality television show, as opposed to a reality-fueled Twitter show.

Twitter founders Evan Williams and Biz Stone asked people to avoid panic tweeting, hoarding of retweets and lurking around Facebook instead, and to maintain faith in a Fry-filled future. “There’s still Neil Gaiman. Stay steadfast! Or we’ll send Warren Ellis round.”

Britain: 5,394 arrested in Internet song crackdown

WHITEHALL, Beijing, Friday (NTN) — British police arrested thousands in the Digital Britain drive against Internet file sharing throughout 2009, which critics say is being used to tighten overall censorship.

The British government has run a highly publicized campaign, “Digital Britain,” against sharing of Lily Allen songs, which were “overwhelming the country’s Internet” and “threatening the emotional health of children.”

Lord Mandelson said late on Thursday that the crackdown on Internet file sharing had brought 5,394 arrests and 4,186 criminal case investigations in 2009. The announcement on the Digital Britain website said the drive would deepen in 2010. Police would “intensify punishments for Internet operations that violate laws and regulations, strengthen monitoring of information and press Internet service providers to put in place preventive technology.”

The ministry did not say how many of the 5,394 suspects arrested were later charged, released or prosecuted. The anti-file sharing drive has also netted many sites with politically sensitive or even simply user-generated content, in what some see as an effort by the government to reassert control over new media. The ruling Labour Party worries the Internet could become a dangerous conduit for threatening images and ideas.

Britain has banned a number of popular websites and Internet services, including Wikipedia. NewsTechnica passed without comment, however.

Polanski thanks supporters of drug rape as extradition wait continues

HUMBERT, Switzerland, Friday (NTN) — Roman Polanski has thanked creepy rape apologists worldwide in his battle to avoid extradition to the US for the artistically necessary 1977 drug rape of a 13-year-old girl.

“Messages have come from supporters of drugging children and fucking them from across the world,” the Oscar-winning rapist wrote in an open letter published on the website of French intellectual and drug rape apologist Bernard-Henri Levy.

“I would like every one of them to know how heartening it is, when one is locked up in a cold, bare cell — and my luxurious ski resort chalet is a cold, bare cell to me — to hear this murmur of human voices and of solidarity with drugging and fucking young girls.”

The 76-year-old director is now under house arrest in Switzerland and facing extradition to the United States where he could be sentenced for having drugged and fucked a 13-year-old girl he was photographing in 1977. He fled the country in 1978 on the eve of sentencing because he believed a judge might actually dare put him, of all people, in jail on some trumped-up pretext.

“It’s clearly victimisation of an artiste by a judge who just doesn’t understand Hollywood,” said celebrity drug rape supporter Whoopi Goldberg. “Luring in kids, giving them drugs and then sodomising them mercilessly and brutally is what this town was built on. The camerawork on the images of the drugged young girl’s anus skewered on the end of Mr Polanski’s genius cock as she mumbled ‘no, stop, no’ was particularly awe-inspiring. You don’t get work like that for free.”

The “Free Polanski” movement is widely considered even wackier than hip-hop’s periodic “Free Some Guy Who Totally Deserved To Go To Jail” movements.