SF the Virgin

netlife007

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  • Feb 10, 2008
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    Interview%20with%20SF%201.jpg
     

    intel_inside

    Well-known member
  • Jan 19, 2012
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    Pirate Bay To Return In February? Countdown Timer Appears

    pirate.jpg


    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.
    A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be
     

    netlife007

    Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
    10,911
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    fuck you. me virgin nattam uba koti bombekata ahuwela kithu kithu wela. gunamakuwa :angry:


    oh yes you fuck.......what do you thing about the others like Brigadier Shavendra Silva. Do you think they stayed at the camp and scraped coconuts......? fuck sake grow up.
     

    Gatapolos

    Well-known member
  • Apr 19, 2014
    3,205
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    Troll-Land
    oh yes you fuck.......what do you thing about the others like Brigadier Shavendra Silva. Do you think they stayed at the camp and scraped coconuts......? fuck sake grow up.
    Yes SF and the whole army under him with the navy and marine forces led by the political support of the president.
     

    netlife007

    Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
    10,911
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    Yes SF and the whole army under him with the navy and marine forces led by the political support of the president.

    Who said no.........But when it comes to politics SF is a virgin.

    That's why Ponil and Mangala used him to clean their coats and dumped him.


    SF is a man with no Shame to still go and lick Ponils balls.........he he heeeee



    .
     

    u.saradiyel

    Well-known member
  • Jul 23, 2011
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    EARTH
    මචන් ඔය වැඩේනම් හොඳම නෑ. මොනව උනත් නොමැරී මැරිල ඉන්න වීරෝධාර සෙන්පතියෙක්ට ඔහොම කරන්න එපා. දෙන්න ඕන ගෞරවය දීපන් මිනිස්සුන්ට. එතකොටයි උඹලත් මිනිස්සු වෙන්නෙ.
     

    Gatapolos

    Well-known member
  • Apr 19, 2014
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    Troll-Land
    Who said no.........But when it comes to politics SF is a virgin.

    That's why Ponil and Mangala used him to clean their coats and dumped him.


    SF is a man with no Shame to still go and lick Ponils balls.........he he heeeee



    .
    palayan kuhakayo yanna. nathuwa kudu raja gawata wela innada kiyanne ? redda
     

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
    18,422
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    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015
    dmLtW1b.gif




    netlife007 ට ටිකක් අප්සට් ගිහිල්ල :rofl:

    My wife Chamila is... 01-01-2015 09:27 PM uba aei ochchara moda......sadun buwa

    පර බල්ලා ඕකා මගේ නම දදා එක එකාගේ rep කපනවා..ඕකාට මේකේ තියෙන fake වගයක් ගැන කියපු දා ඉදන් ඕකට මගෙත් එක්ක නප්පියට තද වෙලා ඉන්නේ..:rofl:+8

    MY3 scares me.........MY era means another war to divide SL.
    Anyway MY3 will never win......................

    අඩෝ netlife007 අවජාතයා..තෝ fake හද හද මේකේ මහින්දට පුක දෙනව මදිවට තව එක ඒක උන්ගේ rep කපනවා නේද මගේ නම දදා..පොන්න වැඩ කරන්න එපා පකෝ..රනිල්ට පොන්නයා කියන්න කලින් අත ගාලා බලාපිය තොගේ ඇට දෙක තියෙනවද කියලා..අවලම් හොරිකඩ බල්ලා..:angry::angry::angry:



    dmLtW1b.gif
     
    Last edited:

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
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    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015
    chatar oi. deshapalane karapan habayi me wage katha wada karanna epa

    ඕකා කරන්නේ ගූ වැඩ..ඔය පර බල්ලා මගේ නම දදා එක එකාගේ rep කපනවා අතේ මාට්ටු වෙලා තියෙන්නේ..මේකේ fake ගොඩක් හදාගෙන ඉන්නේ..කැනඩාවේ ඉදන් කක්කුස්සි හෝදන එකානේ ඉතින් කරන්නේ ගූ වැඩ..:rofl:
     

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
    18,422
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    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015
    අඩෝ netlife වරෙන් පොන්නය එළියට..තෝ මොකෝ හැංගිලා..වේ* බල්ලා..කැ* වැඩ කරලා පොන්නයා හැංගිලා...
     

    netlife007

    Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
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    Earth
    අඩෝ netlife වරෙන් පොන්නය එළියට..තෝ මොකෝ හැංගිලා..වේ* බල්ලා..කැ* වැඩ කරලා පොන්නයා හැංගිලා...

    පල වෙසිගෙ පුතො යන්න.......තො වගෙ පට දෙෂපාලන පිසුසවක් තියනවාද නහින්න..........මම උබෙ නංගිට ඇරපු එක වෙනව වැඩක්, එකට දෙෂපාලනය ගාව ගන්න එපා.
     

    netlife007

    Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
    10,911
    2,371
    113
    Earth
    ඕකා කරන්නේ ගූ වැඩ..ඔය පර බල්ලා මගේ නම දදා එක එකාගේ rep කපනවා අතේ මාට්ටු වෙලා තියෙන්නේ..මේකේ fake ගොඩක් හදාගෙන ඉන්නේ..කැනඩාවේ ඉදන් කක්කුස්සි හෝදන එකානේ ඉතින් කරන්නේ ගූ වැඩ..:rofl:

    කැනඩාවෙ ඉන්නේ තොගෙ මෛත්‍රිගෙ යහලුවො තමයි.
     

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
    18,422
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    113
    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015

    පල වෙසිගෙ පුතො යන්න.......තො වගෙ පට දෙෂපාලන පිසුසවක් තියනවාද නහින්න..........මම උබෙ නංගිට ඇරපු එක වෙනව වැඩක්, එකට දෙෂපාලනය ගාව ගන්න එපා.

    අහ්හ් පර බල්ලා ඇවිත් බුරාගෙන..තෝ මොකෝ වේ#ගෙ පුතෝ මගේ නම දදා ඒක එකාගේ rep කපන්නේ..පුකේ බෙට්ට හිරවෙලාද තොගේ?කැ* වැඩ කරන්න එපා පොන්නයෝ..
     

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
    18,422
    2,039
    113
    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015
    කැනඩාවෙ ඉන්නේ තොගෙ මෛත්‍රිගෙ යහලුවො තමයි.

    තෝනේ කැනඩාවේ ගූ හෝදන්නේ..දෙමළුන්ට සක්කිලි කිය කිය උන්ගේ ජොබ් එකමනේ තෝ කරන්නේ සක්කිලියෝ...:P
     

    Sadun Buwa

    Well-known member
  • Oct 7, 2012
    18,422
    2,039
    113
    UNP BANK ROBBERY 2015

    මම උබෙ නංගිට ඇරපු එක වෙනව වැඩක්, එකට දෙෂපාලනය ගාව ගන්න එපා.

    තොගේ නංගිට ඇරියේ දෙමළෙක් නේ හු@තෝ..ඌට තෝ තොගේ නංගිව දීලා තමා තෝ කැනඩාවට පැන්නේ..:rofl: