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<doc id="41656251" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656251" title="Miss Susie had a baby">
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Miss Susie had a baby
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656254" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656254" title="Jacob de Senleches">
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Jacob de Senleches
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656256" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656256" title="Virginia had a baby">
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Virginia had a baby
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656257" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656257" title="Miss Molly had a baby">
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Miss Molly had a baby
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656261" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656261" title="Jacotin (composer)">
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Jacotin (composer)
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656263" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656263" title="Stan Lee (politician)">
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Stan Lee (politician)
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Joseph Stanley Lee (born September 26, 1961) is an American politician in the state of Kentucky. He was born in Marion County, Kentucky.
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Lee, an attorney, attended the University of Kentucky where he received a Bachelor of Science and Juris Doctor.
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Lee was elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 2000 following the retirement of incumbent representative Stan Cave. He represented the 45th district, as a Republican. He sat on the Judiciary, Natural Resources and the Local Government Committees. From 2006 to 2008 he was the minority whip. He did not seek reelection in 2020.
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Lee is married to Tami and has one daughter. He is a member of the Kentucky Bar, U.S. District Court for the Eastern and Western Districts of Kentucky, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, and the Fayette County, Kentucky, and American Bar Associations. He previously practiced law as a partner with Bowles Rice Attorneys at Law.
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656264" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656264" title="Khazar theory">
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Khazar theory
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656272" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656272" title="FC2 (portal)">
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FC2 (portal)
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FC2 (founded July 20, 1999) is a popular Japanese blogging host, the third most popular video hosting service in Japan (after YouTube and Niconico) and a web hosting company headquartered in Las Vegas. It was the 11th most popular website in Japan overall (as of January 2018).
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Overview.
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FC2 is a US corporation, and according to an interview article by representative Takahiro Rihiro published in the magazine "Yahoo! Internet Guide" May issue in 2006, as of 2006, It is run by two people, his brother Takahashi Takahiro and his younger brother Takahashi Riyo, with 17 full-time employees and approximately 30 part-time staff.
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FC2 Blog launched in October 2004 and celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2014.
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On April 14, 2025, FC2 announced that it will close FC2 Web, its free website hosting service, on June 30, 2025, citing the aging of its system and server. Running since 2001, the service will move to FC2 Website.
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Business.
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It offers free and paid various web services in various languages such as Japanese, including rental server, domain, blog, chat, access analysis, bulletin board, diary, access counter, SNS, etc.
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The same ID and password can be used in the service of FC2. It is characterized that service addition can be registered with one ID.
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Decreased number of users.
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According to a survey by Nielsen in 2016, the number of PC users dropped to 8th in Japan (3rd from 2014 to 2015), and the number of users decreased.
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Due to the decreasing number of users in the last few years of FC2 Web's life, new registrations for the service have ended.
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Controversy.
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Due to FC2's physical presence in the United States, it has been known to allow hosting of pornographic, pirated, and slanderous content but is now being enforced with strict rules. Until 2012 it was very difficult to sue and get FC2 to release information on its users. This changed somewhat with an amendment to Japan's Code of Civil Procedure for foreign entities operating in Japan in 2012 and the ensuing injunctions that followed against FC2.
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One of the founders, Takahashi Rihiro was arrested in Kansai International Airport in Japan by the police on charges of distributing obscene videos.
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656273" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656273" title="Miss Lucy had a steamboat">
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Miss Lucy had a steamboat
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656276" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656276" title="The Johnsons had a baby">
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The Johnsons had a baby
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656278" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656278" title="The Johnsons Had a Baby">
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The Johnsons Had a Baby
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656281" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656281" title="Ms. Lucy">
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Ms. Lucy
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656286" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656286" title="Wooramel River">
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Wooramel River
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The Wooramel River is an ephemeral river in the Gascoyne region of Western Australia.
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The river rises near McLeod Pyramid and flows in a westerly direction, joined by six tributaries including the Wooramel River North, Bilung Creek, One Gum Creek and Nyarra Creek. The river is crossed by the Carnarvon-Mullewa Road near Pandara, then runs through the Carandibby Range. It runs through Wooramel Station before it is crossed by the North West Coastal Highway near the Wooramel Roadhouse, and discharges into Shark Bay and the Indian Ocean near Herald Loop. The catchment area has been approximately 40% cleared. The river descends over its course.
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The river has a non-pristine estuary that has been mostly unmodified.
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The estuary contains the seagrass "Ruppia megacarpa" and is naturally open to the ocean for two to six weeks per year, usually following a wet winter or a cyclonic event.
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</doc>
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<doc id="41656287" url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=41656287" title="Ask Me No Questions">
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