If, as expected, President Sarkozy announces he plans to run for re-election in 2012, he will find that the obvious domain name, nicolassarkozy2012.fr, will not be available.


 

"/> If, as expected, President Sarkozy announces he plans to run for re-election in 2012, he will find that the obvious domain name, nicolassarkozy2012.fr, will not be available.


 

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NICOLAS SARKOZY

Tattoo artist squats on presidential website

 

If, as expected, President Sarkozy announces he plans to run for re-election in 2012, he will find that the obvious domain name, nicolassarkozy2012.fr, will not be available.


 

When internet users click on that site it is not the French president whose image appears, but a black and white image of a woman and the title “un combat, une vie, 15 ans” (a battle, a life, 15 years).

The site is being “cyber-squatted” by Corinne Dubosque, the owner of a tattoo parlour in Pontault-Combault, a town to the east of Paris, reported Le Parisien.

Dubosque bought the site name as a way to get the work of tattoo artists recognized as an “artistic profession,” which would then allow her and others to benefit from a lower VAT rate of 5.5 percent, rather than the standard 19.6 percent rate.

“Tattooing is not considered as an art while others, such as graphic artists working in advertising, are,” she said. “It’s not right.”

Dubosque rejects the term “cyber-squatting” and claims it is “completely legal to buy a domain name.” In 2007 she registered carlabrunisarkozy.eu for fun and has done the same with several members of the government.

She claims her aim is to get her cause heard, rather than make money from selling on the domain names.

“What matters is that people listen to me,” she said. “Although if I can annoy Sarkozy as well, then all the better, because I really don’t like him.”

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Hair salons and tattoo parlours reopen in Denmark

Small businesses such as hair salons, massage and tattoo parlours, dentists and driving schools reopened in Denmark on Monday after a five-week closure, as the country gradually eases restrictions aimed at curbing the new coronavirus.

Hair salons and tattoo parlours reopen in Denmark
Janni Roest, the owner of Fair Tattoo in Copenhagen getting back to work on Monday: Photo: Niels Christian Vilmann/Ritzau Scanpix
“I had an appointment weeks and weeks ago and I've been waiting to come. As soon as I saw there was an opening, I made a reservation,” Merete Soendergaard, an IT consultant who was among the first through the doors at a hair salon in Copenhagen on Monday morning, told AFP.
   
The owner of the salon, Anne-Sophie Skjodt Villumsen, said she was happy to be able to reopen her business, noting that she was following the detailed health and safety guidelines put in place.   
   
Clients have to disinfect their hands at the entrance, and must be given a single-use poncho to wear during their appointment. Materials and surfaces have to be disinfected between clients as well.
   
Denmark began lifting its restrictions on April 15, when it started reopening preschools and primary schools for children up to age 11.   
 
Danes are, however, still urged to practice social distancing by keeping two metres (six feet) apart, gatherings of more than 10 people are banned, and cafes, restaurants, shopping centres and gyms will remain closed until May 10, as will middle and secondary schools.
   
At driving schools, instructors resumed work on Monday, though some expressed concerns about the “possible risk of infection” in cars, the head of the driving instructors' federation, Bent Grue, told AFP.
   
As of Monday, Denmark had 7,711 reported cases of the new coronavirus and 364 deaths.
 

 

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