"Immoral" job

Published: 14 August 2000 y., Monday
The court rejected claims by a north German firm offering live online sex chats that the immorality of the work done by its staff should exempt the company from having to pay social security contributions for them. A judge ruled that the morality of online sex services, which mostly employ women to meet a seemingly insatiable and largely male appetite for impersonal stimulation, was irrelevant and decided staff should be treated as they would in other jobs. The company, which was not named in the hearing, is now liable for more than one million marks ($461,900) to cover contributions for staff it said were self-employed freelancers, but who the court decided were employees. Even mainstream Internet portals in Germany, where topless women are a nightly fixture on national television, are awash with links to subscription-based Web sites promising such delights as "live chats with hundreds of the hottest girls." Social security contributions in Germany are equivalent to about 41 percent of gross pay, though the center-left government has pledged to cut this back as part of a drive to make German job markets more flexible and the economy more competitive.
Šaltinis: excite.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Pope warns feminists

Bishops told to take hard line on issue of gender more »

Bomb Goes Off Under Car in Czech Capital

A bomb targeting a casino owner exploded under a car on a busy restaurant street in the Czech capital Sunday more »

Poland Commemorates 1944 Partisan Uprising

On August 1, 1944, Polish partisans began a battle to retake Warsaw from its Nazi occupiers more »

Moore invites Bush to Crawford screening

Oscar-winning US film director Michael Moore publicly invited US President George W. Bush on Tuesday to attend the screening of his Bush-bashing documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11" in Bush's hometown in Texas more »

Entry into EU spurs repatriation from West

Latvia's decision to join the European Union may be swaying more Latvians in the West to repatriate, according to the Office of Citizenship and Migration Affairs more »

The Arrests

ETA suspects held in Spain, may have planned attacks more »

Alleged Kurdish Militant Appeals Detention In Estonia

A suspected member of a Kurdish militant group Kawa, on the wanted list in Turkey for manslaughter, has appealed against his detention in Estonia, officials said on Tuesday more »

10th anniversary

President Lukashenka said on 22 July that the demonstration to mark the 10th anniversary of his becoming president was "yet another display of the brainlessness of our opposition" more »

“European Al Qaeda” ultimatum

Bulgaria on Wednesday rejected the ultimatum of a group calling itself the “Al Qaeda organisation in Europe” which threatened to attack both Bulgaria and Poland unless they withdrew their troops from Iraq more »

Pope to probe porn scandal

Pope John Paul II will personally examine a sex and pornography scandal engulfing the Austrian Catholic church more »