A website for adulterous affairs has been clicked on a whopping 52,375 times from computers used by British MPs and their staff, a media report said Sunday
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"Out Of Town Affairs" brings together married men and women seeking sex, the Daily Mail reported.
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It has been clicked on 52,375 times in just seven months via computers exclusively used by members of the houses of parliament and their employees.
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In one month, the website received 289 hits a day from parliament.
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In December 2012, it got more hits from parliamentary computers than the official websites for the treasury, justice ministry and education department.
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The website, which contains explicit pictures of subscribers, says: "We connect you with thousands of other married men and women looking for a marital affair or more heat in the bedroom."
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"Marital affairs in Britain (are) very popular - with more and more unsatisfied married men and women looking to do the dirty (on) their partners whilst out of town," it says.
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Users are invited to contact "thousands of horny cheaters ready to get some action" by signing up for a fee of 25 pounds a month.
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The website also allows them to "write your own sex-date diary" and "read and send filthy messages".u00a0
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The Daily Mail made the discovery after submitting a Freedom of Information request, asking for the top 500 websites accessed on parliament computers over the past year.
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The owner of the website said he was surprised that MPs were visiting the site.
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"That's a lot of hits. It's got to be more than one person going on the site from parliament. I hope we don't get hate mail from parliamentary wives now," he said.
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Parliament officials are also spending time on online gambling, playing games and chatting on social network sites.u00a0
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There are thousands of hits on gambling websites, while i-am-bored.com, featuring videos, games and social networking had 21,371 hits in the last three months of 2012.
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Facebook clocked up 28 million hits over a year.
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A parliament spokesman said more than 5,000 people had access to parliamentary network computers but that the "Out Of Town Affairs" website has now been blocked.