Police investigates Icelanders on OnlyFans One of Iceland s more popular OnlyFans contributors is Klara Sif Magnusdottir. When interviewed by Mbl.is in April she claimed to have earned the equivalent of $US 120.000 from her profile on the website in a span of just nine months. Screenshot/Instagram
Icelandic police has begun an investigation into whether Icelanders are using the content subscription service OnlyFans in ways that go against Icelandic laws that prohibit the production and distribution of pornography.
In recent weeks Icelandic media has interviewed several Icelanders who sell their own erotic photos and videos through the OnlyFans website, spurring a heated debate on pornography, prostitution, sexual autonomy and freedom of speech.
Airline Play Soon to Receive First Aircraft Vala Hafstað
The new low-cost Icelandic airline Play, will receive its first out of three Airbus A321 NEO aircraft near the end of May,
Morgunblaðið reports. Meanwhile, pilots, employed by Play, are involved in flight simulator training in the UK, preparing for the first scheduled passenger flight, planned for late June.
Birgir Jónsson, Play’s CEO, confirms that two additional aircraft will be added to the fleet and ready by the beginning of July. All three are of the same kind, designed to carry up to 220 passengers, although Play’s aircraft will transport less than 200 passengers to ensure extra comfort.
About 80 firefighters in the capital area fought a wildfire in Heiðmörk, the municipal conservation area of Reykjavík, yesterday afternoon and into the early morning hours.
Danger Zone Could Be Expanded Today The eruption, seen from Reykjavík. mbl.is/Kristinn Magnússon Vala Hafstað
Morgunblaðið reports. A meeting of scientists is being held this morning to discuss the next steps.
Scientists at the Icelandic Met Office have calculated how fast and how far splashes of lava, coming from the crater, can be carried. They are between 5 and 15 cm (2-6 in) in diameter, and the magma jet from the crater reaches as high as 300 meters (990 ft) into the air. The scientists recommend the danger zone be defined as the area within a 500-meter radius from the eruption.