Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts The Internet The Almighty Buck

GirlsDoPorn: Young Women Win Legal Battle Over Video Con 215

A U.S. judge has awarded $12.8 million to 22 unnamed women, ruling that they were tricked into appearing in widely distributed online porn videos. The BBC reports: Some of the models duped by the owners and operators of the GirlsDoPorn website had become suicidal, he said. They were told the videos were for a private collector or overseas DVDs, according to the 181-page judgement. The women -- aged 18-23 when they shot the videos -- were also assured the videos would never appear online. But they were uploaded to GirlsDoPorn's subscription-based amateur porn website, and clips were shared on some of the world's most popular free-to-view adult websites.

San Diego Superior Court Judge Kevin Enright ordered GirlsDoPorn chief executive Michael Pratt, 36, videographer Matthew Wolfe, 37, and porn actor Ruben Garcia, 31, to take the videos down from GirlsDoPorn and take steps to get them removed from other sites too. GirlsDoPorn markets itself on the premise that the women in the videos are not professional porn stars.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

GirlsDoPorn: Young Women Win Legal Battle Over Video Con

Comments Filter:
  • by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @09:40PM (#59584358)

    Where do I find stupid women that are so easy to get naked?

    They were told the videos were for a private collector or overseas DVDs... were also assured the videos would never appear online

    • Unless someone rips the DVD and posts it online.
    • by mr.day ( 6501838 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:02PM (#59584436)
      What an ignorant comment to make. These women were given legally binding assurances that they would have limited exposure in this process as evidenced by the fact that they won the suit.

      If someone is stupid because they trusted a contract then we have bigger problems than your lack of sexual attention.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by hawguy ( 1600213 )

        What an ignorant comment to make. These women were given legally binding assurances that they would have limited exposure in this process as evidenced by the fact that they won the suit.

        If someone is stupid because they trusted a contract then we have bigger problems than your lack of sexual attention.

        They agreed to make porn for overseas DVD sales -- no one of that age group should have been surprised that their videos ended up online. It's widely known that even sexts sent to your boyfriend are likely to end up posted online, so even if the claims of "They'll only be sold as foreign DVD's" were true, it's pretty likely that the videos would have ended up online anyway.

        If you don't want your naked videos to end up online, then don't make naked videos.

        • If you don't want your naked videos to end up online, then don't make naked videos.

          End thread.

        • by Invidious ( 106932 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:20PM (#59584504)

          It's still, essentially, fraud, because the producer and distributor of the videos lied about the method of distribution. Like a photographer licensing their work out to use in a print ad, but not online. It's basic contract law.

          Now, what happens -after-, well, that's something else. If these porn videos had been distributed by DVD in Taiwan or something as promised, and someone bought it and uploaded it to pornhub or something, there wouldn't be a case against the producer. I agree with your ultimate point, but the fact that the producer was bullshitting from the beginning is what makes this scummy and legally actionable.

          • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

            I agree with your ultimate point, but the fact that the producer was bullshitting from the beginning is what makes this scummy and legally actionable.

            Oh, I completely agree -- it was a scummy thing to do, but that doesn't mean that the girls weren't stupid to fall for it -- if you sell porn you have to expect it to end up online.

            • I agree with your ultimate point, but the fact that the producer was bullshitting from the beginning is what makes this scummy and legally actionable.

              Oh, I completely agree -- it was a scummy thing to do, but that doesn't mean that the girls weren't stupid to fall for it -- if you sell porn you have to expect it to end up online.

              That applies to any digitized commodity.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Even if someone else uploaded it they could be expected to enforce their copyright in defence of their contact with the model.

        • It doesn’t matter if that’s true and you could get a jury that would agree that it would be a reasonable assumption that a person should be expected to have made because the defendants were the ones who breached the contract by putting the videos online. They did something that they contractually said they would not do. The rest doesn’t matter because at that point they breached the contract and they’re liable for damages. It doesn’t even come to the point you raise so there
          • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

            It doesn’t matter if that’s true and you could get a jury that would agree that it would be a reasonable assumption that a person should be expected to have made because the defendants were the ones who breached the contract by putting the videos online. They did something that they contractually said they would not do. The rest doesn’t matter because at that point they breached the contract and they’re liable for damages. It doesn’t even come to the point you raise so there’s no reason to argue the merits of your reasoning.

            I'm not sure if you meant to reply to someone else, but I never said it wasn't a scam and I'm glad that the producers got caught..... but that doesn't mean that the girls weren't stupid to fall for it -- this isn't the 1990's when online streaming was new and porn was hard to find online, if you sell porn today, you have to expect it to end up online.

        • no one of that age group should have been surprised that their videos ended up online

          There's a difference between a bootleg being shared online, and the person who recorded the video distributing it online against the terms of the very contract they got you to sign.

          This isn't stupid. You'd have to be an absolute moron *not* to take the guy to court. It's like a second payday.

          It's widely known that even sexts sent to your boyfriend are likely to end up posted online

          Incidentally if you then have something against that boyfriend he wouldn't stand much of a chance if you took him to court. In many countries now he'd be criminally liable. e.g. Australia or in the UK that (ex)boyfriend

      • by iamacat ( 583406 )

        It was a joke. I support the court damages award because these girls contracts was violated, but let's not go all prude either. Porn is kind of funny as a subject.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday January 04, 2020 @12:51AM (#59584984) Homepage Journal

        More than just fraud. The women agreed to things like modelling only, were flown out a long way from home and told that if they didn't do the porn videos they were not getting a ticket home. Many were doing it because they needed money in the first place.

        The lies and pressure were continual. What was supposed to be a 5 minute photo shoot turned into a 5 hour porn shoot. At ever step the pressure and threat of abandonment far from home was used on women who were barely out of childhood.

        These guys are professional scumbags and were expert at manipulating people.

    • You have to buy them a plane ticket that costs $2-500 bux, depending on where they're coming from. Then you have to put them up in a hotel which, considering it's San Diego, is costing $2-300 a night. Cuz, ya know, it's beachfront. Not in El Cajon, the Armpit of the Universe. Tack on taxi fees, meals, and whatnot.

      I gotta admit I'm on the fence on this one. My "you were stupid" is fighting with "we've been doing this for a while and we're getting good at it", not sure who should come out on top (heh)
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Well, find a friendly mid-range escort. Cheaper and you get to have sex as well. While porn does not pay that much, it still pays quite a bit per session. You will not be allowed to film this though.

      As to the statement itself, so overseas DVDs never get ripped and uploaded? How naive to you have to be to believe that? Seriously, do porn, expect it to be on the Internet not a long time later. That is how things are. Of course this company stepped way over the line by lying to them and uploading themselves, a

    • Where do I find stupid women that are so easy to get naked?

      They were told the videos were for a private collector or overseas DVDs... were also assured the videos would never appear online

      I don't agree with your "stupid" characterization except as applied to you for not knowing how to go to the site.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Well yeah, exactly correct, pretty but stupid. Now I know younger geeks and nerds (and of course harridan bitches) are really jealous of women getting easy rides being well, sluts but be fucking reasonable. As a society we do quite actively and aggressively denigrate and exploit the less intellectually endowed anyone pretty much sub90IQ let alone sub80IQ. I mean the exploitation and abuse of them is pretty disgusting, oh yeah those poor fuckers if you work hard you can be rich too, yep sure uhhuh (absolutel

      • by malkavian ( 9512 )

        Very intelligent women like being objectified as well. IQ has very little to do with that aspect, and it's all down to personal tastes.
        But yes, the lower IQ in general have a very rough time of it on average. I think we could take a leaf out of the Japanese working book on that one, and going back to your word being worth something, and acting dishonourably is something that's likely to see you getting severe penalties.

    • by drolli ( 522659 )

      Obviously they were assured this in a legally binding way giving them $500000 on average upon winning the lawsuit. Maybe you should be careful what you wish for.

    • Where do I find stupid women that are so easy to get naked?

      Err any street corner? Literally look for someone in a skirt and offer them a few hundred dollars to take their cloths of. There's nothing stupid about it, it's an actual profession.

      Incidentally it works on men too if you're into that.
      And if you look around you may also find a mix, woman on the top, man on the bottom if you're into that.

  • This just in (Score:2, Insightful)

    Well, it turns out porn producers are complete slimeballs. Whoda thunk it? The last time I said this, I got slammed with feminist propaganda. Maybe porn is bad for our society, and it's not just the pieces of shit who exploit women to make it.
    • by iamacat ( 583406 )

      Depends. Vivid entertainment has 4.5 star average rating [glassdoor.com] at Glassdoor, better than most tech companies. It's like any career, there are decent employers and there are assholes. Except you get to see assholes more directly I guess. A lot of couples also freelance from home as a side income.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by PPH ( 736903 )

      Well, it turns out guys are complete slimeballs. Whoda thunk it?

      FTFY.

      You get naked in front of a camera and this is what can happen. Even if you have a contract and the producers honor the terms, stuff on subscription services get ripped and reposted by third parties.

      Judge ordered ... take the videos down from GirlsDoPorn and take steps to get them removed from other sites too.

      Yeah. Good luck with that. Stuff gets posted, people download it and repost it on image boards after a time. Rinse and repeat. If there's a camera in the room, it will live on in perpetuity.

      A woman acquaintance I know was at a party and decided to 'get busy' with three guys. Two of them got started and th

    • Re:This just in (Score:5, Insightful)

      by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:20PM (#59584502)

      Well, it turns out porn producers are complete slimeballs. Whoda thunk it? The last time I said this, I got slammed with feminist propaganda. Maybe porn is bad for our society, and it's not just the pieces of shit who exploit women to make it.

      The complete lack of respect for porn is the reason porn producers are complete slimeballs.

      When you offer your body to an employer and he uses you to deliver packages, build a house, cook meals, write code, sell products, etc... in exchange for money, you are a respected worker. And employers who abuse you get no sympathy, as it should be. But when a girl offers her body to be shown for the sexual pleasure of others, she is a whore, a dishonor, and if she is tricked, she got what she deserves, bitch. What did she do wrong? She didn't steal anything, didn't hurt anyone, she just helped produce something enjoyable. She deserves all the respect a worker can get. Maybe once society starts respecting porn, slimeballs will be forced out of the industry.

      • by flink ( 18449 )

        Yes this, exactly. Wish I had mod points for you, but I don't so just voicing my agreement. Some of the comments in this thread have been truly revolting.

      • So.... we need a Seamstresses Guild ?

      • by malkavian ( 9512 )

        Incorrect. Most porn producers are actually reliable in their word. There are enough people who are willing to engage in it to keep the sector running, and keep your word. Hell, keeping your word is pretty important for a long term studio; if you have a reputation for completely breaking promises to your models, you'll likely run out of models, and some other studio will get the business. Keeping your word is good business.

        What you can actually say is "Some companies will lie on contract to get you to d

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:06PM (#59584444)

    While lying to the performers from the beginning is a new low, basically anything filmed that anybody could be interested in ends up on the Internet. This is not a secret in any way and should surprise absolutely nobody. These women need to learn that actions have consequences and that they cannot trust everything people tell them. I mean, they are not children, right? Time to behave like it.

    • by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:28PM (#59584526) Homepage

      You are right, they can't trust everything people tell them. You are supposed to trust a signed contract though. You know, when you buy a house you get a told a lot of things. You shouldn't trust them, but you should trust the contract you sign. If someone breaks that contract, are you just going to tell the person "Sorry, you shouldn't believe what people tell you? Your actions have consequences." The amount of misogyny around this subject is just mind boggling. For some reason, women who do porn should expect to be exploited and when they are it is their own fault according to way too many people.

      • You are right, they can't trust everything people tell them. You are supposed to trust a signed contract though. You know, when you buy a house you get a told a lot of things. You shouldn't trust them, but you should trust the contract you sign. If someone breaks that contract, are you just going to tell the person "Sorry, you shouldn't believe what people tell you? Your actions have consequences." The amount of misogyny around this subject is just mind boggling. For some reason, women who do porn should expect to be exploited and when they are it is their own fault according to way too many people.

        Yep.

        I expected the "women" part to attract way more attention than the "contract" part.

        It's to misogyny do so.

      • Problem is the contract needs to specify a remedy in case of breach. When Rambus joined JEDEC (a consortium of memory manufacturers working together to set new memory standards so future memory modules were compatible), they signed a contract agreeing to abide by the terms of the consortium. One of these terms was that they weren't supposed to patent technologies being discussed in proposed new memory standards. Rambus went ahead and patented them anyway (DDR2). JEDEC sued them for breach of contract.
    • These women need to learn that actions have consequences and that they cannot trust everything people tell them.

      I think that lesson was imparted on the owners of GirlsDoPorn.

      All of you guys who are calling the girls dumb for falling for this scam may be looking at things backwards. They might be smart for signing a contract knowing that it's likely that the contract will be violated, thus entitling them to compensation.

      As you said, actions have consequences. Signing a contract and then willfully violating that contract results in consequences.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      You assume they had an opportunity to read and then freely agree to the contract. They didn't.

      These guys MO was to fly them out far from home, delay and delay and then spring the contract and porn on them. Agree now, no time to read it all we don't have much time today and everyone is getting paid by the hour. If you don't want to you can make your own way home.

  • I don't have much sympathy for these girls or even revenge porn "victims".
    Don't film anything you don't want people to see.
    I won't even send a dick pic to my goddamn wife because I'm not retarded and know it could wind up being seen by anybody.
    • If an unauthorized party were to get ahold of my online banking accounts they can do (at least) as much damage to my life as if my google photos account were hacked. Yet in the former scenario people pretty much universally and rightly recognizes that (1) I am in every way a "victim" if some hacker or scammer makes unauthorized use of my online banking funds, and that (2) the fact that online banking is not 100% secure in all situations ever hardly means I "deserve" the consequences of having my bank accoun
      • Yes one should take reasonable precautions to protect oneself, but the world is not just and it's a comforting lie - though a common fallacy - to believe that people "deserve" the bad things that happen to them. Just world fallacy. Google it.

        So you think that these 3 men shouldn't be held accountable? That's strange.

      • False equivalence.
        If your bank account gets hacked you'll inevitably get your money back via insurance, etc.
        If your nudes get out they're out forever.
        It's also absolutely a false equivalence because "getting hacked" implies you were attacked and you had no control over it, whereas in the case of nudes you had full control over it in 99% of cases (lets be real, most unauthorized nudes online weren't put there by hackers, they were put there by people who YOU GAVE the nudes to).

        A more apt equivalence wou
  • by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Friday January 03, 2020 @10:27PM (#59584520) Homepage

    https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/courts/story/2020-01-02/22-women-win-9m-in-suit-against-girlsdoporn-videos [sandiegouniontribune.com]:


    The judge also granted the women’s request for ownership rights to their images that appeared on videos produced by the defendants and posted on several adult websites. Further, he ordered the defendants to take down the women’s sex videos and take steps to get them off other porn sites they did not control but allowed to post clips, ads or entire films.

    The judge also ordered the GirlsDoPorn website owners to prominently post in recruitment ads that videos would go on the Internet. Women who sign up to make the videos must get copies of the legal agreement ahead of time and give permission before their names or personal information are used. ...

    The civil case was interrupted at one point when Pratt, Wolfe, Garcia, company administrative assistant Valerie Moser and alleged accomplice Amberlyn Nored were charged in federal court with sex trafficking by force, fraud and coercion. Pratt, a New Zealand resident who disappeared after being indicted, also is charged with producing child pornography in 2012 involving a girl who was then 16.

    Nored is accused in the criminal case of acting as a “reference woman” who would lie to the victims by saying she had performed in similar videos that were never posted online.

    The men could face life in prison if convicted of the criminal charges.

    As a San Diegan, this case has been making big news locally. People do modeling, and sometimes people do more than modeling. But contract law is contract law, and when you add the intentional infliction of emotional distress and generally scumminess of those involved (all with malice aforethought), they deserved fines this big and more.

    I hope the criminal case succeeds as well and they get the book thrown at them.

  • I know no one watches it for the plot, but come on. TFS doesn't sound hot at all. And that title, WTF?

    Also, submitter forgot the link to the video. Meh.

  • anyone with any common sense would know any porn created will find its way online. Nobody can promise it won't.

  • Mmmh (Score:2, Funny)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) *

    "and take steps to get them removed from other sites too"

    They judge should really call Streisand to get some hints.

    Second, they fucked on camera and now get millions, how on earth are they not pornstars then?

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      I think 'take steps' is a reasonable demand. While it may well be impossible to have the material entirely leave the public domain it is very much possible to contact any site hosting it and demand its removal.

      The popular commercial sites will be handling a lot of such requests already, and have a fairly streamlined process. That alone will greatly reduce the audience for these videos, purely because those sites are popular because they're where people go to view videos.

      Second, they fucked on camera and now get millions, how on earth are they not pornstars then?

      Sex trafficking victims are not porn

  • I'm struggling to think how people who do something for money are not 'professional'! I mean, I may be wrong but I'm guessing porn stars are not working 40 hour weeks either?
  • by Dausha ( 546002 ) on Saturday January 04, 2020 @10:48PM (#59587756) Homepage

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-s... [justice.gov]

    They GDP crew was also arrested and charged for federal sex trafficking by fraud & coercion. The women were victims.

Waste not, get your budget cut next year.

Working...