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A Months-Long Investigation Reveals Pornhub's Terrible Moderation Practices (vice.com) 233

samleecole shares a report: On May 1, 2016, in the middle of final exams, a young woman got a text message that would change her life forever. It included a screenshot of a pornographic video posted online, featuring her. Panicking, she quickly tried to justify what she had done. "They said it would only be in Australia," she told her friend, according to court documents. "I only did it for money." The video spread like wildfire. Jane Doe 11 -- one of 22 women who sued porn production company Girls Do Porn in 2016 for coercing them to have sex on video and lying to them about how the videos would be distributed -- learned from the student council president that "everyone was watching it in the library, so much so that the internet essentially crashed."

In October 2019, after Michael Pratt was charged with federal sex trafficking crimes, Pornhub removed Girls Do Porn's official Pornhub channel, as well as pages promoting Girls Do Porn as "top shelf" content and a reason to pay Pornhub a subscription fee. In January, after the ruling in the civil case found Girls Do Porn owed 22 women a total of $13 million, the official GirlsDoPorn.com site was taken offline. But even with the official site shut down and its owners in jail or on the run, the ruling has done little to stop the spread of the videos online. Pornhub claims that victims of nonconsensual porn -- as many of the Girls Do Porn videos are -- can easily request to remove videos from the site, and that those videos can be "fingerprinted." Broadly speaking, video fingerprinting is a method for software to identify, extract, and then summarize characteristic components or metadata of a video, allowing that video to be uniquely identified by its "fingerprint." According to Pornhub, this would automatically prevent future attempts to upload a video that was flagged.

But a Motherboard investigation found that this system can be easily and quickly circumvented with minor editing. Pornhub's current method for removing Girls Do Porn videos and other forms of non-consensual porn not only puts the onus of finding and flagging videos almost entirely on potentially-traumatized victims -- those victims can't even rely on the system to work.

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A Months-Long Investigation Reveals Pornhub's Terrible Moderation Practices

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  • Girls who do porn (Score:3, Insightful)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:48PM (#59697996)

    ...for money are porn stars, nothing can alter that.
    As for removing them, they could ask Barbara Streisand for help.

    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:01PM (#59698084)
      That was my thought as well. There's an entire vast ocean of porn out there and screaming about trying to remove a tiny bit of it that most people would never have seen is only going to make people actively seek it out.

      If the multi-billion dollar movie industry can't get their videos removed from the internet, I highly doubt that a few random nobodies who made a single porno are going to be any more successful.

      The sleazeballs that lied to these women certainly got what they deserved, but even if they were honest about the content only being distributed in Australia, the women should have realized it would have eventually found its way to the wider internet. Even a short perusal of one of the big porn sites would tell you that they contain massive amounts of content that was created long before digital distribution existed.

      Hopefully these women will be able to put all of this behind them and realize that even though it was a shitty thing that happened to them, it doesn't need to or shouldn't define them. Anyone who's going to denigrate a person for doing something that everyone else on the planet does is the kind of asshole you probably shouldn't want to be around.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

        he sleazeballs that lied to these women certainly got what they deserved, but even if they were honest about the content only being distributed in Australia, the women should have realized it would have eventually found its way to the wider internet.

        This article seems to be playing long and loose with the definition of "non-consensual" sex.

        I mean, doesn't that mean RAPE?

        That doesn't appears to be what happened here, at least to the primary girl in the story. She got paid to have sex and have it video re

        • Re:Girls who do porn (Score:5, Interesting)

          by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:41PM (#59698300)
          I didn't bother to read the article. The summary gave a good enough impression of what kind of tripe it would be, but as to your argument, I'm not sure it's quite as clear. Consider the following situation: Alice agrees to have sex with Bob on the condition that he wears a condom. Bob agrees but doesn't actually wear a condom or removes it at some point during intercourse.

          It's clear that Alice consented to have sex, but there were some conditions under which this was done. I'm not even sure if I'd want to go so far as to qualify the above as "rape" because that almost cheapens word, but I don't think anyone is going to argue Bob is innocent of all wrong-doing and plenty would still argue he should be punished for what he did.

          The women were clearly lied to and obviously if this were a matter of distribution of some songs they had written the people who lied would be just as guilty and just as fucked legally because there are already laws that cover this sort of situation in a general sense. Should we treat this as special because sex was involved? Maybe, I mean after all we do have laws to protect some information (e.g. medical records) more than others. Will sites like Vice that wouldn't give two shits about this if it happened in some other context (e.g. illegal distribution of songs) write articles trying to play it off as a bigger deal than it should be? Yeah. Is reality a little bit more gray and nuanced than any of the simple arguments that get trotted out? Almost certainly.
        • by ISayWeOnlyToBePolite ( 721679 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:52PM (#59698346)

          he sleazeballs that lied to these women certainly got what they deserved, but even if they were honest about the content only being distributed in Australia, the women should have realized it would have eventually found its way to the wider internet.

          This article seems to be playing long and loose with the definition of "non-consensual" sex.

          I mean, doesn't that mean RAPE?

          That doesn't appears to be what happened here, at least to the primary girl in the story. She got paid to have sex and have it video recorded.

          They lied to her about distribution...but, I have to ask, was that verbal or was it in the contracts she signed?

          If not in the contract, then really what leg does she have to stand on?

          But while the folks doing the film and publish were indeed sleazy, we shouldn't conflate actual rape where sex is not consensual with agreeing to appears in a video having sex, and being lied to as to the distribution channels.

          If anyone got paid, it was consensual.

          The article mentions "non-consensual porn", "non-consensual content", "non-consensual videos" and never the word rape. That what happened entails non-consensual sex is your own inference and the rape accusations you argue against is a complete figment of your imagination,

        • by Atrox Canis ( 1266568 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @03:19PM (#59698760)

          he sleazeballs that lied to these women certainly got what they deserved, but even if they were honest about the content only being distributed in Australia, the women should have realized it would have eventually found its way to the wider internet.

          This article seems to be playing long and loose with the definition of "non-consensual" sex.

          I mean, doesn't that mean RAPE?

          The article isn't claiming it was non-consensual sex. They are claiming it was non-consensual porn.

          That doesn't appears to be what happened here, at least to the primary girl in the story. She got paid to have sex and have it video recorded.

          They lied to her about distribution...but, I have to ask, was that verbal or was it in the contracts she signed?

          If not in the contract, then really what leg does she have to stand on?

          The women in this case have already won their lawsuit and criminal charges have been filed against the men that ran the scheme. Apparently, they had at least two legs to stand on.

          But while the folks doing the film and publish were indeed sleazy, we shouldn't conflate actual rape where sex is not consensual with agreeing to appears in a video having sex, and being lied to as to the distribution channels.

          If anyone got paid, it was consensual.

          Again, nobody was accused of rape, charged with rape, put on trial for rape or convicted of rape. RTFA.

        • Re:Girls who do porn (Score:5, Informative)

          by Bobartig ( 61456 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @04:31PM (#59699056)

          Consent to sex can be voided under the law if that consent was provided under false pretenses. The result isn't necessarily rape, which is traditionally the criminal act of sexual intercourse under force or duress (traditional rape laws are somewhat narrow and gendered, and focused on the element of penetrative sex). However, un-consented sexual contact can give rise to a claim of sexual battery or sexual assault, which is more closely related to the concept of battery (offensive or harmful touching of the body). A common law-school example is someone consents to have sex because the other person promises they don't have an STD. However, in reality, they do have an STD - that scenario can result in sexual assault.

          Some jurisdictions have modernized their criminal code to either expand the definition of rape, or include a definition of sexual battery that subsumes the concept of rape, or makes rape a specific version of sexual assault.

        • he sleazeballs that lied to these women certainly got what they deserved, but even if they were honest about the content only being distributed in Australia, the women should have realized it would have eventually found its way to the wider internet.

          This article seems to be playing long and loose with the definition of "non-consensual" sex.

          I mean, doesn't that mean RAPE?

          That doesn't appears to be what happened here, at least to the primary girl in the story. She got paid to have sex and have it video recorded.

          They lied to her about distribution...but, I have to ask, was that verbal or was it in the contracts she signed?

          If not in the contract, then really what leg does she have to stand on?

          But while the folks doing the film and publish were indeed sleazy, we shouldn't conflate actual rape where sex is not consensual with agreeing to appears in a video having sex, and being lied to as to the distribution channels.

          If anyone got paid, it was consensual.

          I agree with you and would add:

          While GirlsDoPorn can say, promise, guarantee, swear, affirm , even by way of legal contract that "it's only for Australia," and if Girls Do Porn had a geofence, as well, nothing can stop the Gentle User from downloading a video and slipping it to Pornhub.

          Also, as for fingerprinting, a slight edit would strip some of the granularity of the fingerprinting and bypass that method of automated detection.

          People who participate in porn have been outed for years. Movie stars abound

        • was that verbal or was it in the contracts she signed

          Doesn't matter. Verbal agreements are legal contracts (in Common Law). Maybe harder to prove in court, but they have the same standing.

      • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:27PM (#59698216)

        Hopefully these women will be able to put all of this behind them and realize that even though it was a shitty thing that happened to them, it doesn't need to or shouldn't define them. Anyone who's going to denigrate a person for doing something that everyone else on the planet does is the kind of asshole you probably shouldn't want to be around.

        Seriously, this. People do many things for fun and/or pay and who are we to judge them, especially when it's something we do or would do or have done. It would also help if people would stop labeling women who have/enjoy/perform sex as "sluts" and other derogatory things, especially while giving the men a pass or pat on the back for doing the same thing.

        • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:42PM (#59698308) Journal

          If you eat meat, you cannot consider yourself morally superior to the butcher.

          If you jerk off to porn, you cannot consider yourself morally superior to the actress.

          • And if you get paid for porn, you cannot consider yourself morally superior to the whore on the corner.
            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              Well the whore on the corner often has little choice in their partners, especially if there is a pimp involved whereas higher class prostitutes and porn stars can be choosy.
              It's one thing having sex for money with someone you might have had sex with for free and another with someone who you just want to run away from.
              It's one of the reasons that prostitution should be legal, so they can have more choice in clients.

              • Well the whore on the corner often has little choice in their partners, especially if there is a pimp involved whereas higher class prostitutes and porn stars can be choosy.
                It's one thing having sex for money with someone you might have had sex with for free and another with someone who you just want to run away from.
                It's one of the reasons that prostitution should be legal, so they can have more choice in clients.

                I agree.

                I went to Germany back when Moby Dick was a minnow (ca. 1965) where prostitution was legal.

                It was tier pricing inversely proportional to age/looks.

                I was hosted by a German family eager to practice their English and I asked if sex crimes were as big a problem as in the States.

                They said, "No. Why would it be? Sex is affordable to anyone, and it's accepted. When we DO have abuse, it makes major headlines -- not by way of morality, but by way of insanity."

          • If you eat meat, you cannot consider yourself morally superior to the butcher.

            If you jerk off to porn, you cannot consider yourself morally superior to the actress.

            True, but "I only did it for the money" is the worst possible PR in that situation.

            It is like, "I only read it for the articles," when it isn't the one with good articles.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 )

        Hopefully these women will be able to put all of this behind them and realize that even though it was a shitty thing that happened to them, it doesn't need to or shouldn't define them. Anyone who's going to denigrate a person for doing something that everyone else on the planet does is the kind of asshole you probably shouldn't want to be around.

        One bit of advice I would give to women, since apparently she had no idea that taking off her clothes and fucking somebody for money, is that your best bet to not be in porn is to not take off your clothes and fuck someone, especially if they are videotaping it.

        Panicking, she quickly tried to justify what she had done. "They said it would only be in Australia," she told her friend, according to court documents. "I only did it for money."

        I don't mean to be harsh, but here in the hinterlands a woman tha

    • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:11PM (#59698132) Journal

      I just want to know how I can get paid to do a "months-long investigation into PornHub". Nice work, if you can get it!

      • I just want to know how I can get paid to do a "months-long investigation into PornHub". Nice work, if you can get it!

        I imagine it would get really old, really fast and you'd probably see things you'd wish you hadn't and could unsee.

  • by memory_register ( 6248354 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:48PM (#59698000)
    ...don't trust pornographers to begin with. Seriously, not trolling here. Just don't trust shady people who will feel nothing at compromising your personhood, your future, your career, etc. And are we surprised? Why would pornhub act with any more respect or decency than the people they rely upon for content?
    • This falls in the category of someone makes a bad decision which is regretted later, someone else exploits that bad decision beyond all reason. Everyone is wrong, but we have to be careful here to overlook the original sin, lest we be accused of slut shaming, victim blaming, etc. But I won't, because I'm an asshole.

      The guy should definitely be dealt with harshly there's no doubt. Bt the world is not short on people with get rich quick notions that come at the expense of others and they can't be removed quic

    • ...don't trust pornographers to begin with. Seriously, not trolling here. Just don't trust shady people who will feel nothing at compromising your personhood, your future, your career, etc.

      And are we surprised? Why would pornhub act with any more respect or decency than the people they rely upon for content?

      Desperate people do desperate things. Desperate people are vulnerable.

      Unethical people rip off the elderly. Blaming the victim is OK, if proportional.

      The women were not deceptive sleaze buckets, right?

  • by SpankiMonki ( 3493987 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:51PM (#59698018)
    My years long investigation has uncovered no problems. I guess I'm not looking hard enough.
  • by bluefoxlucid ( 723572 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:54PM (#59698030) Homepage Journal

    Rather, it can't solve everything today.

    I wonder what sort of "fingerprint" they use for the video. Lighting? Colored areas? Movement? A hash? What if you introduce a large amount of subtle noise into the L channel?

    Google ALSO has this problem and I'm sure they're WAY better at this than Pornhub.

    Pratt and his company should be forced to pay for these girls's therapy, including therapy to help them deal with the fall-out ongoing--you can learn to not be bothered by this, with a perspective shift, but it's going to take a lot of counseling unless you've already developed a huge pile of defense mechanisms in your life. PornHub should keep improving their software and keep up their due diligence, but obviously the technical problem is so difficult even Facebook and Google can't figure it out, and it won't suddenly make the girls un-famous as local porn actresses. Somebody owes a lot of compensation.

    • by Big Boss ( 7354 )

      I was going to ask what tech, exactly, people think will filter out these videos from all the other videos of similar content on the platform? This is no different than the people asking Google to filter out whatever video content they don't like today. It seems easy to say that you can tell at a glance, but it's not that easy for a computer. It can determine that there are probably people, maybe even that it's porn, facial recognition might be able to pick out a single person, some of the time. But there a

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        It is possible. The technique is similar to what Shazam does with music. If you're willing to put enough processor time into it you can make a video (or audio) fingerprint that is robust enough to manipulation that the original video would have to be very seriously compromised to evade it. Like old-school watching locked porn channels on cable compromised.

        Should PornHub have to invest those resources? Should Google? There's a balance that needs to be struck. I expect Motherboard is in favour of porn being s

        • by Big Boss ( 7354 )

          Fair enough. I'm willing to believe it's possible, I've not read everything on the topic. I've just seen a LOT of bad results from such systems over the years. I have to wonder about the scale though. Any idea on the requirements for, say, 1 minute of 4K video? Or even 1080p. Then we need to figure out how that scales over the amount uploaded to each platform. A quick search has an article from 2017 claiming 300 hours of video per minute being uploaded to youtube. This https://www.tubefilter.com/201... [tubefilter.com] clai

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      What about pursuing the people uploading this stuff? A few might be innocently doing it but many are just trying to hurt these poor women even more by perpetuating the sexual assault they suffered.

      The criminal trial is on-going but if the producers of these videos are found guilty then the uploaders will be accessories to that crime. No different than knowingly upload child pornography.

    • Probably gets a lot worse before it gets better. A decent guess imo is that the combination of facial recognition + social media + ransomware is brewing in the background as the next negative trend. Similar to the "I saw you jacking off in your webcam" spams, but more sophisticated.

      It's a lot of work but the pieces of the puzzle are there given the low costs of bandwidth and storage space, and the effort would serve as a testbed. Scrape pics from social media like Clearview does, then use established alg

    • Rather, it can't solve everything today.

      I wonder what sort of "fingerprint" they use for the video. Lighting? Colored areas? Movement? A hash? What if you introduce a large amount of subtle noise into the L channel?

      Google ALSO has this problem and I'm sure they're WAY better at this than Pornhub.

      Pratt and his company should be forced to pay for these girls's therapy, including therapy to help them deal with the fall-out ongoing--you can learn to not be bothered by this, with a perspective shift, but it's going to take a lot of counseling unless you've already developed a huge pile of defense mechanisms in your life. PornHub should keep improving their software and keep up their due diligence, but obviously the technical problem is so difficult even Facebook and Google can't figure it out, and it won't suddenly make the girls un-famous as local porn actresses. Somebody owes a lot of compensation.

      Since the internet has been around for decades now, I have a better idea. How about we let ignorant people learn the hard way about "limited distribution" on the internet, because it's obvious that technology can't fix stupid.

      And let's stop assuming that anyone who does porn is a fragile little flower in need of a lifetime of therapy. Local or worldwide porn star, you're still a porn star.

  • Can't fix stupid (Score:4, Insightful)

    by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:57PM (#59698054)
    Even if the pornographers themselves really did only post / host the video in Australia, what's to stop someone else from posting it everywhere on other sites? The Golden Rule of the Internet is that ANYTHING posted or sent -- email, social media, naughty vids -- can and likely will be shared publicly, with everyone, forever. There are no take-backs. Someone that says they truly believed their naughty vids would only ever be shown in Australia is depressingly ignorant or lying.
    • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:15PM (#59698154)

      I think it's harsh to say non technical teenage girls would really understand how a video could spread outside a private for-pay site... but you are right that any video online potentially is going to be spread everywhere.

      It seems like a better solution might have been to turn over all online profits and copyright ownership to the women involved, and let them make copyright claims on anything posted (as well as then being in control of shutting things down if they chose). There is probably a lot more power in hosting a high quality original they would derive income from, than in trying to shot down every edited copy.

    • by eth1 ( 94901 )

      Even if the pornographers themselves really did only post / host the video in Australia, what's to stop someone else from posting it everywhere on other sites? The Golden Rule of the Internet is that ANYTHING posted or sent -- email, social media, naughty vids -- can and likely will be shared publicly, with everyone, forever. There are no take-backs. Someone that says they truly believed their naughty vids would only ever be shown in Australia is depressingly ignorant or lying.

      Exactly, which is why any claim by the original publisher that it would only be available in X location is essentially fraudulent, no matter how they try to limit it.

    • by DavenH ( 1065780 )
      Actually you can fix this kind of stupid with a bit of technical education.
      • by Alumoi ( 1321661 )

        Actually you can fix this kind of stupid with a bit of education.

        There, fixed it for you.

  • by scourfish ( 573542 ) <scourfish@@@yahoo...com> on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:58PM (#59698060)
    Coercion would imply that they were forced or threatened into having sex on camera for money, which would be a criminal matter.
  • When you consent to doing things like this on camera. Never let yourself be recorded doing things you can't show you parents and you'll be alright.

    • by amorsen ( 7485 )

      There are blackmail videos on Pornhub.

      We need a due dilligence law for web sites with user created content. It should force web sites to pick one of the following options:

      1) Promise that they are not hosting illegal content (99% of web sites do not accept user created content, this option is for them)
      2) Have a team that proactively searches for and removes illegal content (Only large websites like Google can afford that, and Google has publicly stated that they will not pick this option.)
      3) Contribute a per

  • I'm sorry, but what? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Thursday February 06, 2020 @12:59PM (#59698068) Journal
    "They said it would only be in Australia"??? I'm genuinely trying to understand what kind of thought process would have to occur for *THAT* to be a justification?
    • No, this is what happens when you allow web browsers to stop forcing you to type âoeWWWâ. People forget that itâ(TM)s actually the World Wide Webâ¦
    • by DMJC ( 682799 )
      The problem is a perception (misinformed) that paywalls work and that content doesn't get scraped/shared. I know people with friends in the porn industry in Australia who don't know this. They think their family won't find out, but the reality is (on average) in less than a month your parents are going to know.
    • by LostMyAccount ( 5587552 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:29PM (#59698236)

      There's an old joke about Winston Churchill where he asks a woman at a party if she would have sex with him for a million pounds sterling, and she laughs and says "of course". He then asks her if she would for 1 pound, and she says, Mr. Churchill what do you think I am? He replies that we've determined what you are, now we're just bargaining on price.

      I'm torn about feeling genuinely sorry for these women as they were almost certainly lied to in order to get them to participate in a porn film.

      Yet at the same time, these are women who agreed to be in a porn film. At what point do you reach the idea where you're OK with having sex with a stranger on film just as long as nobody you know finds out about it? And how naive do you have to be to get to the point where you actually trust the people are being honest *or* that somehow overseas porn on the internet won't leak into the US?

      I'd like to not "judge" these women, but I kind of feel like they're being portrayed as revenge porn victims by an intimate partner using footage never intended to be widely available. When in fact they were willing participants in a sex-for-money exchange. At some point I think to myself is the real issue here is that they've been exposed for what they actually are, someone willing to trade sex for money. I've got no problem with that, but it is what it is, and people will think differently about you if they find out, and keeping it secret forever ain't easy.

      How would any of this be different if they instead decided to commit an act of prostitution, got arrested and got their face put on a billboard, in the paper or wound up on the news because their client was high profile? It seems like the same net outcome -- everyone finds out they're willing to have sex for money. Whose fault is it in that situation?

      Are there that many women out there who are so transactional about their sexuality that their principal concern is getting discovered?

      • by jm007 ( 746228 )
        "... the real issue here is that they've been exposed for what they actually are, someone willing to trade sex for money..."

        zing!

        some pretty sharp questions.... probably gonna piss off a snowflake or two

        please, proceed
        • I know there are people who are going to think that the people who paid them and lied about the terms of distribution are the only ones who bear any blame and that otherwise these women are blameless. I'll admit that part of me believes this, but part of me just doesn't get it because of how weird the decision making process was that got them there to begin with.

          Have sex with whoever you want under whatever circumstances you want, but geeze, there are consequences. Pregnancy. Disease. Damage to your rep

    • "They said it would only be in Australia"???

      I'm genuinely trying to understand what kind of thought process would have to occur for *THAT* to be a justification?

      A private buy on the other side of the world getting your "art" means it's unlikely to end up locally available to your grandma. The thought process is quite sound when met with a written contract. A certain amount of trust is involved in everything you do in life, you typically don't enter written contracts with the expectation that the other party fraudulently intends not to uphold their side of the agreement.

    • I don’t call that a justification as much as a contract. It might be a bit naive that the videos could never reach the Internet but a valid clause in a contract. For example, some top Hollywood actors do commercials overseas with stipulations that the commercials are not broadcast in the US. There are stigmas about “real actors don’t film commercials” but if the commercials are not seen in the US it’s a little bit of a loophole.
  • It couldn't be that expensive to hire human moderators to review your content.

    • Are you kidding? Seriously? More porn gets made every single day than could possibly be human moderated. And who is doing this moderating of the hundreds (thousands?) of porn sites out there? And who is paying those moderators? And who sets the standards for moderation? And who gives moderators the constantly updated list of things to moderate? And how can they even tell one random cock sucking 19 year old porn princess from any other look alike 19 year old porn princess? Jesus fucking Christ, use s
    • It couldn't be that expensive to hire human moderators to review your content.

      And do what?

      Are humans supposed to remember every single porn video that is on a block list?

      What are you proposing that humans would DO exactly that could not be done better my computers, in terms of moderation?

  • All it takes is 5 minutes and your own camera and you too could help put an end to this crisis. If every one on Earth posted a porn video of themselves then we'd all be on equal footing and nobody would give a damn that you decided to show some love'n for some money. Not that anyone should give a shit anyway but that says more about them than you.
  • Unpleasant situation, but once the video is out there, it is likely to stay out there.

  • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:06PM (#59698110) Homepage

    In explaining her justification for doing it, she admitted that she agreed to do it for money. That's not non-consensual.

    Perhaps the producers violated the distribution agreements, and they should be held accountable for that, but let's not misrepresent what this is; it's a contract dispute, not rape.

    Free life advice: If you don't want people to know you filmed porn, then don't film porn.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by jargonburn ( 1950578 )
      So if I seduce a woman into having sex but she says I have to use a condom, and then I remove the condom during sex and she notices, that wasn't a crime, right? I just violated the specifics of the distribution (of bodily fluids) agreement I made with her.
      • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @02:03PM (#59698406) Homepage

        Do you always try to prove your point by misrepresenting the opposing argument? I never said it wasn't a crime, and your comparison is different enough not to be applicable regardless.

        What you describe is a horrendous practice, I agree; is it rape? No. Is it assault? Maybe, and that should go both ways ( "She told me she was taking birth control..." ).

        • Hmm. "Contract dispute" doesn't seem to be the phrase you meant to use then, as there's a very significant difference between tort and a crime. Unless you meant a contract with terms that are unenforceable due to violation of the law?
          As far as my example: Rape? Depends on jurisdiction; some would be "yes", but many would be "no". Sexual assault? Where it isn't considered Rape, it's highly likely to be treated as sexual assault; interestingly, a brief search seemed to indicate the U.S. is undecided, as su
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @02:17PM (#59698498)

        Your example involves violation of bodily integrity. It is, by definition, assault.

        The example in the story is violation of a contract. It *is* also non-consensual sex, assuming that the consent to sex was given conditional on the contract.

        The problem is, "non-consensual sex" has been successfully equated in society's consciousness with forcible physical sexual assault.

        • Your example involves violation of bodily integrity. It is, by definition, assault.

          Yes.

          The example in the story is violation of a contract. It *is* also non-consensual sex, assuming that the consent to sex was given conditional on the contract.

          Agreed.

          The problem is, "non-consensual sex" has been successfully equated in society's consciousness with forcible physical sexual assault.

          "Problem", hmm? So long as we're talking about it being a matter of degree, rather than whether it's on the same spectrum, I'm on the same page. I probably should have added some caveats to my previous example (stealthing, found out after the fact, no STIs or pregnancy, but "everyone knows she took it raw"), although I probably still would have deserved to be modded troll...

  • Don't star a Porn Video Any agreements about distribution are out the window because the fact is If it exists it will wind up on bittorrent or a video sharing site
  • by DMJC ( 682799 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:16PM (#59698158)
    People need to know the truth about the Adult industry. I had a friend once who I talked out of doing porn. Not because I dislike porn, but because she wasn't aware of how the internet works. The reality is any porn video that is put on the internet is going to get dumped onto the free sites. There are entire groups of criminals that steal credit card numbers and use them to pay for porn site access. They then scrape every image/video file on the websites and dump them onto the free streaming sites. A lot of naive women are shooting videos being told they are going to be behind paywalls and their images will remain private and members only. There needs to be more emphasis on education in schools to at least explain to young women how this works so that they can make properly informed choices about what they want to do.
    • I have friends who have done porn - one who essentially makes her entire living doing fetish videos - and while teaching people about the all-encompassing and informational spreading capabilities of the internet is all well and good, perhaps what we should teach people instead is that porn isn't anything to be ashamed of, either acting in it, or watching it. Instead, in our puritanical repression, we're all "Dear Christ don't let anyone see a nipple!?" I recall someone years ago discussing that if I have
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @01:23PM (#59698190)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Let's say there is anything online you don't want to spread online. The odds of you being able to contact a site and have them remove whatever it is is next to none besides the major players like Pornhub who make a good effort to remove things when they are reported. There should be also a way to catch people spreading material they don't own but that doesn't happen in an anonymous internet.Getting mad at Pornhub here is like getting mad at the police because they only go after, and try to prevent, the cri
  • I'm sorry, perhaps I'm more than a little cynical about a subject like this, but in what Universe can you believe anything that porn producers tell you?
    Unless she had an iron-clad contract, negotiated by an attorney, how could she believe that they weren't going to take that video and do whatever they wanted with it to make as much profit from it as they possibly could?
    While I feel sorry for her for making such a poor choice, she's an adult, made an adult decision (regardless of it being an extremely poor
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Apparently she did have such a contract. Good enough that it being violated got her about half a million dollars in civil court and federal prison for the guy who broke it.

    • I think some of the problem is just a kind of delusional thinking by these women.

      I'm just guessing here, but these are young and attractive women who have been engaging in socially if not financially transactional sexual activities. They're accustomed to preferential treatment based on their appearance and likely as an outcome of their sexual engagement.

      This probably leads to a false sense of confidence in outcomes -- nothing bad happened before when they had sex with a rich guy or a popular guy to gain so

  • by sheph ( 955019 ) on Thursday February 06, 2020 @02:02PM (#59698398)
    I think this presents yet another excellent educational opportunity for all people young and old alike. If you put something on the Internet it's out there and you have no control over who downloads it, saves it, duplicates it, uploads it somewhere else etc. Even with fingerprinting, no matter what you do someone can open the video in any video editor make a minor alteration and resave it and it no longer has the same fingerprint. If you don't want to be naked all over the Internet then don't agree to get naked on camera for money. That really is the answer here. Don't take naked selfies or videos. Don't make your home sex tape thinking that's never going to get out. Etc. How many times do we have to repeat this lesson? It's been happening for years and every time the "victim" acts surprised.
  • Wait, we're suggesting that guys who shoot and distribute porn *might be something less than perfectly honest and forthright*?

    Jesus. Next you're going to tell me that water is wet or some other unpossible thing.

    Look, I have sympathy for people whose stuff was shot by voyeurs or some upskirt crap - that's criminal, clearly a crime.

    But I'm sorry, if someone says "Hey baby, we're going to have you going at it with these 6 guys, but trust me, we're only going to use this video for (X)" how the fuck gullible ar

  • "only did it for the money", we weren't expecting otherwise.
    "thought it would only be in australia", because somehow that's any better?

    Somewhere along the line, these women should have realized something that my mother's been saying all my life: these women should be overjoyed that they weren't murdered when they were alone in a closed room with large strange men far from home. The fact that they made it home alive is already lucky. The fact that they walked away with cash money is an absolute miracle.

    Don

    • by jbengt ( 874751 )

      . . . these women should be overjoyed that they weren't murdered when they were alone in a closed room with large strange men far from home. The fact that they made it home alive is already lucky.

      You have an awfully pessimistic definition of "lucky".

  • Probably no site needs effective moderation more than PornHub. Not only do they deal with Girls Do Porn, but they have to prevent underage sex tapes, revenge porn, and fakes. Sure, DeepFakes aren't very convincing today, but I think we all agree they'll only improve with time. If I make a sex tape of Mike Pence sucking a man off in a airport bathroom and share it without his consent, should PornHub be able to profit off it?

    I dread the future when revenge porn can be convincingly made with DeepFakes...Mi
  • Another important topic that ought to be here is why is there heat on this young lady in the first place? Why doesn't she just own it and say,"Yeah, I did porn. It's a naked body and maybe you should grow up about it?"
    People having sex is natural... why is it that in a society which allows media about heads exploding, gunshots, and all kinds of vicious, violent, sadistic acts to be shown onscreen that naked bodies doing something (even if acted out) pleasurable is so taboo?
    I sincerely think there's a bigger

    • Playboy, when they got sued back in the day, would use subscriptions in the local area to show the community standards. The prudish areas tended to be the most subscribed....
    • It's a naked body and maybe you should grow up about it?

      A very common and normal Grown Up response to a naked body is sexual arousal and quite often a desire to engage in sexual contact with it. It is only people who are too young, or too old, who tend to view such things in a nonsexual light.

  • Pornographers are untrustworthy. In other news, water is wet and fire is hot.

  • Don't do porn videos for money. Once you're on video on the internet, it's out there, there's no take backs.

  • Fingerprinting is clown shoes.
    What they need is AI to identify the videos.

  • "They said it would only be in Australia,"

    And you were stupid enough to believe that?

    I'm not agreeing with that they did in any way, shape, or form, but c'mon. You have to be pretty damn stupid to hear that and go "Okay, sure, in that case I'll make a porn flick."

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