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The Courts The Almighty Buck

40 Girls Do Porn Victims Are Suing Pornhub For $1 Million Each (vice.com) 313

samleecole shares a report from Motherbard: Forty victims of sex trafficking operation Girls Do Porn have filed a lawsuit against Mindgeek, Pornhub's parent company, for a litany of accusations, including knowingly benefiting from Girls Do Porn videos on Pornhub and failing to moderate the images circulating rampantly on its network of tube sites. In total, the lawsuit is demanding more than $40 million in damages -- at least $1 million per plaintiff -- as well as the money Mindgeek earned from hosting and promoting their videos and legal fees. "As a proximate result of MindGeek's knowing financial benefit and participation in GirlsDoPorn's sex trafficking venture, Plaintiffs have suffered damages, including, but not limited to, severe emotional distress, significant trauma, attempted suicide, and social and familial ostracization," the complaint states.

Filed with the United States District Court for the Southern District of California on December 15 by attorneys Brian Holm and John O'Brien, the 43-page complaint details the suffering of these alleged victims of Girls Do Porn, and claims that each of the 40 plaintiffs became suicidal because of the harassment they endured when their videos spread non-consensually across the internet, including across Mindgeek's network of porn sites. Girls Do Porn was a sex trafficking operation that forced and coerced dozens of women as young as 18 into sex on camera, and lied to them about where and how the videos would be distributed. The women were told by everyone involved, from cast and crew to the owner, that the videos would not appear online. After filming, their videos were uploaded to Girls Do Porn's own site, as well as Pornhub, where the Girls Do Porn monetized its videos as a Pornhub "content partner." Pornhub also promoted Girls Do Porn as a content partner even after women in Girls Do Porn videos came forward about abuse and sued it.
Last week, following a report from The New York Times about allegations of child sexual abuse imagery on the site, Pornhub changed its police to only allow verified uploads and downloads. Soon after, Mastercard and Visa stopped processing payments for Pornhub.
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40 Girls Do Porn Victims Are Suing Pornhub For $1 Million Each

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  • by Pibroch(CiH) ( 7414754 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:05AM (#60836916)

    >Pornhub changed its police

    The typo has me wondering what a PornHub police force would look like, and I can only conclude that it would be a much more explicit version of "Hot Cops" from Arrested Development...

    • They arrest you on suspicion of being good in bed and then drop the charges due to lack of evidence.

  • Better sue now (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:13AM (#60836938)

    When they still have money left in the bank. Now that EMV cut them off their network, it might not last.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by H_Fisher ( 808597 ) <[h_v_fisher] [at] [yahoo.com]> on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:30AM (#60836966)

    One lesson to take away from this is the example that, yet again, tragic problems go un-acted upon for a long time because people who dare to criticize the porn industry in a forum like /. -- even to condemn its ties to real, objectively terrible things like sex trafficking, rape, child exploitation, etc. -- get hit with a strawman argument for supposedly being anti-sex, or fundamentalist or dogmatic, or anti-feminist, or closed-minded, etc.

    Evil gets a free pass when moderate voices who would speak against those evils are silenced.

    But I'm sure that won't happen with other fundamental rights, like free speech or religion or legal firearms ownership ...

    • One lesson to take away from this is the example that, yet again, tragic problems go un-acted upon for a long time because people who dare to criticize the porn industry in a forum like /. -- even to condemn its ties to real, objectively terrible things like sex trafficking, rape, child exploitation, etc. -- get hit with a strawman argument for supposedly being anti-sex, or fundamentalist or dogmatic, or anti-feminist, or closed-minded, etc.

      Evil gets a free pass when moderate voices who would speak against those evils are silenced.

      But I'm sure that won't happen with other fundamental rights, like free speech or religion or legal firearms ownership ...

      Ironic much?

      "I'm gonna make a strawman argument to accuse others of making a strawman argument."

      Your circular reasoning has given me the spins and I have to go puke in the toilet now.

    • Evil gets a free pass when moderate voices who would speak against those evils are silenced.

      Quite right. However I don't think that in the real world people generally leap to defend the porn industry. And for that reason, many porn studios go to extreme lengths to ensure that they do everything exactly by the book, just so they won't get lumped in with people doing "sex trafficking, rape, child exploitation, etc.", and get shut down. By all means speak out against these evils, and against any systematic wrongdoing or bad practices in the industry, but don't condemn the industry as a whole, with

    • tragic problems go un-acted upon for a long time because people who dare to criticize the porn industry ... But I'm sure that won't happen with other fundamental rights, like free speech or religion or legal firearms ownership

      Obviously, we have to ban porn because of the obvious abuses, and people who condemn me yelling about this are horrible people. Now, don't you dare try to regulate my free (hate) speech or my guns.

  • Copyright (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Dan East ( 318230 )

    So in other words this is just a copyright claim? They agreed to have sex, for money, while being videoed from multiple angles, and knowing that the videos would be on the internet on specific website(s). Of course the public in general then copied those videos (illegally, in breach of copyright law) and spread them to other pornography websites. The girls did not suffer damages financially, because (I assume) they were paid as agreed for their services. They also did not hold the copyright to those video

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Dan East ( 318230 )

      I have to correct myself:

      knowing that the videos would be on the internet on specific website(s).

      That should be "knowing that the videos would be distributed on DVD in other countries." Again, they agreed to making pornography, knowing it would be sold and distributed, but not in the area(s) or through the mechanisms they expected it to be. If they have documentation to that affect, and the parties that they were in contract with did financially benefit from the distribution in areas they did not agree in, then it is breech of contract and they could sue for damages or a shar

      • Re:Copyright (Score:5, Informative)

        by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:50AM (#60837030) Journal
        Even in work for hire deals, there's often something in the contract about the scope of distribution. Makes sense, since it is directly related to the expected profits to be made. And as TFS states: it wasn't some random guy with a copy of the DVD who put these videos online, it was the studio who did it, in partnership with PornHub. The studio broke contract, and a judge already ruled as such (and awarded damages).

        By the way, I read on the Wikipedia page about this case that the judge awarded the plaintiffs ownership of the videos. So depending on when these videos were (knowingly) distributed by PornHub, these women do have a copyright case against them, in addition to their other claims. They claim (rightly) that because the distribution was far more widespread than agreed, they suffered reputation damage.
      • I can see how they would have agreed to this though. Knowing the videos will only be on DVDs circulated in Australia, they believed that nobody will recognize them and that their pornographic work goes un-noticed because the entire Australian population don't know them.
      • by Tinfoil ( 109794 )

        Keep correcting.

        After filming, their videos were uploaded to Girls Do Porn's own site, as well as Pornhub, where the Girls Do Porn monetized its videos as a Pornhub "content partner." Pornhub also promoted Girls Do Porn as a content partner even after women in Girls Do Porn videos came forward about abuse and sued it.

        There is no DMCA claim, Girls Do Porn uploaded the videos themselves and PH continued to allow them to upload and monetize videos from these women while court cases were in play.

    • Re:Copyright (Score:5, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:51AM (#60837036) Homepage Journal

      They agreed to have sex, for money, while being videoed from multiple angles, and knowing that the videos would be on the internet on specific website(s).

      No. First they were lied to about the nature of the work, told it was modelling, later that it was porn but only to be sold on DVD overseas with little chance of anyone in the US seeing it. Then they were coerced, with heavy pressure put on them with the threat of abandonment or debt. There were lied to some more, fake testimony from women who claimed to vouch for those guys having previously worked for the site.

      So no, it's not just copyright. Sex under false pretences is sexual assault, it's rape. Pornhub was notified and did little to remove the videos in question, which makes them accessories to the crime as they profited off it.

    • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

      The complaint says "...used fraud, coercion, and intimidation to get the women to film pornographic videos under the false pretenses...". Doesn't really sound like they 'agreed' to do it. And it doesn't say 'the public in general' copied the videos and put them online. It says Girls Do Porn did the coercing, intimidating, lying, and filming. And it says Mindgeek contracted with Girls Do Porn to put them online.

      The suit further states how the principals in Girls Do Porn have been indicted on federal sex

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by gweihir ( 88907 )

        You do understand that you can write anything into a complaint, right?

    • So in other words this is just a copyright claim?

      Nope. It's far dumber than that. They have no claim against Pornhub what so ever because they don't own copyright to the videos, and if they had Pornhub has a DMCA process.

      They are claiming that Pornhub in hosting a video uploaded by others who may or may not be breaching copyright of GirlsDoPorn, a company they successfully persuade a fraud claim against, .... they care claiming Pornhub is now somehow liable.

      I wanted to prepare a car analogy but I couldn't think of something stupid enough to rival this. It

      • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

        Where are people getting this stupid copyright idea from? They are not 'claiming that Pornhub in hosting a video uploaded by others who may or may not be breaching copyright of GirlsDoPorn', they are claiming Pornhub contracted with Girls Do Porn to put the videos online. Pornhub was directly profitting from the sex trafficing operation.

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by gweihir ( 88907 )

          1) Girls Do Porn is not a "sex trafficking operation". It is a porn producer that committed fraud. The production of the porn was legit. The distribution was not.
          2) By the principles of equity and good faith Pornhub could rightfully assume whatever they got from Girls Do Porn was legit.

          Seriously, stop losing all rationality just because sex is involved.

          • by shilly ( 142940 )

            1. Sex trafficking = moving people across borders to do sex work with coercion. Coercion need not be violent, it can be withholding passports, or -- as here -- threatening people with financial harm ("you have to reimburse us for the plane tickets" "but you told us they were free" "only if you do the film" "but that's not what you told me before" "we're telling you now")

            2. Nope. Businesses have duties of care in relation to their supply chains. Supply chain management and assurance is a whole thing, you kn

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Girls Do Porn is a sex trafficking operation, that's what it's called when someone is transported long distances to an unfamiliar place where they don't know anyone and have little means to get home, and are thus reliant on the person who transported them to avoid being stranded.

            Sex trafficking usually does not involve physical restraints or captivity, the same as modern slavery usually doesn't. It uses money and psychology instead.

            PornHub was doubtless aware of the lawsuit that Girls Do Porn lost and the c

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        I completely agree. They have a DMCA take-down right but that is it. What happened to them is that they were defrauded. Because of "Sex!" they now think they (or rather their lawyers who will get most of the money) can blow that all out of proportion and earn a huge payoff.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      They agreed to have sex, for money, while being videoed from multiple angles, and knowing that the videos would be on the internet on specific website(s).

      Wrong and you're doing a good job of underplaying just about everything that was bad about GirlsDoPorn including rape and sex trafficking. This is a long long way from just being about copyright, GDP leaders are a bunch of nasty scumbags.

      https://www.georgiacrime.com/B... [georgiacrime.com]

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

      • According to the complaint, the circumstances were not at all what was promised. Some of the women were pressured into signing documents without reviewing them and then threatened with legal action or outing if they failed to perform; some were not permitted to leave the shooting locations until the videos were made; family and friends and the general public eventually saw the videos online; some victims were harassed and ridiculed and estranged from their families as a result; and some were sexually assaulted and in at least one case raped. Some were forced to perform certain sex acts they had declined to do, or they would not be paid or allowed to leave.

        These are all claims that may don't seem to have any evidence. While the GBI and DoJ can investigate, they will have a hard time proving any of this. What will be very important will be the contents of the documents and whether they can prove the women signed under duress.

        • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

          And what do you think is likely?

          A) Dozens of women are lying, they just made it all up.
          B) Rape and sex trafficking did occur and the police and FBI are not complete idiots, they charged people with these crimes because they have good reason to believe these crimes happened.

          Anyone would think you are on the side of GirlsDoPorn and don't want them investigated and tried.

          Whether or not GDP lied is likely going to be judged based on witness testimony.

          • Honestly, (A) is statistically much more likely than (B) and that is just a fact, which is not part of the feminist jurisprudence and hence not taken into account by the police and FBI.

            Seriously - I have actually done my research here. I am 100% sure you have not.

            Having said that, there has been conviction so I will say GirlsDoPorn did something wrong. At the end of the day, copyright was assigned to the women and they have the choice to use DMCA, and they can press further if DMCA was not honored. So it is

            • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

              Link the evidence for this claim because I find that to be highly unlikely that this is simply a case of dozens of women lying about the same thing at the same time, that comes across as misogynistic.

              • From

                Having said that, there has been conviction so I will say GirlsDoPorn did something wrong.

                you derived:

                this is simply a case of dozens of women lying about the same thing at the same time

                that comes across as misogynistic

                Ah yes - the last refuge of a loser.

            • Unfortunately under the statute 17 USC 201(e) the victims cannot be assigned the copyrights of the videos in question, even if the defendants lost in court, because copyright was not meant to be a tool of censorship.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by gweihir ( 88907 )

        There was no rape or sex trafficking. There was fraud. Of course, some women think that when their consensual sexual activities come to light, they are morally allowed to cry "rape" to restore their honor. Some others are just greedy. This despicable behavior damages every real victim.

        • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

          You seem pretty certain of this, maybe you should look a little deeper at the claims instead of jumping to conclusions. The rapes are claimed to have happened at a different time to when the porn was filmed BTW. One of the rapes for instance, they guy was giving the woman a lift, then he stopped, locked all the vehicle doors and windows and then forcibly raped the woman. And mostly by one guy so far as I have read in the articles.

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            I have looked. I have looked for a long time now. Almost all of these stories are made up. A lot of the rest is misrepresented.

            In the case at hand, we are talking about Girls Do Porn here, i.e. what the _company_ did, not about some other crimes that were done in some other contexts. Sure, rape is unfortunately a fact. Human sexuality is screwed up and some people are unable to compensate intellectually. Some people believe they have a right to take what they want. (Had a line-jumper at the post-office toda

            • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

              The majority of the issue is they lured the girls in on false pretenses, plied them with drink, lied about what they were doing, they lied about the distribution format and location and then sometimes the girls were raped after all that.

              So do you not think these people are complete scumbags who should be thrown in prison?

  • "The women were told ... that the videos would not appear online". And where would they appear? On VHS?

    Crooks and gullible people, killer combination, made for exploitation.

    • Who cares what they were told? What does the contracts say? That is the important thing. The women can say "We were told...." but if it is in the contract then they have no case.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. Still fraud. But decidedly not "sex trafficking" or "rape".

  • It wasn't a very successful one, just going by the number of plaintiffs.
  • Like it or not ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Martin S. ( 98249 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @08:39AM (#60836988) Journal

    You may agree or disagree but like it or not the internet is going to become a lot more regulated in the next couple of decades. Some actions will benefit people and consumers like the GDPR did for personal privacy, some will favour commerce like the upcoming EU internet commercial and services directives.

    In the beginning, and I was there, the internet was seen as force for good, information, empowerment and progress. We all sighed at eternal september [wikipedia.org] but did little except complain.

    We can add to the cacophony or we can be part of the solution. We accept restrictions IRL, speeding, drunk driving, etc is illegal. There are restrictions on alcohol and recreational drugs. We need to focus on what restrictions are desirable or reasonable and which are not, choose the right battles for the right reasons. This case strikes me as entirely reasonable and the underlying situation one that is far closer to criminal than legitimate enterprise.

    Europe's Plans to take on Big Tech from TLDR News [youtube.com]

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @10:17AM (#60837374)
      that's the main issue. The powers that be are flexing their muscles to take control of the Internet as a communications platform. I can't imagine that's going to end well. As it stands it looks to me like they're trying to turn it into cable TV, where a handful of big players are the only ones allowed to put content out.
    • What we are going to see the turning of the wheel back to its starting point. Instead of a world which has a lot of information about everyone everywhere populated by a generation which doesn't care about what something happened in history, we will go back the full circle and have:
      - a world where everything will be hidden behind a paywall and lack of knowledge will remain a form of discrimination
      - a generation which will lust for blood and form lynch mobs asking for pacification
      - run by ~kings~ corporate ow

  • This article, along with it's extensive use of hyperbole, seems like an attempt by the attorneys to try their case in public before it gets to the courts.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      This article, along with it's extensive use of hyperbole, seems like an attempt by the attorneys to try their case in public before it gets to the courts.

      Given that said lawyers are the ones that stand to profit the most, this is obviously what is going on.

  • We cannot set a precedent where a takedown request is more important because of criminal activities by unrelated third-parties. Even ignoring the free speech implications, we cannot have a world where being a recipient of data (in good faith) under a free-to-distribute license can result in an immediate civil liability, regardless of reasonable precautions taken (uploaders have to agree to ToS, which is reasonable enough). Otherwise, we will bring about the end of pseudonymised/anonymised user-submitted co
  • I can guarantee Girls Do Porn had them all sign affidavits and release contracts to cover themselves from child porn charges and comply with federal law. I would be surprised if this use of the videos isn't permitted by a clause in the releases. If that is true, then they have no case because they didn't read the contracts.
  • Isn't Pornhub protected just like Facebook and Twitter in this respect? Is this a back door to strip the protections from these sites?

  • If people consent to doing porn, then turn around and sue, this is gonna be a problem for the industry.
  • by HarryCaul ( 25943 ) on Wednesday December 16, 2020 @10:57AM (#60837558)

    If the coercion aspect is true, it doesn't matter what the contracts said. Coerced contracts are generally not enforcable.

    So that's the key point in these cases.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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