The Impact of Age-Verification Laws on Adult Sites

 

Age-Verification Laws

Thoughts over a Friday morning's coffee.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton [pictured] tweets: "PornHub has now disabled its website in Texas. Sites like PornHub are on the run because Texas has a law that aims to prevent them from showing harmful, obscene material to children. We recently secured a major victory against PornHub and other sites that sought to block this law from taking effect. In Texas, companies cannot get away with showing porn to children. If they don't want to comply, good riddance."

Which state do you prefer to jack it, in? As we speak, the numbers are dwindling because of age-verification laws prompted by PornHub's disregard for the law.

In addition to Texas, Pornhub has had to block site access in Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, North Carolina, Utah and Virginia. Kansas and Georgia are about to institute age verification, and Utah wants to outlaw any type of sex work.

The Free Speech Coalition headed by the likes of Mike Stabile who recently tweeted about the pleasure of a dick in a banana-shaped rectum are squealing like piggies. Can you imagine how many kids read that posting of his?

“We are fighting not only for the rights of our members and the larger adult entertainment community but for the right of all Americans to access constitutionally protected expression in the privacy of their own home," said Alison Boden, Executive Director of Free Speech Coalition.

Let's see. PornHub was just fined $1.8M by a federal court in Brooklyn for sex trafficking.

You're going to continue with this Alison? And then there was that piece in the NY Times about PornHub's sex trafficking which immediately prompted that site to remove over 3 million offending clips and for credit card companies to drop them like a hot potato.

Three million clips. Let that number sink in.

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