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Porn Star Belle Knox Is Remaking Herself As A Libertarian Activist

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Miriam Weeks a.k.a. Belle Knox

College sophomore Miriam Weeks found herself at the center of an international controversy last year when she became infamous as the "Duke porn star."

Now, Weeks wants to make waves in the political world.

She's working with a libertarian group on her campus and has a burgeoning public speaking career. In a phone conversation with Business Insider on Monday, Weeks discussed how her adult film career influenced her libertarian activism.

"I think that my work and being in the porn industry definitely hits on so many libertarian themes like free speech, and censorship, and, you know, choice and autonomy over our bodies," Weeks explained. "So I think that I've really become passionate about libertarian issues because of the intersection."

Her public life began after a fellow student at Duke University revealed to their classmates that Weeks was performing in adult films using the alter ego "Belle Knox." Weeks took control of the situation and gave a series of interviews where she said she entered the porn industry to help pay for college and discussed the social stigma against sex workers. She also identified herself as a libertarian.

"I'm conservative," Weeks said. "I'm very socially liberal, but I'm very economically conservative."

According to Weeks, a friend who saw these early interviews referred her to Students For Liberty, an organization that bills itself as "the largest libertarian student organization in the world." She joined the group last summer, in between her freshman and sophomore year, and participated in its training programs online and in Washington, D.C. 

Now, Weeks is the campus coordinator for Students for Liberty at Duke. In this capacity, Weeks said she brings speakers to campus, attends conferences and seminars, posts flyers, and maintains a presence for the group at school events. On the Students for Liberty website, Weeks identifies her "favorite figures in liberty" as Ayn Rand, economist Milton Friedman, and two other activists whose careers have included both sex and politics: porn star Nina Hartley and former call girl Maggie McNeill.  

Weeks brought her first speaker to Duke on Tuesday: Ayn Rand Institute head Yaron Brook. She immediately rattled off two names when asked about whom she would ideally hope to bring to the school next.

"My dream list would be like Ron Paul, or Rand Paul would be really cool," Weeks said, adding, "That'd be pretty awesome."

And given her affinity for the libertarian political dynasty, it should come as no surprise Weeks is ready to support Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) if he goes forward with his widely expected 2016 presidential bid.

"I totally endorse him," Weeks said. "He actually graduated from Duke, so that's just another reason for me to love him."

Weeks declined to comment when asked about whether she's still filming adult movies. However, she was clear she's interested in going "further" in the political realm.

In addition to her work with Students for Liberty, Weeks said she was recently appointed to the national board of directors for the Sex Workers Outreach Project. Weeks also said she has given speeches at other colleges. In October, Weeks is scheduled to speak at LibertyFest, an annual libertarian event in New York City.  

Weeks plans to focus on college costs and the decriminalization of sex work as she enters the world of political activism. She's also interested in feminism, free speech, and censorship. 

While her work in porn helped fuel her political beliefs, Weeks says she began developing her ideology earlier in life.

"I grew up Catholic, so I grew up in a very, very, conservative background and that, I think, really was kind of the impetus for why I wanted to become a libertarian. I was always being told to cover up my body and I was always being told to wait until marriage to have sex, that my body would go down if I didn't wait till marriage to have sex," Weeks explained, adding, "That really made me become a libertarian and become a feminist."

After she came forward last year, Weeks said she faced a "lot of backlash both from people at school, people in the industry, and just the population in general." She attributes this to those who believe porn is "bad for women" and a "puritanical attitude" that she said runs rampant in the country.

"I think that America has really deeply-seated kind of Christian puritanical values against sex. Our values really place the family unit at the center of our culture," Weeks said. "You see it all the time in political rhetoric and people really view porn as a threat to the family unit. They really view porn as a threat to marriage and I really think that's why some people have an issue."

In contrast, Weeks said libertarians have generally been "really accepting" of her background.

"I think that it's actually helped me within the libertarian community because I think that people have been able to kind of look past it and they do respect it. And I think they also do respect it that I made it into more of an academic thing and more of an educational thing," she said. 

Still, Weeks concedes there have been some exceptions to this accepting attitude.

"There's, of course, been people in the libertarian community who have an issue with me, but it's been because they have an issue with porn," Weeks said. 

And Weeks is definitely attracting attention in the libertarian world. Along with her growing list of affiliations and speaking engagements, Weeks pointed out that this week the website Liberty Viral included her on a list of "The 20 Hottest Libertarian Ladies of 2015."

"That was neat," Weeks said. 

While she's getting noticed in the libertarian world, Weeks said she hasn't received mainstream media attention. She attributed this to bias against porn.

"People want to focus on the negative. ... My story really has so many angles to it and there's a narrative of women who do porn and women who do sex work of a victim. And I don't fit that narrative because I am doing really positive things, like really cool academic and positive things," Weeks said. "I think that media is scared. Like, if they write this article, 'Belle's Really Doing Well,' then girls everywhere are going to want to do porn."

Weeks hasn't yet made a ton of headlines in the political world, but she sounds like she's planning to. She said she definitely plans to work in politics after finishing college. Weeks indicated she wants to work as a legal advocate for women. 

"People always laugh at me when I say this because everyone always thinks I can't do it, but I want to be a lawyer for women. ... Gloria Allred, she's like my idol and I want to be her," Weeks said. "Once I have my law degree and I kind of have that background ... I would love to be somebody who could testify in front of Congress or somebody who does advocacy."

Weeks also hinted she might even want to run for office one day.

"If someone would want to have me as their campaign assistant I would love to do that. I don't know if I could ever win if I ran for political office because I'm very radical. I'm kind of very radical or extreme on the spectrum I feel like and, obviously you have to appeal to the average person, but you never know," Weeks said, adding, "There's a porn star in Italy who's now a politician, so, you never know." 

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Former Oregon State Student May Spend A Year In Jail For Allegedly Filming Porn In Campus Library

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Oregon State University Student Porn Library

A 19-year-old former Oregon State University student has been accused of shooting a pornographic video in an on-campus library and now faces a misdemeanor charge that may send her to jail for a year, The Oregonian reports.

The video was filmed at the OSU Valley Library during the Fall 2014 semester, but university officials told The Oregonian they only learned about it in late January. The former student — who is not currently enrolled at OSU — was cited for public indecency by campus police on Tuesday.

Public indecency is a Class A misdemeanor in Oregon, The Oregonian notes, and the former student now faces up to one year in jail and a fine of $6,250 if she is found guilty.

An OSU spokesperson told The Oregonian that although "the campus library is patrolled by security personnel and campus police, the building is 340,000 square feet and all of it can't be monitored all the time, leaving an opportunity for such incidents to happen."

The former student's video reportedly featured a solo sex act filmed on the sixth floor of the OSU library. Student newspaper The Daily Barometer reports the video was originally uploaded to Pornhub.com, where it has since been removed, and was passed around social media websites, such as Facebook.

This is not the first incident of its kind. In 2012, a woman was discovered to have filmed pornographic videos at multiple libraries on the Cornell University campus.

OSU sent the following statement to Business Insider:

Oregon State University is aware that a former student, who attended the university in fall term 2014, was arrested and cited Tuesday evening for public indecency by the Oregon State Police.

The student was released after being cited.

Issuance of the citation follows an investigation by OSP into the filming of an adult video that reportedly occurred in October in the university's Valley Library.

The university does not condone such behavior. This type of behavior does not represent the values of the university. And it definitely does not represent the values of the more than 30,000 students and 5,000 employees that make up Oregon State University.

Oregon State considers the safety and well-being of all students, employees and campus visitors a top priority.

Valley Library is a-six story public building that occupies more than 340,000 square feet and serves more than 30,000 visitors each week. During overnight hours, two security guards patrol the library and users must provide a valid OSU ID for after-hours admittance. Additionally, the library is routinely patrolled by members of the Department of Public Safety and Oregon State Police troopers – the licensed law enforcement agency for OSU.

SEE ALSO: Porn Star Belle Knox Is Remaking Herself As A Libertarian Activist

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The intern who left Wall Street for porn has details on her first film

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Veronica Vain

Former Wall Street intern Paige A. Jennings who quit her job this month to pursue a career as a porn star named "Veronica Vain" is shooting her first film this weekend. 

ArrangementFinders.com — a dating website that connects attractive young women with rich men — announced that it has signed Jennings (Veronica Vain) to a six-figure business deal that includes her first film role.

Jennings, who declined to specify the exact figure she'll be paid, will be appearing in "Screwing Wall Street: The ArrangementFinders IPO."

She's scheduled to shoot her first scene on Sunday in Los Angeles with 39-year-old French porn star Manuel Ferrera. She told us that she's not nervous. 

The 23-year-old Fordham University graduate worked as a part-time intern in Lazard Asset Management's alternative-investments marketing group in New York. Before she quit, she had posted nude selfies from inside the bathroom of Lazard's offices on her Twitter account. She told us that she still has no idea how the firm found out about the photos. 

She told Business Insider that she's taking what she learned working in marketing on Wall Street and applying it to the adult film industry. 

She called her new adult-film venture "revolutionary and disruptive." The movie will feature product placement for ArrangementFinders.com. Jennings believes this is how the adult film industry can start increasing its revenues. 

"Nearly everyone watches porn. They might not admit it. Advertisers are not utilizing that channel to reach this massive audience." 

She thinks there's a huge market for "sin products" such as non-traditional dating sites, lingerie, condoms and alcohol, etc. that mainstream marketing has rejected. 

"So many people watch [porn]. If the industry sees those advertising dollars, you'll see growth." 

Manuel Ferrara Since leaving Lazard for porn, Jennings said that her friends, mom and boyfriend have been supportive. 

"My boyfriend is very supportive." 

She didn't name her boyfriend, but said he's a "an Ivy League educated guy who works in New York" and is "super hot."

"He's not the type of guy you would think would date a porn star. He's a normal guy with an office job." 

She also expects some of her former colleagues on Wall Street will watch her new film. 

"Every time you'd walk down the aisle, it was eyes on me. You know how it is when you're a woman in business and you're in a tight pencil skirt," she said. "You could definitely feel men's eyes. You know when men are watching you. I definitely felt that when I worked on the floor."

Well, porn sites are blocked at banks. They'll have to watch from the privacy of their own homes. 

SEE ALSO: Wall Street intern posts nude selfies from the bank's bathroom, then quits to pursue a career in porn

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Don't listen to what these porn stars have to say about investing

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Jessica Drak Asa Akira

CNBC went to the Adult Video News (AVN) Awards and asked some of the stars of the adult film industry how they would invest $10,000 right now.

While some of the investment ideas offered might be attractive, the rationales provided by some of the actors and actresses reflect one of the most common mistakes made in investing: the assumption that good companies make good stocks.

Let's examine a few of the quotes CNBC got.

Jesse: "Apple. [The company] is always inventing new technology [and] everyone's going to want it, so it will never go down."

Anikka Albrite: "I'm a huge fan of biotechnology, so anything that seems like it's good for the future and the health of other people."

Kelly Shibari: "Tesla, absolutely. It's a great company. It's green. They're coming out with a more consumer friendly price point for the car. I think that's a really, really good idea."

Tasha Reign: "If I had $10K to invest in a company…I think I would invest in Uber—because I use it for everything and all of the porn community is obsessed with it, and so is LA and NY. Or maybe my favorite restaurant Chipotle."

Each of these four porn stars are off to a good start in that they have a sense of how these businesses work. They're attracted to things like growth and innovation.

However, not one of these porn stars addresses valuation. In other words, they don't consider the possibility that all of these growth prospects are already priced into the stock.

You could argue that Starbucks makes great coffee, and you might be right. But if it's going for $100 a cup, then it's probably a bad purchase.

You'd be ill-advised to make investment decisions based on what these porn stars said.

But two good things came out of CNBC's feature.

Porn star Ron Jeremy had some pretty good insight into the real estate market:

"Real estate. I own a few condos and they all went up. See, there have been a lot of economic problems with real estate, but...you don't get off the roller coaster in the middle of the ride…I didn't. Everything has gone back again. I have a bunch of good condos. They make a lot of money. I think that, right now, is the best place to invest. Entertainment is the worst place to invest."

Jeremy exhibited a valuable trait that's lacking in most investors. He didn't sell at the low.

There are countless studies in the field of behavioral finance that repeatedly show that investors tend to buy high during the manias and sell low during panic. This is a money-losing strategy.

Ultimately, investing is hard. And even if we do understand investing, it's hard to be as disciplined as Ron Jeremy.

For most people, the best idea may just be to defer to a professional.

"I would put it into my [simplified employee pension] where my financial advisor makes all the decisions," Jessica Drake told CNBC.

Check out the whole feature at CNBC.com.

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A China tech firm denies report that it offered one night with a porn star as an employee bonus

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Qihoo 360 CEO

report that Chinese IT firm Qihoo 360 offered up a night with a famous porn star as an employee bonus is false, according to an emailed company statement. 

The rumour started after an employee posted an alleged photo of the monthly awards for successful employees, listing a Porsche and a trip to Bali as well as the event night with Julia Kyoka, a popular Japanese porn star. 

"It appears someone manufactured a false document of what our bonuses are involving an adult entertainment actress. No such document ever existed. It's an entirely false Internet rumour, and we can confirm it is patently false," a Qihoo 360 spokesperson said. 

The awards are intended to celebrate successful employees ahead of the Chinese New Year, set for Feb. 19.

Qihoo 360 is a company based in Beijing that operates in Internet security. It claims to be "a leading Internet and mobile platform company in China," working with almost half a billion active users per month.

Earlier this month, Qihoo 360 had allegedly spent £11 million for purchasing the rights to the domain 360.com, the highest figure ever paid for an Internet domain. 

 

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Google is banning porn on Blogger (GOOG)

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larry page not bad (1)

Google is changing its content policy on Blogger. In a statement posted online, the company writes that from March 23 this year, users "won't be able to publicly share images and video that are sexually explicit or show graphic nudity." 

In the statement, Google adds that existing blogs that feature explicit material will be made private — so they won't show up in public searches. It means private content will only be available to view by the owner, admins, or the people they share their page(s) with. 

However, Blogger will still allow nudity if the "content offers a substantial public benefit, for example in artistic, educational, documentary, or scientific contexts," Google adds. This is where the line may be blurred, given the whole subjective nature of art. It will probably be forever debated. 

Overall, though, each blog is at Google's discretion, and Blogger users have until the March 23 date to either mark their site as private, or remove the sexually explicit images and video that may be displayed. An alternative is to remove the blog altogether, Google notes. 

To announce the news, Google sent out a letter to its bloggers who may be affected. This tweet was spotted by the Verge. 

9to5Google says that the last time Google updated Blogger's terms was in 2013. Then, Google banned sites hosting adult content from "monetising that content with ads"— so people couldn't make money via the service for displaying anything explicit. Really, this was a much bigger deal. In the past, people made money hosting porn content on Blogger (and other pre-made platforms), which was much easier than registering and setting up a web domain. This latest move is simply a blanket ban by Google. It has given no reason for the changes. 

Mainstream hosting platforms are cutting down on explicit material. The move follows video-sharing app Vine, which also recently changed its policy to hide pornographic and sexual footage. It did so in March last year, the Verge reports. 

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Porn stars have started selling 10-second videos on Snapchat using a new payment feature

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stripper pole dancer

Porn stars have begun selling 10-second porn videos on Snapchat using the app's new payment feature, Snapcash.

The feature, which launched in November, allows users to send each other money instantly within the app using payments platform Square. 

Strippers and porn stars have taken advantage of the feature to discretely distribute adult content to users for a small fee. 

Nick Bilton at the New York Times reports:

Some transactions are as inexpensive as $1 to $5 for a few personalized photos. The prices can reach double digits for personalized sex shows. One brunette on Snapchat this week, most likely in her 20s, wore nothing more than skimpy underwear and offered to send pictures personalized for a person’s proclivities for $5. Men offer similar products at comparable prices.

Snapchat does not support or condone this use of the app. Most of Snapchats core users are teenagers or young adults, and posting pornography clearly violates the company's community guidelines“Don’t use Snapchat for any illegal shenanigans and if you’re under 18 or are Snapping with someone who might be: keep your clothes on!” the company recently posted. 

Bilton reports that within a week of adding 30 Snapchat accounts that promised to share porn pictures, 28 had been deleted.

"But... while sexting is no longer the main use on Snapchat," Bilton says, "it’s ludicrous to think that an app that allows you to send videos and photos that automatically disappear won’t be used to also transmit nude images." 

SEE ALSO: How one man's stolen iPhone made him an internet celebrity in China

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Google has taken a massive U-turn over banning porn on Blogger (GOOG)

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3802837734_dec4b95766_b

Earlier this week Google announced plans to change its content policy on Blogger. In a statement posted online, the company said that from March 23 this year users "won't be able to publicly share images and video that are sexually explicit or show graphic nudity."

But Google has changed its mind, Engadget reports.

Google came under fire from some bloggers over the proposed measures. The move could even have seen a mass exodus from the platform. That meant Google had to take the negative responses into account.

Jessica Pelegio, social product support manager at Google told Engadget:

This week, we announced a change to Blogger's porn policy. We've had a ton of feedback, in particular about the introduction of a retroactive change (some people have had accounts for 10+ years), but also about the negative impact on individuals who post sexually explicit content to express their identities. Blog owners should continue to mark any blogs containing sexually explicit content as "adult" so that they can be placed behind an 'adult content' warning page.

Google told users of its blogging platform that existing sites that feature explicit material would be made private — so they wouldn't have shown up in public searches. It would have meant that private content would have only been available to view by the owner, admins, or the people they share their page(s) with. But Pelegio's statement to Engadget shows that Google is making a U-turn, and porn won't be banned after all.

Nudity would have been allowed if "content offers a substantial public benefit, for example in artistic, educational, documentary, or scientific contexts," Google explained. But instead of the concrete, blanket ban, Google said it will instead crack down even harder on publishing explicit material intended for commercial gain. The company banned this from Blogger in 2013.

Despite Google's U-turn, other mainstream hosting platforms have been cutting down on explicit material. Video-sharing app Vine recently changed its policy to hide pornographic and sexual footage. It did so in March last year, the Verge reports. 

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Two guys experience porn in virtual reality and have wildly different reactions

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mikandi google glass pornThe biggest companies in the world — Facebook, Samsung, HTC, and plenty of others — are pouring millions of dollars into virtual and augmented reality experiences.

So far, we’ve mostly seen games, but two lucky men were recently able to experience pornography in virtual reality. And both men had vastly different experiences.

After playing a few games with Samsung’s Gear VR, Kotaku’s Nathan Grayson was given a chance to try out virtual reality porn thanks to game developer Vander Caballero, who was the creative director on the popular puzzle game Papo & Yo

Grayson watched a virtual reality porn film Caballero had downloaded — “it was a real person in a real environment,” even though he was able to have complete control of how he viewed his surroundings. 

Here’s Grayson:

It was breakfast-themed. Sunlight lazily streamed into a white-walled kitchen as a red-haired woman stripped on a table that I—or my "avatar"—was seated at. Occasionally she took sips from a glass of orange juice because thematic consistency or something, I guess. As she slowly shrugged out of a thin white shirt, she frequently made eye contact with "me," whispered and giggled playfully, teased touch but withheld sensation. 

She got close. Really close. If she were a real person, we'd have been nose-to-nose. It was weirdly uncomfortable. My brain—only partially aware that what it was experiencing wasn't real—surged its synapses with mixed signals, ones usually reserved for awkward encounters with actual humans. "Who is this person? You just met her. Why is she right in your face? Please step back please step back please step back she's not stepping back. Why can't you step back?" I could count the moments of eye contact in eternities, it felt so awkward. 

I am sometimes scared of people—especially when I can't talk to them. VR porn triggered that reaction hardcore. 

The illusion that she was a real human broke when she got even closer. My body was so confused by the lack of heat—no warm breath on the nape of my neck, not even a single heartbeat—that I felt it as a phantom sensation. I realized that I didn't feel like I was with another person so much as I was being "stroked" by the intangible ghost hand of some eerie automaton, a one-size-fits-all skeleton wearing intimacy's skin, paying no heed as said skin sloughed away to reveal its true nature.

Grayson said virtual reality porn was “effective, even if only briefly,” since his brain was really tricked into thinking it was dealing with another person. But he still felt it was “really confusing and kinda weird. 

Still, Grayson ran into another person who had tried VR porn that same day. This person chose to remain anonymous, but he told Grayson he had a much more positive experience with VR porn:

She looked me in the eye and leaned in and said, 'I love you, baby.' I was like, 'Wow, that was amazing.' And then I realized I'd only had that experience with a few girlfriends in my life. That's when I realized this shit is crazy. To connect with a human you need so many things, and this achieved it almost immediately. This girl was there with me, and she recognized me, and she appreciated me.

So, while the VR porn made Grayson a bit more uncomfortable than the second person who tried it, both were able to say it was extremely “convincing,” albeit a little bit awkward. 

Check out Kotaku for the full story.

SEE ALSO: Virtual reality is 1,000X better when you can see your own hands

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Researchers analyzed over 100 hours of porn and found some surprising trends

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asia carrera, former porn star

Although internet pornography is frequently criticized for depicting gender inequality, surprisingly little research has examined the actual gendered content of online porn.

Moreover, what little research does exist in this area has focused largely on still images and erotic stories, which means that we know even less about the gendered content of the most widely consumed form of online porn: videos.

A new study just published in the Journal of Sex Research offers a rare look into how gender is represented in pornographic videos from the internet today.

In this study, researchers were guided by the following four research questions:

1.) To what extent are men and women objectified in Internet pornography?

2.) How is power distributed between men and women in Internet pornography?

3.) To what extent does Internet pornography depict violence against men and women?

4.) How does amateur Internet pornography differ from professional Internet pornography in its depiction of gender (in)equality?

In order to address these questions, researchers performed a content analysis on the 100 most-viewed videos in February 2013 from four of the world’s most popular porn sites: Pornhub, RedTube, YouPorn, and xHamster (I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again — I don’t quite get the appeal of a porn site named after a rodent).

In total, there were 400 videos, but only the first sex scene that appeared in each video was analyzed. On average, each sex scene lasted 16.17 minutes, yielding almost 108 hours worth of porn to be analyzed! Four coders independently viewed the entire set of videos and coded the content for objectification, power, and violence for each gender.

Before describing the results, it is important to note that this set of videos did not include any gay or transgender pornography. Consequently, the results below only speak to heterosexual porn.

With regard to objectification, results revealed that women were more likely to be used as sex objects than men. That is, there were more close-ups of female body parts and more scenes in which the sex act focused on male pleasure.

porn statsHowever, it was not the case porn generally dehumanized women — women were equally likely to be depicted as the initiators of sexual activity, and it was much more common for there to be close-ups of the female face than of the male face.

In terms of power, about one-third of the videos depicted the male and female actors to be of equivalent social and professional status. When videos depicted one partner as having higher status (e.g., a boss) and the other as having lower status (e.g., an employee), there were no gender differences in likelihood of holding each position.

porn statsWith regard to sexual dominance and submission, about half of the videos featured no gender difference in this area; of the remaining half that depicted a gender difference, men were much more likely to be portrayed as dominant, while women were much more likely to be portrayed as submissive.

With regard to violence, it appeared relatively infrequently overall and primarily took the form of spanking and gagging. Women were more likely to be the recipients of these acts than men, but it was rare for female recipients to express negative reactions (the vast majority responded either neutrally or positively).

Severe violence was extremely uncommon, as was non-consensual sex and sexual manipulation. When non-consensual sex occurred, men and women were equally likely to be depicted as the victim. When sexual manipulation occurred, women were more likely to be manipulated than men.

porn stats Finally, in terms of the differences between amateur and professional pornography, results revealed that amateur porn actually contained more gender inequality than professionally produced porn.

For instance, in amateur porn, women initiated sex less often than men, women were less likely than men to have sex for their own pleasure, men tended to have higher social and professional status, men were more sexually dominant, women were more sexually submissive, and women were more likely to be manipulated into having sex.

Keep in mind that the findings above are not necessarily representative of all internet porn, given that all videos featured heterosexual sex and were drawn from only four porn sites. However, these results are important because they represent the largest gendered content analysis of online pornographic videos to date.

Overall, these findings confirm that gender inequality does indeed exist in the world of online porn, but not on all indicators.

In addition, they challenge the popular view that amateur porn tends to be more progressive with respect to gender-role diversity than professional porn — indeed, this analysis suggests that the reverse may actually be true.

Want to learn more about Sex and Psychology? Click here for previous articles or follow the blog on Facebook (facebook.com/psychologyofsex), Twitter (@JustinLehmiller), or Reddit (reddit.com/r/psychologyofsex) to receive updates.

To learn more about this research, see: Klaassen, M. J., & Peter, J. (in press). Gender (in) equality in internet pornography: a content analysis of popular pornographic internet videos. The Journal of Sex Research.

SEE ALSO: Why it's hard to maintain sexual interest in one person

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Presidential hopeful vows to crack down on porn-watching federal employees

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RTR4P0VK

Businesswoman Carly Fiorina found a unique way to express her ability to manage the federal bureaucracy as she prepares for an expected presidential campaign.

Indeed, in a "Fox News Sunday" interview this weekend, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO said the US government needs "pay for performance in our civil service" in order to ensure incompetent employees are not watching pornography while on the job.

"How many inspector general reports do we need to read that say you can watch porn all day long and get paid exactly the same way as somebody who is trying to do their job?" she asked. 

According to The Fiscal Times, Congress is moving forward with legislation banning porn-watching by federal employees after "an inspector general investigation found that at least one Environmental Protection Agency employee was watching a ton of porn on his government computer—from two to six hours a day" without being fired. 

In her Fox News interview, Fiorina also touted her experience dealing with foreign leaders, knowledge of technology and economic policy, and "executive decision-making." However, she's widely viewed as a presidential long shot in a field of better known 2106 candidates.

Fiorina has yet to announce her campaign but said the odds were greater than 90% that she would ultimately do so.

View the full interview below:

SEE ALSO: DEA agents allegedly had 'sex parties' with prostitutes hired by drug cartels

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Why southern states are the leading consumers of gay porn

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According to data released by Pornhub, 5.6% of porn users in Mississippi seek out gay porn, compared to 2.8% in North Dakota.

porn consumption

On average, gay porn is more heavily consumed in states where same-sex marriage is legal than in states where it’s illegal, but every single state in the South has a gay porn use that exceeds the average in states with same-sex marriage.

porn consumptionFor me, this raises questions about what’s driving sentiment against same-sex marriage and porn use and if and why it’s related. I can think of at least three theories:

1. There is the (barely) repressed homosexuality theory, of course. This is the idea that some people express homophobic attitudes because they fear being non-heterosexual themselves. So, out of fear of exposure, or fear of their own feelings, they are vocally anti-LGBT rights. There’s data that backs this up in at least some cases.

2. Another possibility is that both homosexual inclinations and anti-gay hatred are high in Southern states, but not in the same people. This is one version of the contact hypothesis: the presence and visibility of gay, lesbian, and bisexual people threatens the norm of heterosexuality, increasing opposition. This is consistent with data showing, for example, that white racial resentment is higher in counties with larger populations of black folk.

3. Or, it may be that politicians in Southern states stoke anti-gay attitudes in order to win elections. They may be doing so as a simple strategy. Or, it may be part of that notorious “culture war,” a politics that supposedly distracts poor and working class people from their own economic interests by getting them to focus on so-called social issues like abortion and same-sex marriage.

As fun as it is to snicker at the fact that the part of the country that claims a moral high ground on homosexuality is over-represented in pursuing it (at least digitally), there’s also probably some pretty interesting social/psychology sociology here.

SEE ALSO: Researchers analyzed over 100 hours of porn and found some surprising trends

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A guy who ran a revenge porn site has been sentenced to 18 years in prison

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Kevin Bollaert

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A San Diego man who operated a "revenge porn" website and then charged victims to remove nude images and personal information was sentenced Friday to 18 years in state prison, the attorney general's office said.

Kevin Bollaert, 28, was convicted in February of 21 counts of identity theft and six counts of extortion in San Diego Superior Court for running a pair of websites that capitalized on the Internet as a forum for public shaming.

Jilted lovers and hackers could anonymously post nude photos of people without their consent, along with personal information about them, at a website Bollaert created called ugotposted.com. More than 10,000 images, mainly of women, were posted between December 2012 and September 2013.

People who sought to have the explicit images taken down were directed to changemyreputation.com and charged $250 to $350 to remove the racy content.

Victims included teachers, wives and professionals. The compromising photos cost people jobs, damaged relationships and led to one attempted suicide.

Bollaert earned about $900 a month in website ad revenue and collected about $30,000 from victims.

Bollaert's lawyer had claimed at trial that the business was gross and offensive, but he didn't break the law by allowing others to post the explicit material.

SEE ALSO: Facebook has banned revenge porn

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'Revenge porn' just became illegal in England and Wales

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revenge porn

Sharing private material as "revenge porn" online is now illegal in England and Wales. The legislation, which went through Parliament as an amendment to the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill, comes into force today, Monday, April 13.

Offenders could get a prison sentence of up to two years for the crime, which includes posting private images on social networks such as Twitter and Facebook, as well as text messages. The law also covers content shared offline without the subject's permission, and with the intent to cause harm.

Clause 33 in the legislation classes "revenge porn" as:

Revenge porn

Revenge porn is "photographs or films which show people engaged in sexual activity or depicted in a sexual way or with their genitals exposed, where what is shown would not usually be seen in public,"according to the BBC. There are further clauses, which you can see in full on the Parliamentary release. 

The move follows numerous high-profile incidents where people have been victimised by sharing private sexual images in public over the internet. Last year "The Snappening" happened, where hackers stole Snapchat photos and leaked them online. Children as young as 11 have also been targeted by revenge porn, Sky News notes.

Although the bill has come into effect in England and Wales, in Scotland and Northern Ireland revenge porn is not illegal yet, the BBC explains. Both countries have more devolved power from Westminster to Wales. They are considering passing the legislation. 

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All internet pornography could soon be illegal in Russia

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RTR4X4VA

A Russian court has instructed Roskomnadzor, the country's state-controlled Internet watchdog, to block 136 websites hosting “pornographic material” under the terms of international conventions signed in 1910 and 1923.

Vague language in the ruling, first reported by the newspaper Izvestia, means all Internet pornography could soon be illegal in Russia.

The ruling comes after a district attorney in Tartarstan's Apastovksy district cited the regulations put in place in the early 20th Century in Czarist Russia and then the USSR, respectively.

All of the websites on the list, including some of the most frequently visited in the world, must be blocked within the next three days, Global Voices Online reported.

The court banned the illegal distribution of pornography, though it failed to precisely define what “legal distribution” of pornography is, meaning millions of other Russian pornography websites could soon be knocked offline as well.

This restriction on Internet activity is just the latest example of Internet crackdowns in Russia since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency in 2012. The Kremlin recently enacted a “law on bloggers” that forces popular online writers to register their home address with the government, offers a bounty for anyone able to crack the increasingly popular Tor anonymity software and is forcing Western technology companies to collect and provide information on Russian Internet users.

The porn prohibition also coincides with a law that prevents using a photo of a celebrity in a meme “when the image has nothing to do with the celebrity's personality.” Depending on how the law is enforced, it could mean photos of a shirtless Putin remain legal while prohibiting flattering images of opposition leaders.

SEE ALSO: Russia just banned celebrity memes

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How to watch porn responsibly, according to porn stars

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XXX KeyYou probably watch porn. No? Whatever you say.

A lot of people look at pornography. More Americans do now than even back in the late 1970s, when Deep Throat was a national phenomenon and you could still watch X-rated movies in public theaters.

As a nation, we don't like that we like porn, though.

We draw correlations between porn and rape, even when we're the ones watching it.

At the heart of a lot of criticism of the porn industry is the idea that performers are coerced, exploited, even possibly underage, and that watching porn supports this treatment.

But what do the performers think? Workplaces—at least in California and New Hampshire, where filming porn is legal—are regulated: Production companies want to be and need to be above board in order to run their businesses. But independent, feminist-focused production companies—as well as some of the old guard—have also created a sea change in the industry over the past decade by committing to making "ethical porn." 

Yes, there's porn you can feel good about watching and supporting.

"A big part of my mission is ethical production practices and fair labor practices."

"I identify as a feminist pornographer, and a big part of my mission is ethical production practices and fair labor practices," says Tristan Taormino, an adult film performer, director, and educator. Taromino was one of the first feminist directors to work with Vivid, an established mainstream adult film production company known for such titles as Bad Wives and Backdoor to Chyna.

In 2006, Taormino challenged the mainstream image of porn with Tristan Taormino's Chemistry, a series for Vivid in which performers chose their partners, chose how they had sex, and engaged in interviews on their work and what they enjoyed throughout the films. Taormino also made a series of sex education films for Vivid's VividEd label.

9f8568e7c"I feel like a false dichotomy has been set up that feminist pornographers are good and mainstream pornographers are bad," Taormino says. "The difference is that feminist pornographers state their mission and then want to be held accountable to that mission in a very explicit and public way.

But I've certainly been on dozens and dozens of mainstream sets where everyone is just fine."

Taormino is referring to a trend in independent, often woman-made adult films toward posting mission statements and "performer's rights" bills on their websites and in their films. 

Pink and White Productions [NSFW], an indie outlet run byShine Louise Houston, was at the fore of this movement with the Crash Pad series of films. Such information is included in all Pink and White movies and on the company's website.

Jiz Lee [NSFW], a performer and director known for work with Pink and White as well as with mainstream producers, says that the adult film industry, especially in Los Angeles, has come a long way in supporting performers and protecting their work.

Lee, along with Rebecca Sullivan, an associate professor of communication, media, and film at the University of Calgary, is guest-editing an upcoming edition of the academic journal Porn Studies, with a focus on labor rights around the world.

woman"It's so great to have an issue focused on labor, because there are a lot of assumptions about what the environment on a set is like," Lee says. "A lot of my frustration about the buzzword of 'ethical porn' is because of the assumption that only the companies claiming their work to be ethical are doing ethical work."

Lee notes that "there's definitely been a increase in marketing ethics. ... People feel guilty watching porn, so it behooves the company to say, 'It's OK! Look, we're not mistreating anyone, and here's the proof!'"

Lee says that "the differences were very few" between working with Vivid on more mainstream material and working with Pink and White, though Lee was put on payroll at Vivid rather than operating as a contractor.

When adult film studios have ethical workplace regulations, Lee says, that's one more step toward legitimacy—which affects whether banks and credit card companies will do business with them.    

So what is the most unethical part of the industry, then? Consumers, says Taormino.

"There's an entire generation of people—and I work with college-age people—that believe porn is free and has always been free," Taormino says. "There needs to be a re-education that says, 'If you want more porn, especially from people whose work you really like, you have to pay for it. Because if you don't, then we can't make more.'"

Paying for your porn is a great way to support the labor and intimate exchange that is part of making and consuming pornography.

Both Taormino and Lee call out "tube sites" like PornHub and XTube, which offer pirated free clips and full-length performances, as being one of the worst things to happen to legal performers and producers in the past decade.

"When an average person uploads a video to a tube site that they don't have any rights to, there's no affidavits to prove performers are of legal age, there are no STI results, there's no proof the performer got paid," says Lee. "Most of the time, those uploads don't even feature the performer's name, so it strips any kind of insurance of consent of viewership from performers."

So how can a consumer avoid supporting such practices?

"Pay for your porn!" says Lee. "When you pay for porn, you've got credit card processors looming over the shoulders of producers to ensure that porn is done legally and that all the paperwork and those checks and balances are in place."

Paying for your porn can also be a learning experience about your own desires. Both Taormino and Lee say that researching performers you're drawn to—via their social media accounts, personal websites, and curated collections like Good Vibrations'[NSFW]—is a great way to support the labor and intimate exchange that is part of making and consuming pornography.

Lastly, Lee suggests, you can always make your own. There have been several Feminist Porn Awards [NSFW] won by directors filming with only an iPhone.

SEE ALSO: 5 subliminal sex messages hidden in ads for wholesome brands

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David Cameron's plan to censor Internet porn hit an international snag

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David Cameron

One of British Prime Minister David Cameron's most worrisome proposals—forcing U.K. ISPs to automatically block porn—has caught the attention of the European Union, which is reportedly planning an international response to the proposal.

Cameron has been talking about forcing ISPs to block porn for years, telling the BBC in July 2013 that the companies had a "moral duty" to prevent their customers from accessing explicit content. The recent general-election victory for Cameron's Conservative Party has heightened fears that the promised widespread Internet censorship will begin soon.

But the EU has taken notice of Cameron's plan and is drafting rules to block it. TheSunday Times obtained a document prepared by the Council of the European Union—which is comprised of representatives from EU member-states' governments—that would make the censorship scheme illegal.

"Rather than implementing a default block on pornography, the Council of the European Union believes that users should opt in to web filtering and be able to opt out again at any time," BetaNews explained. "This is precisely the opposite to the way Cameron would like things to work."

The opt-in approach mirrors a 2011 agreement between Cameron and British ISPs in which the companies began requiring customers to affirm that they wanted to be able to access pornographic material.

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the U.K.'s Internet regulator, is annoyed that the EU is trying to preempt Cameron's new policy.

"The UK government will not support any proposals that do not allow us to maintain our child protection policies or bring forward new policies," a DCMS spokesman said.

In an interview with the Sunday Times, John Carr, a member of the UK Council for Child Internet Safety's executive board, said that if the EU proposal were adopted, "a major plank of the UK’s approach to online child protection will be destroyed at a stroke."

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Make-up artist posts shocking before-and-after photos of the porn stars she styles

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melissa murphy makeup artist porn star

Ten years ago, make-up artist Melissa Murphy left her job working at the cosmetics counter in a Boston mall for the bright lights of the erotica industry.

When the actresses and models settle into her chair, she snaps a before and after photo to capture the transformation. You would be amazed to see how much make-up these beauties actually wear.

Murphy shared some of her Instagram photos with us. The results are incredible.

Make-up artist Melissa Murphy has been dolling up adult film stars for more than 10 years.

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She photographs her subjects in natural light and posts the juxtaposed images to her Instagram account.

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Her account has more than 75,000 followers.

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See the rest of the story at Business Insider

PornHub is trying to raise $3.4 million to shoot a sex tape in space

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astronomy telescope stars spacePornHub has launched an Indiegogo campaign to make a sex tape on the final frontier: space.

The campaign, titled Sexploration, aims to raise $3.4 million to make a porno in space featuring Eva Lovia and Johnny Sins as astronauts.

Those who donate to the campaign will be entitled to a range of prizes, all of which have space-inspired names. Awards include early access to the resulting film, an opportunity to interview Eva and Johnny, and a gift of porn props from the film.

The top prize, called the Uranus prize, will award the person who donates $150,000 or more one of the two space suits worn in the film complete with underwear (we hope they wash that).

“This will be a grand experiment in learning how intercourse works after penetrating the Earth’s atmosphere,” said Corey Price, vice president of Pornhub.

PornHub says the money will go towards funding shuttle seating for the crews and performers, as well as space-appropriate video equipment. The company will front the costs for all other aspects of the film, like actors, promotion, and pre/post production.

The campaign will go on for another 30 days, and if the project gets funded PornHub expects to launch its team into space in 2016.

SEE ALSO: PornHub reveals advertising finalists

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Google just made a huge move in the fight against revenge porn

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Google OfficesGoogle has finally taken a firm stance against revenge porn. In a blog post released today, the company announced that it will honor requests for image takedowns from people who are the victims of this digital act.

Revenge porn happens when people post sexually explicit pictures of people online as an act of retribution — often against someone they dated.

Over the last few years websites have formed as repositories for people to post these photos. Lawyers and activists have been working fervently criminalize this behavior. Most recently, a man who ran one of these revenge porn sites was sentenced to 18 years in prison.

While states have been slowly drafting laws to combat people who post these photos, tech companies have had a difficult tightrope to walk

Now Google has made a formal decision. It writes:

So going forward, we’ll honor requests from people to remove nude or sexually explicit images shared without their consent from Google Search results. This is a narrow and limited policy, similar to how we treat removal requests for other highly sensitive personal information, such as bank account numbers and signatures, that may surface in our search results.

The company says that very soon, it will post a web form for revenge porn victims to fill out. 

While this doesn't solve the problem — Google admits that taking these photos away from search results doesn't remove them from the websites themselves — this is a pivotal point for all those working to end this disturbing practice.

SEE ALSO: Privacy advocates are slamming Facebook for its shady transparency policy

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