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Free Porj
Published March 31, 2017 12:08pm EDT
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A man types on a computer keyboard in Warsaw in this February 28, 2013 illustration file picture. (REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Files)
Relax, your personal porn-watching habits will be protected.
That’s the message from two of the world’s most popular adult internet sites — PornHub and YouPorn — following the passage of a bill on Tuesday in Congress that would allow internet service providers to sell browsing history and other data to marketers.
“Here at Pornhub, with more than 70 million daily visitors, we wanted to continue our concerted effort to maximize the privacy of our users, ensuring that what they do on our platform remains strictly confidential,” said Corey Price, the website’s vice president. “With the switch to [Hypertext Transfer Protocol Service] we are able to protect their identity as well as safeguard them against exposure to malware by third parties.”
PornHub officially switched to HTTPS on Thursday, while YouPorn will make the plunge on April 4. The websites, according to an announcement by the sister sites yesterday, are two of the most-visited sites worldwide. Among those top 100 sites, 11 are destinations for porn and other adult content, but only three — RedTube, Pornhub and YouPorn — will default to HTTPS.
“The data on our webpages will now be encrypted, making it significantly harder for third parties to penetrate,” said Brad Burns, YouPorn’s vice president. “Now, our community members can peruse our site even more safely, knowing they have that extra layer of security.”
So what’s this all mean to the average online porn consumer?
Websites that adopt HTTPS — ones with a green padlock in front of the URL — will give the user more peace of mind with encryption to keep data secure from third parties like internet providers, as well as protection against hackers and the assurance that the site is authentic.
“If you’re visiting sites that allow HTTPS, you don’t have to worry so much about what they’re doing to observe your traffic,” Joseph Hall, chief technologist at the Center for Democracy and Technology, told WIRED .
Meanwhile, the White House on Wednesday announced that President Trump intends to repeal the Obama administration’s broadband privacy rules , which would have mandated that companies get consent from consumers before selling sensitive information like medical history and financial details to other firms.
“The market for internet users’ data is extremely opaque,” Peter Eckersley, chief computer scientist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told The Post. “ISPs are making billions of dollars every year by selling data about their customers, but we don’t know which ISPs, and how much they’re selling, and which kind of data is fetching the highest prices, because all those transactions are conducted in secret.”
On Tuesday, the White House explained in a blog post why Trump wants to overturn the Federal Communications Communication rule requiring broadband ISPs to get permission from customers before selling their personal information to third parties.
“In particular, the rule requires ISPs to obtain affirmative ‘opt-in’ consent from consumers to use and share certain information, including app usage and web browsing history,” the blogpost read. “It also allows ISPs to use and share other information, including email addresses and service tier information, unless a customer ‘opts-out.’ In doing so, the rule departs from the technology-neutral framework for online privacy administered by the Federal Trade Commission. This results in rules that apply very different regulatory regimes based on the identity of the online actor.”
This article originally appeared on The New York Post .
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For one brief moment here at the 2011 Adult Video Awards in Las Vegas, America’s porn performers can forget about the Golden Decade of the Teen Wanker and remember when they were stars. Tonight, all of them, the whole porn carnival, are vamping down the red carpet at the Palms Casino. There are actual midgets. There is self-styled fakir Murrugun the Mystic, who has been nominated for Most Outrageous Sex Scene: swallowing a sword “while she swallows my sword,” as he puts it. There are the Oscar-ishly glammed-up ladies with titanic breasts and twitchy Restylane smiles. There is—yes, here he comes—Ron “The Hedgehog” Jeremy: The starriest living male porn star ambles along the carpet in a sad, grubby collar and with an air of existential depletion. And now, the announcer is introducing Joslyn James as “Tiger Woods’s ex-girlfriend,” fresh from her appearance in the scandal-milking The Eleventh Hole .
Maybe you’ve seen it. Did you pay for it? This evening, if only for a few hours, the industry is doing its best to ignore the explosion of free porn online that has made the early-21st century such a bonanza for masturbators. It’s difficult. The Adult Entertainment Expo taking place simultaneously at the Sands has scaled back dramatically; Vivid and Adam & Eve, two of the best-known companies in the business, didn’t even have booths on the main floor this year. There are no Jenna Jamesons on this red carpet, and even the idea of a porn A-list seems dated. Performers are making less money, working harder for it, getting fewer jobs. “It doesn’t affect me that much—well, I guess less work—but my friends with companies are being put out of business,” Ron Jeremy says, pausing before the media gauntlet. He mentions one who has been forced to diversify into “cookies, penis pills, and a blender.”
For a decade or so, to the porn industry, the Internet looked like the best thing ever invented—a distribution chute liberating it from the trench-coat ghetto of brown paper wrappers and seedy adult bookstores, an E-Z Pass to a vast untapped bedroom audience. If it was equally apparent that the web would prove as destabilizing as it has for other media, the money was so good that the industry could ignore the warning signs. Now the reckoning has arrived.
The chief culprits in the eyes of the porn Establishment are the “tube sites,” YouTube-like repositories of content that is often free, and often pirated. “Tubes are going to destroy our industry,” says Sunny Leone, 29, an Indian-American knockout who is celebrating eight nominations this evening. “Fans don’t understand that if they don’t pay for porn, we can’t make a living. They’ll have to watch crazy European porn.”
Farther along the red carpet, as the porn parade navigates the throng of gawkers to enter the Pearl Theater, actor James Bartholet shouts to the onlookers, “Buy your porn, don’t download it illegally!” During the impressively slick ceremony, piracy is an anxious leitmotif. “Thank you for paying for porn,” says Joanna Angel, accepting the award for Best Porn Star Website. Then, with a less-carrot-more-stick approach, an anti-piracy PSA plays on the big screen, ending with the admonition: “Buy the fucking movies.”
There you are, Porn Surfer, Googling your way to a little adult material—you know, a little plain-vanilla, middle-of-the-road grown-up content —when, wham, you’ve dropped acid and been astrally projected into a triple-X pachinko parlor. One minute you’re trawling for a simple NSFW divertissement, and t
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