List Of Revenge Porn Sites

List Of Revenge Porn Sites




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List Of Revenge Porn Sites

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9/22/17



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Lisa M. can’t walk around her hometown without wondering who has seen her naked.
The 28-year-old from Gardner, Mass., was only 17 when her then-boyfriend snapped a couple of topless photos of her when she wasn’t looking. She loved him, trusted him and had no idea he even owned a camera. Years later, the pictures would surface online and spread all over her tiny hometown.
“To see those online was just like a total betrayal of trust, and on top of that, there’s nothing you can do about it — it’s just there, and you can’t take it down, and you don’t know who’s seen it,” she said.
The pictures had been posted to the website Anon-IB, a k a Anonymous Image Board, one of the world’s main online promoters of revenge porn — intimate photos that are uploaded typically by a former sex partner and without the subject’s consent.
Anon-IB is where naked pictures of Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Lawrence surfaced in 2014 and where dozens of male Marines posted illicit photos of female comrades earlier this year. And it’s the site where thousands of other women — including underage girls — are exploited daily for twisted reasons ranging from perversion to revenge to financial gain.
Nearly 40 US states have battled the odds to enact laws to combat revenge porn.
“There just simply isn’t the interest or passion about New Yorkers’ sexual privacy and dignity,’’ Brooklyn lawyer Carrie Goldberg lamented. “The majority of the country cares. New York doesn’t.”
Anon-IB at first appears to be a typical porn clearinghouse with the usual complement of categories: “lesbian,” “milf,” “ebony.” But a closer look reveals other headings, such as “drunk/passed out” and “peeping toms” — and features nude images of sleeping women and “upskirt” pictures of others taken in dressing rooms or bathrooms.
Some of the postings even appear to involve possible molestation and rape.
Recently, the top of the site boasted a collage of young women with their breasts exposed. They easily looked preteen, even though such a posting would be a crime.
There are links for each US state, as well as 22 countries, and site users can post requests for nude pictures of women — from specific towns, colleges and high schools.
They ask for certain graduating classes and often provide the names of women, even if it’s against the rules of the site.
Anon-IB has a special four-letter word for photos that are scored — “wins.’’
“Anyone got any wins of,” a typical post reads, followed by a high school, graduating class or a specific name from either.
The users often trade “wins,’’ offering photos they’ve found in exchange for the ones they’re seeking.
New York cybercrime expert Philip Rosenthal said such sites are able to operate in virtual anonymity because of the murky way they are set up.
“Think of it as a stage with 50 levels of curtains, and every time you draw back one curtain, you gotta go run around and search for the string to pull back the next curtain,” said Rosenthal, who has worked with everyone from the FBI to the US Secret Service to root out cybercrime.
Kateri Gasper of the Queens District Attorney’s Computer Crimes Unit would tell The Post only that Anon-IB is owned by a company in Panama.
‘People I barely knew or people I thought were friends would come up to me and chat me up about my body and say things like, “I saw you naked.”‘
The warped website has proven to be a moneymaker. Anon-IB gets close to 50,000 unique visitors per day and nearly 170,000 page views daily, according to Alexa, an Amazon company that monitors web traffic. That equates to an estimated $1,500 a day in advertising revenue, giving it an estimated site value of more than $700,000.
That revenue comes mostly from ExoClick — a Barcelona-based advertising company that hosts Anon-IB’s ads. They’ve been recognized as one of the fastest-growing private companies in Europe by ­Inc. 5000 Europe and they won The Business of the Year award in 2016 from the European Business Awards.
But in 2014, the Wall Street Journal reported they’re a frequent advertiser to illicit file-sharing websites that host pirated movies and TV shows. The Annenberg Innovation Lab at the University of Southern California ranked it among the worst offenders of ad networks that display ads on illicit file-sharing sites. ExoClick did not respond to requests for comment.
Rosenthal believes Anon-IB is connected to high-level criminals with “deep pockets.” He said the law enforcement agency that has the best chance at bringing down Anon-IB and other similar sites would be the FBI — but only “if they really wanted to,’’ and that doesn’t seem to be the case.
“If the director of the FBI’s picture showed up [on the site], you bet they’d get shut down tomorrow,’’ he said.
An FBI spokesman said the agency “will decline comment.”
The victims’ tales can be heart-wrenching.
Imogen R. from Sheffield, England, was 16 when she decided to send a nude picture of herself to her boyfriend, who was in a band and traveled often.
She sent the photos to her beau and never thought much about it until five years later, when an old friend from high school called her out of the blue and said he needed to talk with her.
“He said he’d been on [Anon-IB] and seen some naked pictures of me, and I felt really sick, and I was just in shock,” said Imogen, who is now 24 and living in London. “I . . . went straight on the website and saw these pictures, and I knew exactly when I took them . . . Straightaway, I knew it was my ex-boyfriend.”
Soon, the photos were being sent to her friends and former classmates. When she’d go out, she was approached by people who recognized her from the photos.
“People I barely knew or people I thought were friends would come up to me and chat me up about my body and say things like, ‘I saw you naked’ or . . . ‘It was a shame that was passed around but you got a great body,’ ” Imogen said.
Paige Rines, 23, of New Hampshire said her own nightmare began when “a former schoolmate found me on [Anon-IB] and messaged me.”
“I was mortified,” said Rines, who was about 16 or 17 in the nude photos posted by her ex.
“Others I knew who were on the site had tried [to get the photos off], only to be told no way.”
Rines gave The Post her full name because she’s at peace with her life and wants to make sure women like her get the help they need to fight this and survive.
She said she was in college studying to be a counselor or therapist when the pictures were posted — but soon believed her dream was no longer possible because of them.
“If anyone looked up my name, no one ­would let me work with children,’’ said Rines, now working as a barista while studying to be a makeup artist. “I wanted to be a counselor for troubled teens. No way that would be allowed if any potential employer saw those.”
Rines said she was harassed on social media after she was exposed.
“I was anonymously messaged hateful things. Some of those people even threatened my life and told me I should never have kids,” she said.
In fact, revenge-porn victims can suffer long-lasting trauma, according to an analysis published in the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law last year.
They must cope with feelings of “anger, guilt, paranoia, depression or even suicide,’’ the article says, while remaining “engaged in a lifelong battle to preserve their integrity.’’
One in 25 internet users, mostly between the ages of 18 and 29, has been a victim of revenge porn over the years, according to the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative.
Still, legislation targeting revenge porn only gained steam after a massive celebrity nude-picture dump occurred in 2014 .
Stars including Lawrence and Rihanna had their iCloud accounts hacked and nude pictures disseminated, publicizing the issue to the point that states finally acted.
New Jersey and California were among the first states to enact anti-revenge-porn laws. Since then, they have been joined by 36 others including Pennsylvania and Connecticut, as well as Washington, DC, according to the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative.
The laws vary by state. New Jersey’s revenge-porn law, for example, falls under its invasion-of-privacy statute. Perpetrators are guilty of a third-degree felony if they share explicit photos or videos of someone who did not authorize the sharing. Penalties can range from three to five years in jail and up to $15,000 in fines.
But victims in the remaining 12 US states, including New York, still have no protection.
Legislation was proposed in Albany, but the bill has languished for the past three years.
Until then, authorities acknowledge there is little they can do.
“These are real victims that we don’t have a tool on the books to actually assist, or to help directly,’’ Oleg Chernyavsky, the NYPD’s director of legislative affairs, said at an April council committee hearing.
Many revenge-porn victims don’t go to cops for this reason, experts say. Goldberg notes another factor.
“There’s so much shame involved” that many victims just try to forget about it, she said.
Lisa M. and Rines said they didn’t go to authorities because they didn’t think it would help. It’s unclear whether their photos are still posted.
Imogen did contact her local police in England.
But she said they told her there was nothing they could do about it, even though she told them, “I saw a lot of girls I knew, and a lot of them were 15 years old.”
Five years later, Imogen’s pictures are still online.

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Revenge Porn Is Being Posted Under a Different Name
Campaigners say they have seen an increase in victims having their abuse packaged as "leaked" sex tapes.
ORIGINAL REPORTING ON EVERYTHING THAT MATTERS IN YOUR INBOX.
The last seven days have been nothing short of monumental for the world’s most notorious porn website.
Yesterday, Pornhub announced that it will be deleting all content uploaded by unverified users. This came after last week’s statement explaining that only verified users will be able to post videos and that the site will expand its moderation efforts, followed by Thursday’s revelation that both Mastercard and Visa will stop processing payments to Pornhub.
All of this is worth your attention, both because Pornhub now appears to have deleted the vast majority of its videos, and because of what it could mean for revenge porn – which is defined as any explicit content uploaded to the internet without the consent of the subject.
Previously, unverified Pornhub users could anonymously upload content with very few obstacles. However, verified accounts require users to submit photographs of themselves, adding a moderate level of accountability. While by no means bulletproof – The New York Times points out that verified users have uploaded footage of sexual assault in the past – the move should hopefully discourage the posting of revenge porn at a time when such measures are more necessary than ever.
Sophie Mortimer, manager of the UK Revenge Porn Helpline, said they have seen almost twice as many revenge porn cases in 2020 as last year. “Since the helpline opened, numbers have risen year on year, but this year has been something quite special,” she said. “April 2020 brought almost exactly double the cases seen in the same time last year.”
Kate Isaacs, founder of NotYourPorn – a campaign to regulate the porn industry and stop the dissemination of revenge porn – told VICE World News that this kind of content is now being shared under a different name: as “stolen” or “leaked” sex tapes. “The number of revenge porn victims coming forward who have had their abuse packaged up as 'leaked sex tapes' on major porn sites is growing every day,” she explained.
Indeed, in August of 2020, a search on Pornhub for “stolen” videos yielded 191 results. Just four months later, in early December – prior to the site removing over 10 million videos uploaded by unverified accounts – there was a 331 percent increase in videos tagged or titled “stolen”.
It’s important to note that not all of these videos will be revenge porn, and that in many cases revenge porn will not be tagged as either “stolen” or “leaked”. Pornhub has also said it has “a steadfast commitment to eradicating and fighting non-consensual content”, and its new verified rules are a further effort to prevent revenge porn from being uploaded.
A piece by artist Emmalene Blake on a wall in Dublin, protesting the fact there is still no legislation in Ireland outlawing revenge porn. Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Still, Zara – an adult content creator and co-host of the Sex Sells podcast – warned that the mountain of unregulated explicit content on free porn sites throws up questions like, “Where’s the consent? Who shot this video?” Kate Isaacs agreed, saying “anyone can upload a video of anyone without their consent”, and that there are “absolutely no checks [around consent] in place before the content is uploaded”.
While Pornhub appears to be taking steps to remedy this, plenty of other popular websites are not. For instance, an uninspiring video of my hand covering my laptop camera now sits on Xvideos.com, the most visited porn website on the internet. To upload the clip, all I had to do was enter a username and an email address, and to write at least two tags, a title and a video description. I wasn’t asked to enter any information that could be traced back to me, potentially dissuading me from uploading certain content. The website didn’t mention consent once, but did warn against the uploading of spam. 
I approached Xvideos for comment about this multiple times, but am yet to receive a response.
Xvideos specifies that it is a “hosting service for user-uploaded videos” and that it “cannot and [does] not manually review every video that is uploaded to the site”. If a video of you makes it past Xvideos’ lacklustre defences, your only option is to fill out a content removal form and wait for a notification informing you that the site has done what you’ve asked it to do. While you wait, a download button is available to anyone with an account, allowing them to permanently save the footage to their desktop. 
Sarah – who asked that we withhold her real name for privacy reasons – can vouch for how devastating it is to be a victim of this scenario. When she was 18, explicit photos and videos of her were sent to hundreds of people. “I had 400-plus messages calling me a whore, telling me to kill myself – and then I did try to kill myself,” she says. “Then someone took my videos from a forum and uploaded one to Pornhub. It was only up very briefly before I got it removed, but the fact is, it shouldn't have been able to go up at all.”
Afterwards, Sarah said, she became very insecure about her body and didn’t think anyone would ever want to be with her again. “The stigma was a killer more than anything,” she explained, adding that she has now worked through this self-doubt: “If you become a victim of this crime, your life is not over. This was something done to you – you’re never to blame.”
Unfortunately, as the increase of videos tagged “stolen” demonstrates, there is clearly an appetite for this kind of content, whether it’s staged or not.
Dr James Cantor, psychotherapist and CEO of the Toronto Sexuality Centre, puts this down to the fact that, because of the damage it can inflict on its victims, revenge porn is about as taboo as you can get. “One of the key features that makes a scene hot to people is its naughtiness – including or hinting at taboo elements adds to the exhilaration,” he explained. “For both revenge porn and another popular taboo theme, sex between siblings or step-siblings, the added naughtiness comes from the set-up.”
The problem here is that while “step-sibling” videos are now being produced by major porn studios, with consenting adults paid to appear on camera, that’s not the case for any genuinely “stolen” content, where videos or images are uploaded without participants’ consent, potentially traumatising them.
You don’t need me to tell you that there is nothing hot or exhilarating about that. When I spoke to Megan Sims – a campaigner fighting to get anti-revenge porn laws implemented in Ireland – she said that in the previous few weeks, multiple people had told her how they had attempted suicide after becoming victims of revenge porn.
Pornhub’s announcement is a start, but there is still a lot of work to do. The vast majority of free tube sites provide almost no barriers to uploading content, and are frustratingly opaque when it comes to having that content removed. In practice, this means anyone can upload whatever they want, and the onus falls on the victim to clean up the mess it makes of their lives.
As Zara from the Sex Sells podcast says, “Porn isn't necessarily the problem; the problem is the way it's put out there.”
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Hunting for the best Tor sites? Yeah, they aren’t as easy to find as clearnet sites, I agree. So, I’ve compiled a huge list of Tor websites over here which should solve your problem once and forever.
Note that all the sites listed here are fully functional and working as of 20 th January, 2018 so the common problem of Tor sites being generally down won’t arise either.
Now, I don’t know you personally, (although I’d love to), and hence I don’t know what exactly you’re searching for, so I’ve made sure to include sites from as many different categories as possible.
The primary categories you can find in this list of best Tor sites are:
And I believe your interest must align with atleast one of these, isn’t that right? So without further adieu let’s get on with it.
We are not promoting dark web or illegal activities. Every single site listed here is purely and solely for educational purposes.
We aren’t sure if these sites really offer or sell what they claim to offer & sell. This piece is done purely based on claims
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