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Published April 13, 2015 12:00AM (EDT)


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This article originally appeared on AlterNet .
According to Rule 34 , if it exists, there's a porn for it. Rule 34 doesn't, however, guarantee there's a decent porn for it. What if you want something that's--I don't know--classier, I suppose? Smut that's plenty sexy, but also artistic and intelligent and just less...gross.
If you're looking for some not-so porny porn, start with the seven sites below. Like Swedish art films of yore, these sites occupy a space somewhere between art, erotica and porn. Some are even part sociological study and thought experiment. Or at least that's what you can tell yourself when you look at them instead of bourgeois ol' regular porn.
Hysterical Literature , an art project by Clayton Cubitt, is a collection of stark black-and-white videos, each featuring a woman sitting at a table reading aloud from a book of her choosing. However, under the table, there is an unseen person equipped with a back massager who is assigned to distract the reader as she reads.
As the vibrator does what vibrators do so well, the women try to keep it together and keep reading, but begin to show signs of losing focus with a little gasp, a quick intake of breath or wiggling in their chairs for a better position. They fight to keep their composure, and it's completely fascinating. Here's Janet reading from “Friendship and Character” by Ralph Waldo Emerson . It's that line between control and loss of control that's so interesting about Hysterical Literature .
“On the surface level I want to short-circuit the practiced poses of modern media-savvy portrait subjects. On the next level I want to explore the battle between the mind and the body. On the level after that I want to explore the relationship of female sexuality to society's concepts of shame. On the final level I want to explore the cultural contrast between art and sex, particularly how people react to the mixture of the two,” writes Cubitt. (The site is free)
I Shot Myself , aka Project_ISM, is a collection of nude selfies taken by women (and a few men). What makes this different than just a collection of nudie pics to leer at--which is certainly is as well— is the intent behind the site and the Euro/arty vibe of the photos (the site is based in the Netherlands).
By taking their own photos, contributors are wresting control of their images from pornographers, and creating a joyful, creative and often sassy celebration of female sexuality.
“What inspires women to submit their naked photos online?” reads the Project_ISM Principle. “The short answer is--control. The ability to show yourself on your terms, how you'd like to be seen, free from the distortion of someone else's viewpoint and the sanitizing of Photoshop. For some contributors this is an exposition of pure art. For others it's a rebellious gesture, erotic expression, a desire to be desired, or a cathartic process. And for everyone, as we're told every day, it's just hugely fun.” (Pay site with free previews .)
Audio Porn is a stripped-down Tumblr site with little to look at, save for the explanation “A collection of the sexiest sounds.” The press n' play audio clips have brief labels like “Boy Masturbation,” “Sex on a Squeaky Bed!” and “Vibrator Orgasm” and include no photos or other information. But damned if they aren't sexy. The sound clips feel shockingly intimate, like overhearing a neighbor or roommate in the throes of sexual thrall. It plays on whatever our aural equivalent of voyeurism is, and seems both arousing and transgressive. At the same time, the sound-only format lends a visceral immediacy and allows space for imagination. (Free.)
Beautiful Agony , a collection of short films submitted by users showing their faces during orgasm, is celebration of la petite mort. “Beautiful Agony began as a multimedia experiment,” explain founders Richard Lawrence and Lauren Olney on the site. “We wondered whether film of a genuine, unscripted, natural orgasm - showing only the face - could succeed where the most visceral mainstream pornography fails, and that is, to actually turn us on.”
It is a indeed a turn-on, and thought-provoking as well, if you want to go that way. The experience of going toward and riding the throbs of orgasm is so outside the realm of the rest of our lives. What other thing gets us to this place of grunting and sounds that leads us to a state of transcendence somehow both grounded in, and sublimely beyond, the physical? And these faces contorted in orgasm reminds us that there is a bit of agony in it. If you didn't know the experience yourself, to see someone moaning and grimacing in orgasm's throes would look, well, you probably would not want to "have what they're having."
Literotica has user-created erotica, including poems, stories, audio clips, drawings and anything else deemed erotic by the user base. The user-created content means that there's plenty you'll find hot, but to get there, you'll have to wade through some possibly weird-ass stuff (uh, no judgment!) created by anyone with a modem and a sweaty, fevered dream.
This means don't go picking categories randomly lest you end up like I did, unhappily in the midst of a story about “That 70s Show” called “Red Rules the Roost” in which everyone in the whole damn family has sex with each other, including the old dad Red. Yes, RED. I contacted my friend, a cool Bay Area techie chick, one of many women who'd recommended the site, to say basically, “WTF? RED?!” But she was undeterred in her Literotica love, “Hahahaha. but that's the best thing about erotica! No gingers were harmed in the making of that story!”
Fair enough. So yes, do go, but follow your trail of passion, not your trail of morbid curiosity or you might end up in SciFi/Fantasy section beholding this passage: “the dark, prehensile limb coiled itself around my left thigh in answer, coming from the inside and curving back around to the front, constricting and shifting up before the tip fluttered playfully along my crotch.”
MakeLoveNotPorn.tv , promotes the glories of real world sex via sexy videos submitted by regular people (uploaders get a 50% cut of rental fees. “MakeLoveNotPorn.tv is of the people, by the people, and for the people who believe that the sex we have in our everyday life is the hottest sex there is....We are not 'amateur' - a label that implies that the only people doing it right are the professionals and the rest of us are bumbling idiots. (Honey, please.)” writes moxie-filled founder Cindy Gallop. At MLNP, you won't be offered 8 billion varieties of “overemoting woman with huge boobs gets 'nailed'”--unless that's what you want—but human sexuality is all its diverse glory. Or Gallop puts in, not porn, but “making pegging, married, cinematic, teasing, experimental, owowowheynow, firsttime,softserve, yummy, toytime, gushing, succulent, orgasmic, spanking, dressedup, gentle, Italian, downtown, strappedon, happy, romantic, GAY, blissful, backdoor, condomhot Love.”
On XConfessions , acclaimed filmmaker Erica Lust turns two user-submitted confessions, real life stories or fantasies into short erotic films,with lovely production values, fleshed out characters and even a plot. (Note: “plot” usually ends up with much naked rutting.) There's all kinds of variety as well. Current offerings include a randy pool boy, lesbians, a dominatrix, seducing strangers, Skype sex, and even friggin' IKEA. Hot! And coming later this month... Mad Men porn .
Copyright © 2022 Salon.com, LLC. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. SALON ® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon.com, LLC. Associated Press articles: Copyright © 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

A new study reveals that porn sites are leaking user data to third parties. Here's how to fight back.

Wipe it clean.
Credit: SEBASTIAN GORCZOWSKI / GETTY

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Privacy Please is an ongoing series exploring the ways privacy is violated in the modern world, and what can be done about it.
Your dumb privacy tricks aren't working. They still know what kind of porn you're watching.
So concludes a not-so-surprising study , which determined that online pornography sites are loaded with various trackers that leak private details about their users to third parties. And no, the study authors take pains to insist, Google's Incognito mode won't keep your secrets.
This latter point highlights broad confusion among the general public about what the Google Chrome feature actually does. Many people believe it renders their online browsing private, when in reality it just prevents Chrome from "[saving] your browsing history, cookies and site data, or information entered in forms."
Importantly, Google warns users , when using Incognito mode "[your] activity isn’t hidden from websites you visit, your employer or school, or your internet service provider."
Which brings us back to porn. The study, conducted by researchers hailing from Microsoft, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Pennsylvania, found a significant majority of pornography websites — 93 percent of the 22,484 analyzed — "leak user data to a third party."
And it gets worse. "Our content analysis of the sample’s domains indicated 44.97% of them expose or suggest a specific gender/sexual identity or interest likely to be linked to the user," continues the study.
In other words, your specific — and perhaps extremely private kinks — stand a pretty good chance of becoming not so private.
To illustrate this, the study authors lay out what for many is an all too familiar scenario.
"The websites [hypothetical porn consumer 'Jack'] visits, as well as any third-party trackers, may observe and record his online actions," explains the paper. "These third-parties may even infer Jack’s sexual interests from the URLs of the sites he accesses. They might also use what they have decided about these interests for marketing or building a consumer profile."
Once companies have said profile on this unsuspecting porn consumer, continues the study, they "may even sell the data."
This is problematic for all kinds of reasons, in addition to the skeevy factor alone. If your porn consumption reveals sexual preferences that are banned or outright illegal in repressive countries, this sort of tracking could literally threaten your physical safety.
Thankfully, there is a way to watch porn anonymously online. It's called Tor , and if it's not your best friend already, that should change today. Tor is an incredibly easy to use free service that keeps your identity private while browsing online.
There's even a Firefox-based Tor browser , which means the only real technical skills you need to browse privately are the ability to download (and update) a browser.
Oh, but there is one tiny catch: you can't go full-screen any more. That's right, it's only the default window-size setting for your porn viewing from now on. This small tradeoff is made necessary because of a type of tracking, known as browser fingerprinting , that uses a computer's unique hardware and software settings to essentially fingerprint unique devices. Maximizing a browser window, which reveals some display features, helps in that process.
So there you have it: ditch the worthless Incognito mode, use Tor, and browse all that glorious internet porn to your heart's content. Hey, you can even use Tor for things other than viewing porn — after all, privacy is sexy.
Related Video: Here's 5 tips for Spring cleaning your digital footprint


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On the afternoon of Oct. 1, 2013, a tall, slender, shaggy-haired man left his house on 15th Avenue in San Francisco. He paid $1,000 a month cash to share it with two housemates who knew him only as a quiet currency trader named Josh Terrey. His real name was Ross Ulbricht. He was 29 and had no police record. Dressed in jeans and a red T-shirt, Ulbricht headed to the Glen Park branch of the public library, where he made his way to the science-fiction section and logged on to his laptop–he was using the free wi-fi. Several FBI agents dressed in plainclothes converged on him, pushed him up against a window, then escorted him from the building.
The FBI believes Ulbricht is a criminal known online as the Dread Pirate Roberts, a reference to the book and movie The Princess Bride. The Dread Pirate Roberts was the owner and administrator of Silk Road, a wildly successful online bazaar where people bought and sold illegal goods–primarily drugs but also fake IDs, fireworks and hacking software. They could do this without getting caught because Silk Road was located in a little-known region of the Internet called the Deep Web.
Technically the Deep Web refers to the collection of all the websites and databases that search engines like Google don’t or can’t index, which in terms of the sheer volume of information is many times larger than the Web as we know it. But more loosely, the Deep Web is a specific branch of the Internet that’s distinguished by that increasingly rare commodity: complete anonymity. Nothing you do on the Deep Web can be associated with your real-world identity, unless you choose it to be. Most people never see it, though the software you need to access it is free and takes less than three minutes to download and install. If there’s a part of the grid that can be considered off the grid, it’s the Deep Web.
The Deep Web has plenty of valid reasons for existing. It’s a vital tool for intelligence agents, law enforcement, political dissidents and anybody who needs or wants to conduct their online affairs in private–which is, increasingly, everybody. According to a survey published in September by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 86% of Internet users have attempted to delete or conceal their digital history, and 55% have tried to avoid being observed online by specific parties like their employers or the government.
But the Deep Web is also an ideal venue for doing things that are unlawful, especially when it’s combined, as in the case of Silk Road, with the anonymous, virtually untraceable electronic currency Bitcoin. “It allows all sorts of criminals who, in bygone eras, had to find open-air drug markets or an alley somewhere to engage in bad activity to do it openly,” argues Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, whose office is bringing a case against Ulbricht and who spoke exclusively to TIME. For 2½ years Silk Road acted as an Amazon-like clearinghouse for illegal goods, providing almost a million customers worldwide wi
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