Teen Porn Site Review

Teen Porn Site Review




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Teen Porn Site Review
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WHAT are the best websites on the internet? Reddit unveils 15 top destinations according to its users and Google, eBay or YouTube don't even make the list.
THERE'S so much more to the internet than just cat videos.
In fact, there are so many options it's sometimes tricky to really know where to start. Luckily, Redditors have come to the rescue to provide a complete list of the best websites out there, and Google doesn't even get a look in.
When a post was created on Reddit (a huge social news website with content generated by its users) asking "what is the best website other than Reddit?" thousands upon thousands of passionate replies came back.
This interesting social survey resulted in many hailing the greatness of sites like Wikipedia (which took first place) and Snopes for useful information, where others vehemently supported places to download pirate video and porn. Notably, the world's most visited websites Google, Facebook, and YouTube didn't make the list, neither did big hitters such as eBay or Amazon.
Reddit's full list of the internet's 15 best websites is below:
1. Wikipedia : the font of all knowledge. Come here to know anything about everything.
2. Multiple submissions : this is a tied-for-second list of miscellaneous sites ranging from Dropbox to How Stuff Works.
3. WolframAlpha : the site that can answer fact-based questions with fact-based answers.
4. Netflix : on-demand movie streaming and DVD-by-mail website. Not officially available in Australia (unless you go through a proxy).
5. (Name withheld) : no points for guessing what this does. It's an adult site, and it's a hub of movies. This sort of thing is quite popular on the internet, evidently.
6. Snopes : mythbusting-website that clarifies misinformation and sets the record straight on rumours and urban legends.
7. Zombo : all that's found here is a Flash animation that leads to nothing. A big internet parody of Flash.
8. PrimeWire : the place to go to find a host of pirated TV or movies.
9. Kickass Torrents : peer-to-peer file sharing of pirated movies, music, TV and software.
10. The Nicest Place on the Internet : the place to go for free hugs via webcam. No nudity in sight.
11. Kickstarter : got an idea? Sign up, share the notion and ask for funding from the public. A great place for entrepreneurs to get started.
12. Kongregate : a massive collection of free simple online games. It's a good place to idle away some time.
13. Find the Invisible Cow : find a cow on your blank screen by moving your cursor around and listening to someone shouting "cow!". The internet loves this.
14. Motherf***kingwebsite : a satirical single-page website talking about building a website. Contains more swear words than a Guy Ritchie movie.
15. TV Tropes : the tricks of the trade for writing fiction through workshops and reviews.
Do any of these websites make your list? Tell us what you'd include as your favourite websites.
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Twitter experienced a widespread outage in Australia, the US and Europe on Thursday night.
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Porn Sites Still Won’t Take Down Nonconsensual Deepfakes
The videos are racking up millions of views. Meanwhile, for victims, the legal options aren’t keeping up with the technology
 Deepfake pornography videos are widely considered to target, harm, and humiliate the women that are placed at their core. Photograph: Benne Ochs/Getty Images
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Matt Burgess is a senior writer at WIRED focused on information security, privacy, and data regulation in Europe. He graduated from the University of Sheffield with a degree in journalism and now lives in London. Send tips to Matt_Burgess@wired.com .
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Hundreds of explicit deepfake videos featuring female celebrities, actresses, and musicians are being uploaded to the world’s biggest pornography websites every month, new analysis shows. The nonconsensual videos rack up millions of views , and porn companies are still failing to remove them from their websites.
This story originally appeared on WIRED UK .
Up to 1,000 deepfake videos have been uploaded to porn sites every month as they became increasingly popular during 2020, figures from deepfake detection company Sensity show. The videos continue to break away from dedicated deepfake pornography communities and into the mainstream.
Deepfake videos hosted on three of the biggest porn websites, XVideos, Xnxx, and xHamster, have been viewed millions of times. The videos are surrounded by ads, helping to make money for the sites. XVideos and Xnxx, which are both owned by the same Czech holding company, are the number one and three biggest porn websites in the world and rank in the top 10 biggest sites across the entire web. They each have, or exceed, as many visitors as Wikipedia, Amazon, and Reddit.
One 30-second video, which appears on all three of the above sites and uses actress Emma Watson’s face, has been viewed more than 23 million times—being watched 13 million times on Xnxx. Other deepfake videos, which have hundreds of thousands or millions of views, include celebrities such as Natalie Portman, Billie Eilish, Taylor Swift, and Indian actress Anushka Shetty. Many of the celebrities have continuously been the targets of deepfakes since they first emerged in 2018.
“The attitude of these websites is that they don't really consider this a problem,” says Giorgio Patrini, CEO and chief scientist at Sensity, which was until recently called DeepTrace. Deepfake pornography videos are widely considered to target, harm, and humiliate the women that are placed at their center. Patrini adds that Sensity has increasingly seen deepfakes being made for other people in the public realm, such as Instagram, Twitch and YouTube influencers, and he worries the advancement of deepfake tech will inevitably see members of the public targeted.
“Until there is a strong reason for [porn websites] to try to take them down and to filter them, I strongly believe nothing is going to happen,” Patrini says. “People will still be free to upload this type of material without any consequences to these websites that are viewed by hundreds of millions of people”.
Many of the videos are hiding in plain sight—they’re uploaded to be watched, after all. Some videos include “fake” or “deepfake” in their titles and are tagged as being a deepfake. For instance, tag pages on XVideos and Xnxx list hundreds of the videos.
However, the full scale of the problem on porn websites is unknown. There will probably never be a true picture of how many of these videos are created without people’s permission.
Despite repeated attempts to contact representatives of XVideos and Xnxx, the owners did not answer requests for comment on their attitudes and policies towards deepfakes.
Alex Hawkins, VP of xHamster, says the company doesn’t have a specific policy for deepfakes but treats them “like any other nonconsensual content.” Hawkins says that the company’s moderation process involves multiple different steps, and it will remove videos if people’s images are used without permission.
“We absolutely understand the concern around deepfakes, so we make it easy for it to be removed,” Hawkins says. “Content uploaded without necessary permission being obtained is in violation of our Terms of Use and will be removed once identified.” Hawkins adds that the dozens of videos appearing as deepfakes on xHamster, which were highlighted by WIRED, have been passed onto its moderation team to be reviewed.
Deepfake upload figures seen by WIRED did not include Pornhub, which is the second-biggest porn website and despite banning deepfakes in 2018 still has problems with the videos .
“There has to be some kind of thinking about what we do about this when women are embarrassed and humiliated and demeaned in this way on the internet, and it really is like a question about privacy and security,” says Nina Schick, a political broadcaster and the author of Deepfakes and the Infocalypse .
Since the first deepfakes emerged from Reddit in early 2018, the underlying artificial intelligence technology needed to make them has advanced. It’s getting cheaper and easier for people to make deepfake videos. In one recent example , a security researcher using open-source software and spending less than $100 was able to create video and audio of Tom Hanks.
The tech advancements have raised fears that deepfakes will be used to manipulate political conversations. While there were some early examples of this happening, the threat has largely failed to materialize. However, deepfake porn, where the technology was first invented, has flourished. Hollywood actress Kristen Bell said she was “shocked” when she first found out deepfakes were made using her image. “‘Even if it’s labelled as, ‘Oh, this is not actually her,’ it’s hard to think about that. I’m being exploited,” she told Vox in June.
The amount of deepfakes online is growing exponentially. A report from Sensity released last year found 14,678 deepfake videos online in July 2019—96 percent of these were porn and almost all are focused on women. By June this year the amount of deepfakes had climbed to 49,081.
The majority of deepfake porn is found on, and created by, specific communities. The top four deepfake porn websites received more than 134 million views last year, Sensity’s 2019 analysis shows. One deepfake porn website is full of videos featuring celebrities and contains videos of Indian actresses that have been watched millions of times. Some videos state they were requested, while their creators say they can be paid in bitcoin.
“Some of this technology is improving so fast, because there's so much energy and drive, unfortunately, from the creators’ side,” Patrini says. “I think we're going to be seeing it applied very soon with much larger intent to private individuals.” He believes when the technology is easy for anyone to use there will be a “tipping point” when lawmakers will become aware of the problems.
Clare McGlynn, a professor at the Durham Law School who specializes in pornography regulations and sexual abuse images, agrees. “What this shows is the looming problem that is going to come for non-celebrities,” she says. “This is a serious issue for celebrities and others in the public eye. But my long­standing concern, speaking to survivors who are not celebrities, is the risk of what is coming down the line.”
At the moment, the legal options for people featured in deepfake videos has not kept up with the technology. In fact, it wasn’t ever prepared for the impact of AI-generated porn. “If a pornographic picture or video of you goes up online, your legal options for taking it down vary wildly,” says Aislinn O'Connell, a law lecturer from Royal Holloway University in London.
People can pursue nonconsensual uploads for defamation, under human rights laws, copyright complaints, and other forms. However, most of these processes are onerous, resource-intensive and most often don’t apply to deepfakes. “We need more and better solutions now,” O'Connell says.
Some deepfake laws have been passed in US states, but these largely focus on politics and ignore the impact that deepfakes are already having on people’s lives. In the UK the Law Commission is conducting a review into the sharing of intimate images online, which includes deepfakes, but it is expected to take years until any changes can be made. O'Connell proposes that England adopts image rights laws so people can properly protect themselves.
However, while lawmakers fail to deal with the problem, the technology is set to become cheaper and easier for all to use. “I see the evolution of deepfakes in the pornographic space as actually the harbinger of the bigger civil liberties issues that are going to emerge,” Schick says.
“This technology is out there, and it is evolving at a rate that is much faster than society can keep up with,” she adds. “We are not ready for the age of synthetic media, where even video becomes something that almost anybody can corrupt.” To fight this, Schick says, multiple people need to be involved—technologists, the public, domain-specific experts, policy officials, and lawmakers. Right now, however, that’s not happening.
This story originally appeared on WIRED UK .
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Pornhub on Thursday officially switched to HTTPS, so visitors can now access the site over an encrypted channel. YouPorn will also soon be making the switch.
I'm PCMag's expert on fitness and smart home technology, and I've written more than 6,000 articles and reviews in the 10-plus years I've been here. I unbox, set up, test, and review a wide range of consumer tech products from my home in Florida, often with the help of my pitbull Bradley. I'm also a yoga instructor, and have been actively teaching group and private classes for nearly a decade. 
Pornhub last year launched a bug bounty program offering money in exchange for information about vulnerabilities in its site, and now the popular porn destination is taking its security efforts a step further.




Pornhub on Thursday officially switched to HTTPS, so visitors can now access the site over an encrypted channel. Pornhub's sister site YouPorn will also be making the switch on Tuesday, April 4.
Once primarily reserved for financial websites, HTTPS, or HyperText Transport Protocol Secure, is a more secure version of HTTP. When you see HTTPS at the beginning of a web address, you can rest assured that all communications between your browser and the website are encrypted .
In a statement, Pornhub Vice President Corey Price said the move to HTTPS will help ensure that what people do on the site "remains strictly confidential."
"As one of the most viewed websites in the world, it is our duty to ensure the confidentially and safety of our users," said YouPorn's Vice Presidnet Brad Burns. "The transition to HTTPS will go a long way in solidifying our users' privacy and protecting them against various types of malware. The data on our webpages will now be encrypted, making it significantly harder for third parties to penetrate. Now, our community members can peruse our site even more safely, knowing they have that extra layer of security."
Pornhub and YouPorn are both among the top 100 most visited websites in the world, according to Google.
Their switch to HTTPS comes just days after Congress voted to overturn a Federal Communications Commission rule requiring ISPs to get permission before selling consumer browsing history and other data. As The Verge notes (Opens in a new window) , HTTPS won't hide from your ISP that you visited Pornhub, but will prevent them from being able to tell what you watched on the site.
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