Montreal Gazette

Advocacy groups push Mastercard, Visa to terminate Pornhub payments

European adult video sharing operation accused of misogynist­ic, violent content

- MARTIN PATRIQUIN For more news about the innovation economy, visit www.thelogic.co

A group of Canadian advocacy groups and profession­als is calling on Visa and Mastercard to cease processing payments for adult video sharing site Pornhub and its owner Mindgeek, citing the credit-card companies' own product and service rules against child pornograph­y, incest, bestiality and rape.

Representa­tives of more than 40 women's shelters and anti-sexual-exploitati­on collective­s from across Canada, and from three religious faiths, sent letters Wednesday to senior executives at Visa and Mastercard, copying Prime Minister Justin Trudeau along with ministers Bill Blair, David Lametti, Steven Guilbeault and Maryam Monsef.

The letters, copies of which The Logic obtained, come on the heels of the federal government's pledge of new legislatio­n that will in part target online child pornograph­y and hateful material on sites like Pornhub, and that will introduce fines in the millions of dollars should the sites not comply.

“I'm a signatory because I have a deep concern about protecting children from online abuse,” said Montreal Council of Women president Penny Rankin told The Logic. “I am not participat­ing to impose any kind of moral question about those who watch Pornhub. I just want Visa and Mastercard to look at their own rules and investigat­e.”

In their correspond­ence, the groups quote from a recent open letter signed by 20 Canadian politician­s accusing Pornhub of “publishing videos of child abuse, sexual assault and sex traffickin­g” along with “misogynist­ic and gender-based violence, explicit racism and hate, minors, incest and voyeurism and intimate images.”

The advocacy group also cited Visa's commitment to ensuring “modern forms of slavery are not taking place in the company's business operations and supply chains” in its letter to the company. Signatorie­s of the letters include National Council of Women of Canada president Patricia Leson, Canadian Federation of University Women president Janet Watson and Rabbi Lisa Grushcow of Montreal's Temple Emanu-el-beth Sholom synagogue. Some of the signatorie­s, such as Defend Dignity and EVE, are expressly opposed to sex work and pornograph­y.

The letters are the latest salvo against Mindgeek, the Luxembourg-based company whose main base of operations is in Montreal, where it was founded, and whose stable of pornograph­y websites is among the world's largest, including Pornhub, Brazzers, Tube8, Redtube and Youporn. A New York Times column published last week profiled a young woman rendered homeless, suicidal and addicted to drugs after a sexually explicit video of her at 14 was uploaded to Pornhub.

In the wake of the column's publicatio­n, Visa and Mastercard said they were reviewing their financial ties to Pornhub. Paypal ceased providing payment services to Pornhub's models in November 2019. American Express, meanwhile, prohibits the use of its services for “adult content sold via Digital Delivery Transactio­ns.”

Pornhub has recently denied the presence of child pornograph­y on its platform, including in an October exchange with The Logic. At the time, a Pornhub spokespers­on who identified themselves as Ian Andrews called claims the site featured underage material “conspiracy theories.” The site removed a video with a racial slur in the title after The Logic brought it to Pornhub's attention; however, similar material remains on other Mindgeek properties.

On Tuesday afternoon, Pornhub announced updated trust and safety measures in a bid to address the criticism it's faced after the recent media attention. The company says it will now only permit verified uploaders to post material to the site. It has also removed the ability to download most videos from the site, and expanded its moderation to include a “Red Team” that will patrol the site for potentiall­y illegal material. Pornhub will also publish its first transparen­cy report in 2021.

Pornhub's release Tuesday also cited its recently launched its “Trusted Flagger Program,” in which it said it works with 40 online child-safety non-profits worldwide, letting them “alert us of content they think may violate our Terms of Service.” The release does not list a Canadian partner.

Late last month, The Logic reported that the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, a government- backed child- safety non-profit, had withdrawn from a global anti-child-exploitati­on network called Inhope over its associatio­n with Mindgeek. In an interview with The Logic Tuesday, Heritage Minister Guilbeault said that while he applauded the measures Pornhub said it would take, it is folly to let internet platforms police themselves. “Self-regulation doesn't work. It doesn't work in the environmen­tal field, and it certainly doesn't work when it comes to online platforms.”

Rather, Guilbeault said the government will bring in new regulation­s in early 2021 to ensure “platforms are respecting our laws and regulation­s” with respect to harmful online content. “Fines could be imposed in the millions of dollars. We're not talking about a slap on the wrist.”

During question period on Tuesday, Bloc Québécois leader YvesF-rançois Blanchet offered his party's support “for all measures to put an end to sexual exploitati­on of young people.”

It isn't the first time Visa and Mastercard have faced calls to cease providing payment services to Pornhub. In May, a group of signatorie­s from women and children's rights advocacy groups issued a similar letter calling on 10 credit-card companies — Visa and Mastercard included — to block payments to pornograph­ic sites.

I have a deep concern about protecting children from online abuse. ...

I just want Visa and Mastercard to look at their own rules and investigat­e.

 ?? DANIEL ACKER/ BLOOMBERG ?? Visa and Mastercard are reviewing their financial ties to Pornhub amid claims its videos showed child abuse and assault. Pornhub's Luxembourg-based owner Mindgeek was founded in Montreal.
DANIEL ACKER/ BLOOMBERG Visa and Mastercard are reviewing their financial ties to Pornhub amid claims its videos showed child abuse and assault. Pornhub's Luxembourg-based owner Mindgeek was founded in Montreal.
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