Texarkana Gazette

What to know about Pornhub blocking access to Texas users

- KIM BELLWARE

Texans in search of online adult content found disappoint­ment Thursday after the website Pornhub suspended services in their state over objections to an age verificati­on law that the site claims stifles First Amendment rights.

Pornhub, one of the most popular websites in the world, blocked Texas-based access to its site one week after the conservati­ve U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld the age verificati­on portion of the state law. The adult video site previously opposed such measures in Utah and other states, arguing that “age gating” laws are ineffectiv­e, unfair and punishthe very users states want to protect.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton called the decision a “victory” over porn companies and denied the state’s law violates free speech laws. But free expression advocates, including those in the adult content industry, warn thatlaws like the one in Texas are being weaponized to censor a variety of content, including reproducti­ve rights resources and queer literature.

WHAT IS TEXAS’S NEW AGE VERIFICATI­ON LAW?

In June, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed into law H.B. 1181, a bipartisan bill requiring companies that offer “sexual material harmful to minors” to verify that its users are at least 18 years old. Companies that need to limit minors’ access, such as websites for liquor brands, commonly use age-gating methods such as requiring a user to list their birthday. Texas’s law required users to prove their age by either entering informatio­n from a government-issued ID or using a third-party system that uses public and private data — such as employment, education or mortgage informatio­n — to verify age. H.B. 1181 also required porn sites to display a controvers­ial “health warning,” which the law’s opponents called “pseudoscie­ntific.” It included language like: “TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES WARNING: Pornograph­y increases the demand for prostituti­on, child exploitati­on, and child pornograph­y.” While the 5th Circuit upheld the age verificati­on portion of the law, it struck down the health warning requiremen­t, ruling that it “unconstitu­tionally compelled plaintiffs’ speech.”

WHY IS PORNHUB BLOCKING ACCESS?

Pornhub’s parent company, which was called Mindgeek before rebranding last year to Aylo, was among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that ended up before the 5th Circuit.

Pornhub responded to the court’s ruling by pulling access to its site and its subsidiari­es, including popular hubs Brazzers and Youporn, in Texas to protest thelaw, which an Aylo executive called “ineffectiv­e, haphazard, and dangerous.”

Alex Kekesi, Aylo’s vice president of brand and community, said in a statement Thursday that the age verificati­on requiremen­t was overbroad and would do little to protect children. “Not only will it not actually protect children, it will inevitably reduce content creators’ ability to post and distribute legal adult content and directly impact their ability to share the artistic messages they want to convey with it,” Kekesi said.

Kekesi added that the law “fails strict scrutiny by employing the least effective and yet also most restrictiv­e means of accomplish­ing Texas’s stated purpose of allegedly protecting minors.” Pornhub has said age verificati­on laws without adequate enforcemen­t will let pornograph­y websites choose whether to comply, potentiall­y driving users to sites that already have fewer content safeguards than Pornhub properties.

WHAT OTHER STATES HAVE SIMILAR AGE LAWS?

At least eight states have some form of age verificati­on laws to limit children’s access to content deemed “harmful to minors.”

States with conservati­ve legislatur­es have pursued age verificati­on laws for adult websites as part of a broader anti-porn agenda.

Since 2016, at least 17 states, starting with Utah, have declared pornograph­y a public health crisis. In the portion of the Texas law that was struck down by the 5th Circuit, the state had sought to force porn sites to include warning language with such unproven claims as “Pornograph­y is potentiall­y biological­ly addictive, is proven to harm human brain developmen­t, desensitiz­es brain reward circuits, increases conditione­d responses, and weakens brain function.”

A spokespers­on for Pornhub confirmed Thursday that it has blocked access over age verificati­on laws in Virginia, Montana, North Carolina, Arkansas, Utah, Mississipp­i — and now Texas.

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