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Delete history: Pornhub changed the world, but its empire faces a reckoning

- Sam Cole

Pornhub completely dis‐ rupted the adult entertain‐ ment industry, and its in‐ fluence on culture and our collective experience­s of sexual expression online is undeniable.

But Pornhub, which bills itself as the world's leading free porn site, is now at‐ tempting to adapt to the times itself. It's facing a changing landscape of how people make and consume adult content, a reputation marred by accusation­s of child sexual abuse and pres‐ sure to abide by potentiall­y invasive age verificati­on laws.

Like many other tech companies, Pornhub was started by a handful of dudes with a dream of making tons of money - and they would do it by offering people what they wanted: free pornograph­y.

The site was founded in 2007 by Concordia students Ouissam Youssef and Stephane Manos, and their competitiv­e foosball buddy Matt Keezer. They spent the next several years treating it like the tech startup it was.

By the mid-2000s, Porn‐ hub had become one of the most popular sites on the in‐ ternet.

In an era of free every‐ thing online, Pornhub flour‐ ished by allowing anyone with an internet connection to upload pornograph­ic videos to the site, regardless of whether they owned or appeared in them. In 2010, the site was purchased by a larger company that owned several other porn sites. It would eventually become known as MindGeek, based in Montreal.

Big-box porn in a momand-pop world

Pornhub's grip on the online porn industry was like a bigbox corporatio­n coming into a mom-and-pop town. Inde‐ pendent porn websites that relied on paying customers faced an industry-wide reck‐ oning.

Suddenly, their content could be stolen and reu‐ ploaded to a free "tube" site like Pornhub - tube being short for YouTube, which they were modelled after and hundreds of thousands of people could watch it with‐ out ever having to pull out a credit card.

"That was the same year that you remember the mort‐ gage crisis and the subprime crisis and the world economy is collapsing," said Colin Rowntree, an indie pornograph­er who was run‐ ning his own online adult business at the time.

"And right in the middle of that was the tubes giving away free stuff when, you know, Joe Blow had no mon‐ ey and his mortgage was due, but he still wanted to watch some porn. It was a perfect storm."

Tube sites "literally deci‐ mated the adult industry," he said.

Pornhub built its brand on a Wild West of free content, and in the process, trained people to never expect to pay for porn. Add to this the pervasive stigma against sex workers, and what resulted was a widespread entitle‐ ment to the labour of pornograph­ers.

But access to free porn al‐ so expanded sexual horizons and brought pornograph­y more into the mainstream. People no longer had to dri‐ ve to a physical porn shop to rent a VHS tape. It was all on‐ line.

With free access to porn came more exposure to dif‐ ferent gender expression­s, body types and fetishes far beyond the pages of Playboy. In that sense, Pornhub and access to porn online in gen‐ eral played a role in broaden‐ ing sexual horizons, and re‐ search backs up this phe‐ nomenon.

Pornhub also became a place for performers to gain a wider audience and earn money through ad revenue. Uploading clips on Pornhub meant massive exposure and allowed them to develop fan bases that might follow them to paid sites or onward in their careers.

The changing economy of porn

In the last few years, the economy of porn has changed in radical ways.

Working online as a con‐ tent creator or influencer has become a viable job. The gig economy didn't just disrupt taxis and food delivery, it also changed nearly everything about the world of adult en‐ tertainmen­t.

The rise of subscripti­on platforms and cam sites, which allow performers and models to stream live from their own bedrooms, meant earning a living as a sex worker became possible for more people, including those who are disabled.

LISTEN | How OnlyFans taught me to embrace my disability:

For escorts, online sex work also offered safer work environmen­ts than streetbase­d work. Performers were able to determine who they would shoot with and what hours, wages and terms of employment they'd accept. With the rise of live-stream‐ ing sites, the performers owned their own content.

Onlyfans is the most famous example of this shift to a new generation of porn creators and consumers, and it has quickly become one of Pornhub's biggest competi‐ tors.

The subscripti­on-based site, launched in 2016, lets people sign up to support content creators for a set price per month - usually around $10. There are "safe for work" creators on Only‐ Fans, but it's known for porn.

Onlyfans exploded in pop‐ ularity in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. For all of the reasons the adult gig economy was starting to thrive online - flexible hours, decent pay, ownership of one's work and well-being creators flocked to the site.

Between March and April of 2020, Onlyfans saw a 200 per cent increase in new cre‐ ator registrati­ons. In 2022, it made $1.09 billion US in net revenue.

People weren't just paying for porn again, they were

paying in droves.

Accusation­s of child sex‐ ual abuse

At the same time, Pornhub was going through a crisis.

In December 2020, the New York Times published an opinion article by Nicholas Kristof, who spoke to victims of child sexual abuse about what happened when record‐ ings of their abuse ended up on Pornhub. The accusation­s were startling and harrowing.

Following the New York Times piece, Mastercard and Visa pulled their services from Pornhub entirely. Sex workers who relied on the site for their livelihood­s were devastated.

"I felt, especially during the COVID times, it was very scary - the thought of them not allowing us to make any money at all ever anymore," said Vanniall, a performer who uses Pornhub.

"I really was thinking, 'Oh my God, is this actually going to be it? Is this going to be the last time I'm ever gonna get a Pornhub payout?' And that was horrifying."

WATCH | Nicholas Kristof on the problem with Porn‐ hub:

There were demands and petitions from anti-traffickin­g groups to have Pornhub shut down altogether. Conserva‐ tive lobbyists in the U.S. es‐ pecially held up Pornhub as an example of what they felt was wrong with the entire in‐ dustry, and miscategor­ized all porn work as exploitati­on.

Because of Pornhub's Montreal roots, Kristof's arti‐ cle called for action from Canadian officials. "So a question for Trudeau and all Canadians: Why does Canada host a company that inflicts rape videos on the world?" he wrote.

Many social media sites struggle to keep non-consen‐ sual sexual imagery and child sexual abuse material off their platforms.

Facebook, Instagram and X, formerly known as Twitter - three of the biggest social media platforms in the world - all report massive amounts of child abuse imagery every year to oversight agencies like the U.S.-based National Center for Missing and Ex‐ ploited Children.

But Pornhub, which had built itself up as the house‐ hold name for porn and has long been the target of con‐ servative campaigns against porn, was poised for a partic‐ ularly hard fall.

In response to Mastercard and Visa pulling out, Pornhub scrambled to strengthen its moderation practices, delet‐ ing millions of unverified up‐ loads from the platform and prohibitin­g anyone who had‐ n't had their identifica­tion verified from uploading new content to the site.

Recently, it started requir‐ ing paperwork showing that each person in every video had consented to being in the video and having it up‐ loaded to the site.

Pornhub's future

In 2023, Mindgeek, Pornhub's Montreal-based parent com‐ pany, was bought by Ethical Capital Partners and is now known as Aylo.

In recent interviews, the new owners of Pornhub and its sibling sites emphasized that the site is safer than ever. They also said Porn‐ hub's era as a tube site is over.

"This is a content sharing platform with verified up‐ loaders and full moderation," said Solomon Friedman, partner and vice-president of compliance at Ethical Capital Partners.

But Visa and Mastercard still haven't returned, and Pornhub's future, as well as the future of all porn on the internet, hangs in the bal‐ ance.

WATCH | What can be done to block kids from vis‐ iting Pornhub?

Age verificati­on bills like the one recently introduced in Canada and several others in the U.S. are gaining popu‐ larity. These bills require adult sites to verify the ages of all users - not just upload‐ ers, but visitors as well - to prevent minors from visiting.

Adult entertainm­ent pro‐ fessionals agree that their in‐ dustry should be safe, and kids shouldn't have access to their content. But critics of the legislatio­n say the methods being proposed pose a privacy risk to con‐ senting adults.

An article published by the Electronic Frontier Foun‐ dation, a nonprofit that de‐ fends civil liberties in the digi‐ tal world, noted that though age verificati­on mandates are limited in terms of what data they retain and disclose, there's still a significan­t risk.

"Users are forced to trust that the website they visit, or its third-party verificati­on service, both of which could be fly-by-night companies with no published privacy standards, are following these rules," the article read.

The American Civil Liber‐ ties Union (ACLU) also wrote that the "legitimate fear of having personal informatio­n exposed may deter adults from accessing legal and con‐ sensual adult content, there‐ by limiting their freedom to explore and express them‐ selves in a private digital space."

Being forced to show gov‐ ernment issued ID and get‐ ting a biometric face scan to visit a porn site attempting to comply with the law - as is al‐ ready happening in Louisiana - won't prevent minors from seeing porn, but it will likely drive people to less compli‐ ant, less moderated sites, where minors can still see ex‐ plicit material.

Where Pornhub goes from here is unclear, but the adult industry is resilient.

Porn, and the audience for it, isn't going anywhere, but the legislatio­n, rights and freedoms that impact per‐ formers and users eventually affects us all.

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