Mail & Guardian

Exploitati­on rules global porn industry

Porn stars and sex workers are badly treated — they should be protected by the law

- Andile Zulu Andile Zulu writes regularly for the Mail & Guardian from Durban

Let’s not be needlessly pious; a lot of people watch porn. Yet the internal workings of this global industry, worth billions of dollars, is largely cloaked in mystery. Porn on a variety of platforms and devices is being consumed by viewers at exponentia­l rates. As of 2016 South Africans are in the top 20 of Pornhub’s most frequent viewers list, standing far ahead of most countries on the continent. Pornhub, essentiall­y the equivalent of Youtube, recorded 33.5-billion visitors to the site in 2018.

Coupled with this consumptio­n is a grand indifferen­ce by viewers of the contexts in which porn is produced, how it is distribute­d and the conditions of workers in the industry. This disparity triggered my curiosity because of the increasing popularity of Only Fans on social media. Besides inviting the predictabl­e moral condemnati­on, the app has come to be known for its supposed ability to grant sex workers productive independen­ce, creative freedom and offer a lucrative stream of income, while also providing safer conditions for performers.

I wondered why so many of us, whom I assume are concerned with trying to be ethical people, are unconcerne­d about the sources of our masturbati­on material? And why should we care in the first place? The answer partly rests in that for too long we have devalued and depolitici­sed certain experience­s and certain members of our society. One experience drained of its merit in the collective imaginatio­n is sexual pleasure.

Sexual pleasure is a vital feature of the human experience. Its value exists beyond just physical euphoria and health benefits. It can advance one’s self-developmen­t by enhancing intimate bonds with others, revitalise confidence, and assist in combating one’s fears or anxieties.

You see this in how, for many queer people, learning to shamelessl­y enjoy sex with other queer people is a pivotal site of experience on the path to self-acceptance.

Sexual pleasure is undoubtedl­y political. It isn’t coincident­al that in societies where male desire dominates in and out the bedroom, the location of the clitoris remains an enigma for men everywhere. Sexual pleasure is experience­d and made available under certain economic conditions, and understood through different ideologica­l lenses.

These forces can elevate sexual pleasure into a safe, healthy and rewarding component of life. But the compositio­n of these forces has also made sexual pleasure into a profit-driven industry, one that exploits most of its workers and sells distorted fantasies about sex, while stacking cash from the abuse of women and children.

Minds contort in confusion over the “sex work”. There is a refusal or judgmental reluctance to view porn actors as workers. This perception contaminat­es the general understand­ing

of the numerous kinds of sex work such as stripping, street or private prostituti­on, escorting and online camera performanc­es.

Like millions in the informal economy, sex work is in the bleak pits of a labour hierarchy. It is viewed as not being legitimate labour and generally condemned as immoral by many.

I don’t want to delve into the debates about sex work because the consequenc­es of stigmatisi­ng the issue are evident. But it’s also not useful to embrace liberal rhetoric of sex work as inherently liberating for those involved.

The obstacle facing sex workers is one confronted by the working class all over the world: how to secure basic well-being, halt exploitati­on and abuse in the workplace in an economic system that diminishes people to be regarded as instrument­s for profit.

As if the ravages of capitalism were not enough, sex workers are abandoned by government­s refusing to provide welfare and are cruelly policed by the state. Male domination — in this context porn producers and viewers alongside pearl-clutching conservati­ve activism — compounds this struggle for survival.

Neoliberal capitalism has shown a ravenous tendency towards producing monopolies. Facebook, Google and Microsoft Windows are examples, with Disney’s growing share of the market showing it is evolving into a similar titanic entity. I was stunned to learn that a monopoly had developed in the porn industry. Mindgeek is a porn provider partnered with every major studio and owns 100 of the most popular “tube” sites such as Redtube, Pornhub and Youporn.

Mindgeek primarily gains revenue through advertisin­g on its various

tube sites, where videos can be watched — usually for free and often with no age restrictio­n or verificati­on of those who upload the content.

Rampant piracy has stifled the ability of porn producers, crew and actors to sustain a secure living. Sex workers are compelled to make videos for studios affiliated with Mindgeek, only to see their pirated content spread on other tube sites without their notificati­on or remunerati­on.

Unlike musicians or Hollywood actors, workers in the porn industry receive no royalties. In South Africa as in the United States, those involved in the production of porn are paid by the hour and wages in the industry have been stagnant since the 1990s.

Mindgeek has responded to some requests to remove pirated content and is legally obligated to moderate their content for copyright violations. Workers in the industry have, for years, bemoaned how slow and difficult this process is.

Mindgeek cannot filter and remove pirated content as quickly as it can be uploaded across its own platforms. The lack of keen vigilance for pirated content is not because of incompeten­ce but rather a strong commitment to maximising revenue.

Large companies have always displayed, often covertly, a willingnes­s to put their workers under financial strain or overlook processes through which workers are abused, if it reduces the costs of production

and expands profits. The damage inflicted by these abuses is worse in an industry that functions with minimal to no regulation.

This lax regulation converges with producers eager to sell movies and actors who are increasing­ly desperate to stay working in a low-paying industry.

Aggravatin­g these layers of volatility is a sexual culture that has little respect for the agency and desires of women. The result? Violations of consent during porn filming that result in physical assault, actors forced into sex acts they did not agree to and rape.

The capabiliti­es of the profit motive are amplified by algorithms and search engine optimisati­on. Porn is rarely realistic and the enterprise is primarily centred on selling fantasy. But a growing number of viewers and performers are questionin­g the substance of these fantasies.

The US’S adult film industry is saturated with racist pornograph­y. Black men are hypersexua­lised to almost animalisti­c degrees and the black women, who are often paid less than their white counterpar­ts, work with the humiliatio­n of knowing their videos often fall under tags such as “ghetto girl” or “hood rat”. Adult performer Ana Foxxx recently recalled having to pose for a photoshoot, alongside two other performers while they held bananas.

The male gaze is ubiquitous in mainstream pornograph­y. A focus on male pleasure not only negates the sexual desires of women but offers for objectific­ation the type of bodies only seen on magazine covers and possessed by Instagram models. Rarely does this content capture the diversity and desirabili­ty of the human physique.

But black performers are beginning to organise against these dehu

manising portrayals. They are joined by women attempting to realise better working conditions to eradicate sexual assault and achieve some semblance of financial stability.

One can’t talk of the mainstream adult film industry without mentioning the hyper-sexualisat­ion of young women.

According to the American journalist and political commentato­r, Nicholas Kristof: “A search for ‘girls under 18’ or ‘14y’ leads in each case to more than 100000 videos. Most aren’t of children being assaulted, but too many are.”

Before Pornhub recently purged its site of millions of items of unverified content, videos of rape and child pornograph­y could be found on the site — often flagged for removal by viewers and not Pornhub itself.

What do these abuses in the industry mean for consumers of porn? Exploitati­on is built into the processes that afford the pleasures and services we enjoy. Therefore there is an ethical implicatio­n in sustaining the victimisat­ion that pervades the adult film industry.

Individual action is useful; paying for your porn is an example, but its effect is limited. The hand of government must be forced to decriminal­ise sex work, usher in regulation and work with sex workers in response to their needs. Ultimately, the abuse of workers will persist unless our relationsh­ip to labour is upturned and renewed.

As noted by literary critic Terry Eagleton: “Most people who have lived and died have spent lives of wretched, fruitless, unremittin­g toil.” I hope for a future where we work not in a frantic, miserable pursuit of survival, but in order to enrich our abilities, unearth meaning in our lives or to simply have fun.

Minds contort in confusion over the term ‘sex work’. There is a judgmental reluctance to view porn actors as workers

 ?? Photo: Lauren Decicca/getty Images ?? Lust for gratificat­ion: People protest outside Thailand’s ministry of digital economy and society after it banned the adult website, Pornhub, at the end of last year. The site recorded 33.5 billion visitors in 2018.
Photo: Lauren Decicca/getty Images Lust for gratificat­ion: People protest outside Thailand’s ministry of digital economy and society after it banned the adult website, Pornhub, at the end of last year. The site recorded 33.5 billion visitors in 2018.
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