'Porn King' Says Google Should Block Porn Access
mikesd81 writes "The Register has a story saying that one of the world's biggest porn producers wants Google and other search sites to put up barriers between kids and adult entertainment. 'Steven Hirsch, the co-chairman and co-founder of Vivid Entertainment, is to deliver this message on Saturday in New Haven, Connecticut as he addresses an army of Yale University MBA candidates. "Responsible companies in the adult industry such as ours have done a great deal to deter minors from accessing adult material," Hirsch proclaims from inside a Vivid press release. "None of the search engines and portals, but particularly Yahoo and Google, has taken any significant steps in this direction.'"
Steven Hirsch: "Won't somebody please think of my profit margins ... *cough* I mean ... children?!"
My work here is dung.
.XXX domain names would help here. Sure, it won't prevent kids from accessing 100% of adult content, but it would certainly make it easier for sites like Google and applications like Net-Nanny filter the adult sites with that domain. It would also go a long way toward showing that adult site operators can be responsible and are putting forth an honest effort to limit "adult content" to adults only.
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
Should read:
'Porn King' Says Google Should Block Internet Competition As It Hurts Video Sales
If you haven't made a developer cry, you've wasted a day.
How the heck am I supposed to find stuff?
I sure wish I could call for google to block searches that wind up returning my competitors' sites in the name of the children.
More Twoson than Cupertino
Google has a SafeSearch option. That's a deterrent to accessing adult content. Granted, it's only default on for images...and there's no restriction I know of to turning it off. But it's certainly something.
Translation: It isn't OUR fault that children can see porn on the Net, it's Google's and Yahoo's, since they don't filter search results for children. (Which is not actually entirely true in either case.)
My blog
I use a search engine to search the internet.
There is pr0n on the internet.
I think it's pretty simple...
What doesn't kill you only delays the inevitable
Did Hirsch just say that the online porn industry is doing more to protect minors from porn than Google or Yahoo?
Isn't that a lot like the Mafia saying they're doing more to protect people from criminals than the police?
And, as absurd as it sounds, are those statements maybe more correct than we'd like?
Trying to make search engine providers responsible for regulating online behavior is Nannyism taken to absurd lengths.
Teach your children to make good choices, turn them loose, and be available to them when they need you.
TLR
A man no more knows his destiny than a tea leaf knows the history of the East India Company
This is just a very obvious illustration of Yandle's theory:
The Baptist and the Bootlegger
This happened before when the CEO of some major airline called for more regulation of the airline industry and, more recently, when big agri business corps talk about 'our dependence on foreign oil'.
Nothing to see here (for economists anyway), move along.
Google's SafeSearch blocks web pages containing explicit sexual content from appearing in search results.
Granted it is not a completely effective deterrent, but the Vivid web site offers little more than an assent click and age verification -- not exactly a strong wall to keep out minors either.
That leads me to believe that Vivid is more interested in squeezing out the little guys (pun unintended) in the business and gaining larger market share through greater obscurity on search engines.
There are already numerous meta tag schemes for content rating.
http://www.icra.org/label/
http://www.w3.org/PICS/
http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/wcl/
As a teenager, in the days when there was no internet and a computer took up a medium sized building, I found porn. I found it, because I was actively trying to. So were most of my friends.
I cannot think of any way you could have stopped me then, nor any way you could stop a teenager now. Age verification etc is simply a token gesture to shut-up the lunatics on the religious right-wing. It's a worthless annoyance.
Porn isn't a big deal. It's people having sex, it's good thing. I do not want to have to jump through hoops to find it, and I am sick of paying the price for bad parenting. Educate the damn kids and leave the rest of us alone.
Your kids are your problem, not society's.
"Responsible companies in the adult industry such as ours have done a great deal to deter minors from accessing adult material"
Ah, no. I think they have been doing what they can do deter non-paying people from accessing adult material. When a 16-year-old types in a valid credit card number there really isn't anything they sanely can or should be expected to do to prove how old that person actually is. But heay, the fact that minors generally don't have credit cards sure is a handy-dandy public relations score for them.
And oh joy, now the porn industry wants to do as much as they can to make Google suppress all the free competition out there. Thanks but no thanks. Google is merely building a "phone book" of addresses out there and it is not reasonable or possible for them to play policemen judging each site out there if it is "acceptable" or "not acceptable", and it is not reasonable or sane to demand Google play policemen on who is forbidden to look up what phone numbers in the phone book.
Google's already going above and beyond what they need to do in offering their "safesearch" option and (if I'm not mistaken) defaulting it to on. No demand or expectation that safesearch is supposed to be accurate, just a "whatever effort we felt like putting into a maybe useful but not necessarily accurate automated grouping" sort of thing, and an if you don't like the results don't use it sort of thing.
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- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
Hirsch is the CEO of a mostly offline porn company. Vivids web presence isn't as great as say Girls Gone Wild or even Playboy or Penthouse. Thus he has an economic interest in minimizing competition for porn entertainment dollars by reducing Internet porn availability.
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
Pun intended.
"No free peeks" says profit-oriented smut-peddler!
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."