pro-porn

Apples, Oranges, Nutritional Supplements, and Porn

Tue, 2009-03-10 08:55

Ann Bartow of Feminist Law Professors, posted last week about that zip-code study that strongly correlated online porn consumption and conservative voting practices. It’s pretty clear from her analysis not that she sees porn differently from a lot of progressives who accept porn but what she sees that’s different.

She first ruminates on what kind of porn people in red-state zip codes tend to view (hint: not anything Tony Comstock, Rachel Kramer Bussel or Violet Blue produce or review.) And then reflects on what kind of people produce and sell porn for red-staters.

...no doubt y’all will be shocked, absolutely shocked, to read that in terms of online advertising methods, pornographers behave like evil, unethical jerks…

From the study**:

Some marketing partners engage in unlawful advertising practices, creating possible liability for the providers they promote. Federal Trade Commission regulations (16 C.F.R. Part 316) require that all unsolicited “sexually oriented” emails contain the label “SEXUALLY-EXPLICIT” in their subject lines. Furthermore, the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 makes advertisers liable for unsolicited commercial email sent by their marketing partners. The FTC has brought suit to enjoin unlabeled explicit emails and to penalize content providers’ whose affiliates send such emails (for example, United States v. APC Entertainment, FTC File No. 052-3043).

Other marketing partners use expired or misspelled web addresses to present adult materials without a user’s request. For example, in 2002, I uncovered Domain Strategy, a Montreal firm that registered domain names after their prior registrants failed to pay for renewals. I reported more than 4,500 affected domains, including bicyclebills.com (previously a Boston bicycle repair shop), ridgefieldhighschool.com, and savannah-bbb.org. Users requested these web addresses in hopes of receiving the content previously available at the specified sites. Instead, Domain Strategy showed explicit images and promoted adult websites via affiliate links.

She said it here.

I think this is a pretty important point when pondering what, exactly, people mean when they talk about the merits or demerits of porn. I’m guessing everyone you know agrees that vitamins, minerals, and herbal supplements are ok — somewhere between at best really good for you and, at worst, the placebo effect. But then I’m also guessing everyone you know doesn’t get their information about supplements… let alone their supplies... from spam and spam-driven websites.

To the best of my knowledge neither, say, Rachel Kramer Bussel, nor Mr. and Mrs. Comstock, nor the photographers, models, agencies, nor sites linked to by Violet Blue and Vivian, nor any of the nearly 1000 amateur, non-commercial shared- and self-photographing participants of Half-Nekkid Thursday likely to rely on misspellings of children’s television programming to put their work in front of other people’s eyes. But then… neither are their intent nor their content similar to those who do.

Point being that unless one is willing to be extremely dogmatic (not that there’s… necessarily anything wrong with that) one probably can’t be clear, at all, about one’s position on porn… or about someone else’s… if they’re not clear about the nature of the source, the nature of the content, and the nature of the consumer.

[A PDF called, entertainingly enough, “Red Light States!” —fl]

(Caveat: Today’s “Continue reading…” image is less suitable for work.”)

Problem Being That "Anti-Anti" is Not a Double Negative

Tue, 2008-08-19 20:11

Megan of Jezebel, in her “Crappy Hour” feature with IM buddy and political pundit Spencer Ackerman, raises a point that I think might explain some of the nature, and bitterness arising out of, for instance, the “blowjob wars.” The snippet below involves speculation about who John McCain might select as a Vice Presidential running mate.


MEGAN: ...At what point in the race do you think Lieberman would start undermining McCain the way he did Al Gore?

SPENCER: Not even SLIGHTLY and here’s why. Lieberman is animated by the classic neoconservative grievance of rejection by his first love, the Democratic Party. Jacob Heilbrunn’s book goes into this pathology in detail. And honestly, I have to admit I understand it, given my inability to let go of this whole TNR shit. [Note: Ackerman was fired from The New Republic for failing to drink kool-aid with neocons. —fl] That’s why Lieberman has been such an eager attack dog for the right ever since he lost his primary in 2006 — he wants, and wants badly, to redress what the left did to him. He’s not actually rightwing. He’s anti-anti-left, and ferociously so.

MEGAN: Well, you know, if you want to be a hawk, don’t expect a bunch of doves to come flocking to you.

SPENCER: He’s obsessed with his own transcendent righteousness.
They said it here.

The problem with transcendent righteousness, in any debate, is that, like Leiberman, one can wind up doing damage to one’s own cause at the expense of respect or influence in either camp.

The 411 on the 6th Circuit's 2257 decison

Fri, 2007-11-16 00:26

Kathleen A. Bergin of Feminist Law Professors inquires about the significance of pronoun order in a court decision. It’s a good question in the sense that it’s unusual for courts to buck the convention of always using the masculine pronoun first. Having been subject to the law in question myself (as has, technically, any blogger, Flickr users, or social networker who’s posted a half-nekkid photo) I think I understand why the decision was written as it was.

Much Ado About Pronouns . . .

In Connection Distributing v. Keisler, the Sixth Circuit struck down on First Amendment overbreadth grounds certain record keeping requirements of the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act. I’m struck not by the specific ruling in the case, but by three small words the court used to describe the statute’s coverage: “If a person is producing [any sexually explicit image], she or he is subject to the recordkeeping requirements.”

This conspicuous ordering of pronouns must have been intentional. After all, he or she is the more common, supposedly “gender neutral” convention, and the statute in question, 18 USC § 2257, uses conventional pronoun ordering in making it unlawful “for any person . . . to refuse to permit the Attorney General or his or her designee to conduct an inspection [of records].” A quick Westlaw search returned Bowen v. Gillard as the last time a majority opinion of the Supreme Court used the she or he construction - and that was a 1987 case involving support obligations owed to low income mothers (actual research might turn up additional cases). Bucking both tradition and statutory usage,  Connection Distributing led with she three times in its majority.

Read the quote in context here.

The wording “she or he” probably relates to confusion of the the term “producing.” Yes, “producing” applies to what Hugh Hefner does but his personal information is already a matter of public record and not just 2257 record-keeping requirements.

The real problem is that the law required that all of Hefner’s models personal information be kept where it could easily be examined not just by law-enforcement authorities but also by busybodies, fans, and stalkers. Since most but by no means all porn models are women, and since making model information public was the biggest objection to the 2257 requirement, it makes sense that the court would have written it the way they did.

—-

By the way, I’m not sure where you come down on the question of whether pornography should be legal or illegal, but even though the law referred to policing child pornography the public record-keeping requirement was clearly intended to a) make model’s personal information publicly accessible and b) therefore intimidate them so that they wouldn’t accept the work.

Worse, it tended not to inconvenience mainstream industrial pornographers, almost all of whom routinely require that any image sets they purchase have photos of all models holding legible, legal ID proving that they were of legal age. Nor did the law tend to put models for those pornographers at risk because such large enterprises could afford normal corporate amenities like reception areas, secured files maintained in staffed areas, and so on. And therefore the requirements slightly increased the cost and hassle of, say, the heavy BDSM porn company Kink.com.

It did, however, really, really inconvenience small and, especially, self-publishing models such as myself (age 52) or Annie Sprinkle (age 53) or anyone else with a home office since we’d break the law for posting photos of ourselves without also posting our legal names, addresses, and other identifying information. All with the intention, mind you, of making it slightly easier for law-enforcement officials to make sure that neither I nor Sprinkle were under age.

The point being that the rule was clearly designed to greatly intimidate not those we commonly see as porn producers but the models, actresses, and actors they depict…. while only incrementally conveniencing legitimate law-enforcement. To the extent that intimidation (and as someone who posts my own self-photography I certainly felt it) was the intent then the court did the right thing in overturning it. (Even if one does object to pornography one should also object to efforts designed to scare not the people who publish it but those who appear in it.)

User login