Internet Porn: Sex No Longer Sells In World Of Webcams And Piracy

  • May 31, 2011

If sex sells, there’s one place it isn’t selling: online.
Once the pioneers of the e-commerce movement and advancing online technology during the early stages of the Internet, the porn industry is now in the same boat as the music industry, demonetized by a proliferation of free porn sites and struggling to find a way to profit in a world where money’s for nothing and the clicks are free.
"The average consumer thinks porn is free and that has really devalued our product," Allison Vivas, chief executive of Arizona-based adult entertainment company Pink Visual, said during a panel discussion at the Mesh technology conference in Toronto on Wednesday. "It’s hard to sell a product most people think they shouldn?t have to buy anymore."
It’s an uncomfortable position for the adult industry to be in since historically it’s been in the forefront of embracing and shaping technology and the Web as we know it today.
Previously, premium cable and satellite channels were the only means for users to see adult content, with magazines like "Juggs" still nestled between the mattresses and box springs of pimpley faced teen boys.
But once the adult trade hustled its way online, it found a way to grow exponentially. As the Internet grew, so did the number of adult-oriented websites, which began using the same subscription model used by television, allowing users to pay a fixed fee and have access to instant content. As these sites multiplied, competition drove better content to attract and maintain users and that better content came in the form of online video and streaming technology pushed by the porn industry.
With this new technology grew a demand for more bandwidth, better interfaces and high-quality cameras, including the webcam, a porn-inspired tool that revolutionized amateur broadcasting and video conferencing.
"What we know about the Internet today is because of porn," panelist Patchen Barss and author of The Erotic Engine told The Huffington Post. "Without streaming video, Youtube wouldn’t look like what it does today; CNN.com wouldn’t look like what it does today. Without ecommerce, there’d be no Ebay, no Amazon.com.
"A tremendous amount of Google’s economic platform derives from the porn industry. All of the facets, even social networking, at least intellectually, started with the early use of chatrooms that were dominated by the porn industry. Everything we know about the modern Internet is something that has strong roots in pornography."
But like all relationships, there’s been a rocky period and the porn industry’s love affair with the Internet hit that period with the web2.0 boom. User generated content meant, to some extent, that everyone and their moms were creating porn. Well, not quite everyone, but there appeared to be a proliferation of amateur videos and photos floating around cyberspace.
User submitted content could be uploaded and served for free on sites such as Youtube, which in turn inspired adult sites like Youporn, Pornotube and Redtube, forever changing the business model. Users could see all content, all the time. No subscriptions, no fees, just user-submitted content.
"The Youtubes and Redtubes are taking commerce away from entertainment industries. It’s doubly problematic for the adult industry because (unlike the music industry) they don?t have a live performance (such as a concert) they can fall back on," said panelist Peter Nowak, author of the best-selling book Sex, Bombs and Burgers.
?The culture of free is not something you can turn back,? said Barss. "It’s now so incredibly easy to get pirated stuff."
And that’s been one of the porn industry’s biggest online downfalls: piracy. The industry has struggled with copyrighting its content and has so often been on the other end of lawsuits that it hasn’t been able to combat infringement like Napster has.
"Hollywood had years of experience with copyright and has all this strength regarding piracy. Most porn industry companies don?t have lawyers on staff so they weren?t copyrighting their videos," said Vivas. "In the music industry people feel like they would now pay for some things.
But the adult industry hasn?t put consequences on (foregoing) the buying experience and we?ve seen companies being put out of businesses (because of this)."
But like all good make-ups, the porn industry has learned to compromise, realizing that they likely can’t force users to pay for something that’s been free for too long. So they’re again jumping on the tech wagon and creating new apps for mobile devices and learning how to capitalize off the Internet in other ways. Vivas said Pink Visual, for instance, has been developing porn apps for the iPhone.
"The day the iPhone came out, (our app went) live, and we had thousands of visitors in the first day," she said. "Whenever new technology comes out people will always think of how they can put porn on it."
The adult industry is also looking to new technologies such as 3D tablets and Microsoft Corp.?s Kinect interactive gaming system as possible platforms for new kinds of content. Companies like Pink Visual are reviewing how advertising on ‘tube sites has enabled those sites to profit by offering free porn while drawing users to other pay-for-usage experiences. They are also looking at providing their users with live shows and creating customized, unique experience for a fee.
And the adult industry is coupling that type personalized concept with a heavy push on social networking sites such as Twitter, so users feel like they are having a truly intimate experience with the women or men they follow on porn sites to generate more traffic and brand loyalty.
Nowak said one of the reasons the adult industry always jumps on new technology early is because governments are often slow to regulate new technologies.
"So that?s why a lot of porn industries have gone there. And since we?ve have reached a peak where distribution of porn has become ubiquitous, we?re at this inflection point where the industry may lose its edge unless things change and (the porn industry is) again reinvented," he said.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/05…_n_867640.html
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Poll: Adult Industry Split Over Content Piracy Action

  • May 14, 2011

More adult entertainment professionals would prefer to call in the lawyers to fight rampant content piracy rather than do nothing about it, according to the results of a new XBIZ Research poll.
The adult entertainment industry in the past few years has seen bottom lines sharply eroding because of illegal streamed content, leading to growing discontent over online thievery.
That discontent is so strong that one-third of those polled also feel that end-users should be held liable for poaching and sharing videos.
The results are based on opinions of members of XBIZ.net, the adult entertainment industry?s leading social network.
XBIZ asked community members, "Should legal action be taken against end-users involved in content piracy?"
XBIZ found that 33 percent of respondents said, "Yes, any and all end-users accessing pirated content." Another 38 percent said, "Yes, but only those who share and distribute pirated content. But 29 percent of those polled said, "No, legal action against end-users is ineffective."
Pirated adult content can be found everywhere over the Internet, particularly through BitTorrent networks and file-sharing lockers. In fact, some companies’ entire catalogs are available online.
"Piracy has affected our entire industry," Burning Angel’s Joanna Angel says, "but in our case we are a small company, and we would have been a bigger company if piracy weren’t so rampant."
Piracy extends well past BitTorrent networks and file-sharing lockers. Some tube site operators, too, poach and republish adult content.
Being clubbed so hard by piracy, adult companies are fighting back with litigation, bundling defendants in large numbers, and going directly after tube site owners and file-sharing locker operators with multimillion-dollar suits.
Adult companies Corbin Fisher, VCX Inc., Grooby Productions, Titan Media, Lightspeed Media, BlazingBucks, Elegant Angel, West Coast Productions and Axel Braun Productions have been the most prolific in filing porn BitTorrent claims.
And Private Media Group and Pink Visual have taken the strongest legal approaches against tube sites posting content online illegally.
http://www.xbiz.com/news/133911
Read more at: gfy.com

Free6 owners sentenced to life in the Philippines FUCK FUCK FUCK!!!

  • May 14, 2011

Christ.. makes me wanna throw up. Afaik two normal good guys that, unfortunately, got blinded by stupidity and greed.. God have mercy on them and lets hope the bribing system helps them "out"…

CAGAYAN DE ORO — Two Swedish nationals were sentenced to life imprisonment by a local court here on Tuesday for operating a cybersex den and employing minors to pose naked before foreign clients.
Judge Jeoffre W. Acebido of Misamis Oriental Regional Trial Court branch 41 found Swedish national Bo Stefan Sederholm, 31, and Emil Andreas Solemo, 35, guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of trafficking in persons.
Also meted with 20 years imprisonment for same offense were three Filipinos, namely: Andrea Galdones Romero, Arvy Pablo Baylon and Aminoding Lomangcolcob Rangaig.
The court fined Sederholm and Solemo P2 million each, while their Filipino cohorts were ordered to pay P1 million each.
In its 25-page decision, the court said, "It will not shirk from its duty to impose the most severe of penalties against anybody, be he a foreign national or a citizen of this country who tramples upon the dignity of a woman by taking advantage of her vulnerability."
The court added that the foreign nationals "should not abuse the hospitability and protection accorded to them during their temporary stay in the country by making it a haven for their criminal activities."
"Disrespect for Filipino women and violations of our laws deserve the strongest condemnations from this court," it added.
On April 23, 2009, police arrested the Swedish nationals and three Filipinos at a cybersex den located in a middle class subdivision along Kauswagan highway, where 17 minor models were found naked while video chatting with foreign clients.
One of the models told police that the Swedish nationals offered them P15,000 each in exchange for posing nude in front of the web camera.
Authorities recovered during the raid computers, web cameras, a satellite dish and a powerful cable antenna along with a whole gallery of sex toys.
Jose Justo Yap, National Bureau of Investigation regional director, said the two foreign nationals will be committed to Bureau of Corrections in Muntinlupa or to the Davao Penal Colony where they will serve their sentences. (Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro/Sunnex)
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Top ten Excuses Why a porn girls doesn’t show up for a shoot.

  • May 1, 2011

1. My grandmother died last night.
2. My grandfather died last night.
3. My mother died last night.
4. My father died last night.
5. My grandmother and grandfather died again last night.
6. My mother and father died last night.
7. My car broke down.
8. The Rental car got towed. Like they have a credit card that works!!
9. I had an accident and I am going home to get my id’s.
10. It s too hard to tell the truth so I will just pick a lie from here and tell you that.
Please add on and see who has the most creative one, when we decide which is the best I will give it to the next talent that gives me the "family emergency" excuse…lol
Read more at: gfy.com