Malaysian Feminist Charged With ‘Obscenity’ Over Tweet Depicting Vulvas

KUALA LUMPUR — A Malaysian feminist and activist was charged today with “knowingly making and initiating the transmission of obscene communication, namely pornographic pictures, with the intention of offending others” after she uploaded a collage of vulvas on her Twitter account.

Amira Nur Afiqah Agus Salim, 25, pleaded not guilty at the Sessions Court in Kuala Lumpur.

She faces a maximum fine of RM 50,000 ($11,500 USD), imprisonment for up to one year or both. She was released on bail and has a new hearing next month.

The case highlights the concerns of digital rights advocates worldwide, especially in the U.S. and Europe, about what could happen if courts begin enforcing harsh obscenity statutes against any kind of sexual expression, even for educational, activist or editorial purposes.

According to Yahoo News Malaysia, the vulva collage, posted in September 2021, was meant as a commentary regarding an ad campaign by Libresse, a popular feminine care brand in Malaysia. Libresse had launched a line of sanitary products featuring “images of vulvas interpreted into flower motifs on the packaging.”

A Feminine Hygiene Ad Campaign Riles Up the Censors

The V-Kebaya ad copy read, “At Libresse, we aim to create a world where women can live the life they want by breaking ‘V-Zone’ taboos, and that begins with knowing and loving the V-Zone. Let’s normalize V-Zone taboos in an open, positive and respectful manner by encouraging women to embrace this beautiful part of their body, together.”

Salim tweeted in response, “Libresse uses flower as representation of vulva instead of this?” and attached the collage, which the authorities consider a violation of the country’s strict obscenity laws.

Religious organizations have also successfully objected to even the stylized, flower-like design that the tweet criticized. The Yadim Muslim Women’s Council called the representation a “misuse” of an image of women’s private parts and “a dishonor to women.”

Another group, Wardah Media, accused Libresse of “promoting porn,” asking Malaysians to “imagine what a man’s imagination would be when he sees the motif on the flowers.”

The Libresse campaign was eventually cancelled due to the uproar.

U.S. Arcades Releases Research Stats for Q2

VAN NUYS, Calif. — US Arcades has released research statistics on the top trends from its locations for April through June.

“The first time we put out stats, the feedback from store owners was tremendous. They loved the information” said VP Lewis Adams. “This time, we added a couple of more categories.”

Top trends are as follows:

Most Popular Category
Gay

Most Popular Studio (Gay)
Falcon Studios

Most Popular Studio (Straight)
Pure Taboo

State With the Busiest Arcades
California

State With the Busiest Arcades: Runner-Up
Rhode Island

State With the Most Webcam Viewership
Rhode Island

State With the Most Webcam Viewership: Runner-Up
West Virginia

Most Popular Genre (Gay)
Bareback

Most Popular Genre (Straight)
Group/Orgy

Most Popular Genre (Trans)
Fetish

Most Popular Genre (Bisexual)
Threesome

Most-Watched Movie (Gay)
“Shower Bait”

Most-Watched Movie (Gay): Runner-Up
“Massage Bait 4”

Most-Watched Movie (Straight)
“A Mother’s Choice”

Most-Watched Movie (Straight): Runner-Up
“After Dark”

Most-Watched Movie (Trans)
“All My Mother’s Love”

Most-Watched Movie (Trans): Runner-Up
“Aubrey Kate Plus 8”

Most-Watched Movie (Bisexual)
“Coming Out Bi 8”

Most-Watched Movie (Bisexual): Runner-Up
“Wanna Fuck My Wife, Gotta Fuck Me Too 7”

The longest continuous arcade session occurred in Portland, Oregon, with a total of 8:41:36, followed by Memphis, Tennessee with 7:37:24 and Meriden, Connecticut at 7:07:04.

“I am a believer that the more information you have, the better you will make decisions,” Adams noted. “Better decisions lead to creating a better customer experience, which inevitably leads to more sales.”

Follow US Arcades and PeepMaps on Twitter.

BDSM Playspace Sanctuary LAX to Host Fundraiser Party in Los Angeles Friday

LOS ANGELES — BDSM playspace and community center Sanctuary LAX will host a fundraiser party Friday night, starting at 8 p.m. (PDT), to fund its pending move to a new location.

“The party is a kinky take on the classic bachelor auction,” a rep said. “Volunteers fill out questionnaires about kinks and interests and put themselves up for auction for the night. Everyone attending gets ‘play money’ to bid on volunteers for the auction. Winning bidders get to play with their human prizes for the night. Everyone is encouraged to participate, but participation is not required to attend the party. Guests who prefer to attend and simply play with a partner, or just watch, are welcome. There is no sex or penetration at this party. Everything is negotiated, consensual and for fun.”

Sanctuary Studios LAX is “well-known as one of the biggest BDSM spaces in Southern California, and has held up well, even through the COVID pandemic,” the rep noted. “As the name suggests, Sanctuary has served the LGBTQ+, BDSM and leather communities as a safe space for over 20 years. This location has hosted many parties, movie shoots, concerts, classes and other events. It has been no secret that changes in the real estate and mortgage market have prompted Sanctuary LAX to move; the time to change locations has come.”

Founder and owner Mistress Cyan noted Sanctuary LAX will soon reopen in its new location.

“But this is our last month here,” Cyan added. “That is why we have decided to make this event a fundraiser to help with the cost of relocation.”

Events will continue to be hosted at the current location until Sunday, July 24.

The rep noted Friday’s party is “a fully vaccinated event.” Attendees must show ID and proof of vaccination at the door. Click here for tickets and additional details and follow Sanctuary LAX on Twitter.

Those who wish to assist with the move can email info@sanctuarylax.com.

Related:  

Twitter Files Lawsuit Challenging Indian Government’s Censorship Attempt

NEW DELHI — Twitter has sued the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi over an escalating attempt to control content available on open platforms in India.

Twitter’s suit, The New York Times reported, was filed in the Karnataka High Court in Bangalore and “challenges a recent order from the Indian government for the company to remove content and block dozens of accounts. Twitter complied with the order, which had a Monday deadline, but then sought judicial relief. A date has not been set for a judge to review Twitter’s suit.”

As XBIZ reported, in early June, India’s increasingly powerful Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology published proposed new rules that would give the government sweeping control over social media platforms like Twitter and Reddit as well as digital news publications and streaming sites, including the power to punish them for “porn” and “obscenity.”

Led by Modi, a religious nationalist with authoritarian tendencies who came to power in 2014, the government “wants to arm itself with powers to overturn decisions of top social media companies such as Twitter, Facebook, Google and Instagram to suspend, block or remove accounts of users over various violations, and is also seeking new levers that will force the internet majors to take down content when directed on a user’s complaint,” India’s leading newspaper, The Times of India, reported last month.

India is currently in the middle of a media-driven “porn panic” centered around a case involving Bollywood celebrities who invested in an X-rated online startup.

According to The New York Times, the lawsuit announced today “is the first legal challenge that the company has issued to push back against laws passed in 2021 that extended the Indian government’s censorship powers. The rules gave the government oversight of Twitter and other social media companies, allowing the authorities to demand that posts or accounts critical of them be hidden from Indian users.”

Executives at the companies, the Times added, “can face criminal penalties if they do not comply with the demands.”

The nation’s 2021 IT Rules ask social media platforms “to inform their users that they should not post content which is ‘ethnically objectionable,’ ‘harmful to child,’ ‘insulting another nation’ or is ‘misleading in nature.’”

Main Image: India’s Minister of Electronics and Information Technology Rajeev Chandrasekhar and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who appointed him

Wall Street Journal Purports to Explain ‘Porn and the Teen Brain’

NEW YORK — The Wall Street Journal published a column over the weekend purporting to reveal “what porn does to teen brains.”

The article, by the Rupert Murdoch-owned newspaper’s “Family & Tech” reporter Julie Jargon, attempts to stake out a middle ground between “porn addiction” panic pieces that frequently appear in mainstream publications, and a more balanced approach that explains some of the actual science behind compulsive behavior in general.

The title of Jargon’s article, “What Porn Does to Teen Brains and How to Keep It Off Their Devices,” appears to reference debunked pseudoscience. While she stops short of endorsing such controversial views, Jargon does quote a 2014 study by Cambridge University researcher Valerie Voon that concluded, “When shown pornographic images, the men’s brain activity mirrored that of drug addicts who were shown photos of drugs.”

She seems to buy into the “addiction” argument, writing, “Imagine a 24-hour candy store where kids could gorge on sugar, without parents there to stop them … what can such readily available porn do to kids’ brains?” and claiming that research shows “younger people’s brains are more wired for pleasure than adults, with higher spikes of the feel-good neurotransmitter dopamine released in anticipation of enjoyable activities … Because of this, many researchers believe young people are more vulnerable to compulsive porn use, which can lead to unrealistic views on sex.”

However, Jargon veers away from the standard “porn addiction” panic narrative by clearly stating that “psychologists say it’s important to talk to kids about porn without making them feel ashamed. Some exposure to it can be a natural part of development, they say, and porn shouldn’t be shunned in a way that creates a taboo. They do, however, recommend using tech guardrails to reduce the chances that younger kids see things they’re not ready to see.”

Jargon even quotes researcher Nicole Prause, who persuasively argues that “if we shut down conversations and say, ‘Don’t watch porn, and if you do, it’s an addiction and it will rot your brain,’ that’s terrifying … It’s some of the messaging that’s making it worse.” 

A Study Hijacked by the ‘Fight Porn Addiction’ Industry

Jargon omitted key elements of the 2014 Valerie Voon study, which clearly illustrate its misuse by the lucrative “fight porn addiction” industry.

“The upshot of Voon’s study is that there could be a shared brain network associated with many compulsive disorders, regardless of whether they involve consumption of drugs or more ‘natural’ rewards such as sex,” The Guardian’s science reporter Chris Chambers pointed out in 2014.

“Do these results mean that compulsive viewing of pornography is an addiction like dependence on cocaine or heroine?” Chambers asked. “No, and Voon is keen to emphasize this point in both the published article and the press release issued by Cambridge University. Addiction can’t be diagnosed with a brain scan.”

Noting that mainstream psychiatry still doesn’t know enough about compulsive sexual behavior to label it as an addiction, Chambers praised Voon for producing a nuanced report that explicitly discourages the kind of generalizations and fault causation regularly trotted out by anti-porn crusaders.

“Do the results tell us that online pornography itself is addictive like a drug?” Chambers asked. “No. Do they say anything at all about the non-compulsive viewing of pornography? No. Do they allow us to conclude that pornography ‘damages’ or ‘changes’ the brain in any harmful way? No.”

We cannot draw strong conclusions, he noted, from a single study that tested only a small number of men.

Nevertheless, another Rupert Murdoch publication, the New York Post, yesterday rehashed Jargon’s Wall Street Journal piece — but crucially re-inserted the kind of “porn addiction” propaganda that the financial daily shied away from.

“Children and teenagers who are exposed to pornography online are more likely to develop an addiction to smut than adults, according to researchers,” wrote the New York Post’s Ariel Zilber.

DPDiva Lands 1st DP From Brenna McKenna

LOS ANGELES — Maestro Claudio’s recently launched DPDiva has landed the first DP from Brenna McKenna.

“Dressed in pink lingerie, Brenna expresses her excitement for her first DP scene,” a rep said. “She quickly gets to learn what’s in store as Michael Stefano and Ramon Nomar give her oral pleasure, and Brenna reciprocates. Brenna takes turns with Michael and Ramon, riding them as they take turns with her holes.”

McKenna described the scene as “so special and authentic.”

“I got to do my first DP ever, and catch it all on film,” she said. “To be able to share such a vulnerable moment with the fans is crazy. They’re getting the real deal with me. Ramon and Michael took care of my holes and gave me the best first time ever.”

“And it’s also amazing working with the Maestro again, because learning from him and creating with him is so fun,” she added. “We had this moment coming and I really enjoyed making it with the crew at DPDiva.”

A trailer and additional details for the scene can be found here.

Follow Brenna McKenna and DPDiva on Twitter.

Related:  

Evil Angel to Debut 9 Hardcore Scenes, 5 New Releases This Week

LOS ANGELES — Evil Angel will premiere four new hardcore titles this week as well as nine new member-exclusive scenes.

Dropping Wednesday is “Anal Angels 5” featuring “a glamorous cast and gorgeously lensed nastiness,” noted a rep, from director Jonni Darkko, and “Anal Elegance 4,” where director David Perry “dresses starlets in stylish finery and then strips away the genteel exterior, revealing the lust inside” as well as the latest “crazy fun” from Rocco Siffredi in “Rocco’s Sex Clinic: Treatment 2.”

Additionally, director Aiden Starr offers “Bisexual Volume 2” with “four freaky threesomes featuring double-penetration as voracious women play with pairs of bi guys.”

Arriving Thursday is “Fetish Adventurer” on the Evil Angel Red label from directors Pat Myne, Chris Streams and Aiden Riley. Pairings include Michael Stefano taking on Skylar Snow, Tiffany Watson and Rebel Rhyder, respectively, as well as a threesome with Stefano, Adira Allure and Joanna Angel.

Set to debut online Wednesday is Korra Del Rio hooking up with cis starlet Destiny Cruz for director Starr and PansexualX, and Yasmin de Castro seducing a musclebound stud from director JD’s “Transgressive 9.”

Dropping Thursday and Saturday are scenes from Siffredi’s “The Spanish Stallion: Shalina Devine’s True Power of Sex,” while three scenes from “Anal Elegance 4” and one tryst from “Anal Angels 4” will debut.

Content creator Scarlet Chase will premiere an “extremely wet” scene, titled “Squirting and Cream Enemas,” on Sunday, July 10.

Visit EvilAngel.com for additional information and follow the studio on Twitter.

For domestic sales, contact Rick Porras at rick@evilangel.com; for international sales and licensing, email Alexandra Kelley at alex@evilangel.com.

Related:  

Wicked Sensual Care to Exhibit at ANME Expo Next Week

LOS ANGELES — Wicked Sensual Care (WSC) will exhibit at the in-person ANME running from July 11-13 in Burbank, California.

WSC reps will staff booth Nos. 114-115 and will feature “the full range of the manufacturer’s products, including its award-winning ‘simply’ line, a rep said. “With no propylene glycol or glycerin, all ‘simply’ products feature clean ingredients, including the brand’s proprietary olive leaf extract, and are 100% vegan, cruelty-free and paraben-free. New for 2022, the booth will showcase three exciting additions to the ‘simply’ line — delicious and refreshing flavors designed to delight consumers, drive sales and deliver customer satisfaction.”

The entire WSC sales and marketing team will be available at ANME each day to “answer questions and give buyers the tools, support and brand info needed to grow their WSC business,” added the rep.

Additionally, the 2022 StorErotica Awards ceremony, hosted by Sunny Rodgers, will be held during ANME on July 12, where WSC has been nominated for Sexual Enhancement Company of the Year and Lubricant Manufacturer of the Year.

“We’re excited to be exhibiting at ANME in person once again,” said WSC marketing director Cassie Pendleton. “It’s the ideal forum to meet with new and existing customers to strategize effective ways to grow business. We are thrilled to get the opportunity to showcase our products and debut our latest creations.”

Find additional information about ANME online here.

Visit WSC’s B2B portal and follow the company on Twitter; to schedule an appointment during ANME, contact sales@wickedsensualcare.com.

Related:  

Ukrainian Activists Bypass Russian Censorship Through Porn Ads

MOSCOW — Ukrainian activists have reportedly started buying ad space on adult sites accessible in Russia to bypass Vladimir Putin’s ramped-up censorship efforts and access accurate information about the invasion.

Adult sites are “perfect” conduits for disseminating information to counteract state propaganda, wrote Jemimah Steinfeld, editor-in-chief of “Index on Censorship,” in an opinion piece published by The Guardian over the weekend.

Steinfeld cited Ukrainian digital marketing expert Anastasiya Baydachenko as saying that adult sites offer “huge audiences” whose operators prioritize profits over politics and are therefore quite willing to take her money.

To counter Putin’s aggressive policing of Russia’s internet, Steinfeld explained, Baydachenko came up with a simple plan: “Buy ad space across websites in Russia and Belarus and use them to link to independent news on the war in Ukraine. The adverts could be direct, or they could be oblique, even titillating, to conceal their true nature and evade the censors.”

Baydachenko first tried buying ads on Google, YouTube, Facebook and other high-traffic sites, but Russia’s “fake news” law undermined that effort — whereas the ads on adult sites, Baydachenko said, have been able to reached hundreds of millions of internet users in Russia.

Last December, several months before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Putin increased pressure on open platforms through state regulators and the courts.

As XBIZ reported, Google was fined nearly $100 million for “systematic failure to remove banned content,” a term that encompasses any political and social messaging of which the Moscow government does not approve, along with almost all adult material online.

The December 2021 fine followed a series of reports by Russia’s Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media. The Washington Post reported that it was the largest such penalty yet in Russia, calling such fines Moscow’s attempts to “rein in Western tech giants.” 

Meta — the company formerly known as Facebook, which also owns Instagram — was fined approximately $27 million for the same supposed crime against mandatory moderation.

“The fine represents an escalation in Russia’s push to pressure foreign tech firms to comply with its increasingly strict rules on what it deems illegal content,” wrote the Washington Post’s Isabelle Khurshudyan.

Angela White Answers Viewer Questions on Australian TV

Angela White Answers Viewer Questions on Australian TV

SYDNEY, Australia — Angela White was featured on a recent installment of the popular Australian TV series “You Can’t Ask That,” as part of a panel of porn stars answering questions from viewers.

The program, which features candid talking-head interviews before a plain background — a popular format optimized for maximum social media shareability — included White and fellow Australian performers Arianna Kody, Nikki Stern, Woody Fox and Robbie Cox.

White described her first foray into the industry as “a little scary because it was my first time overseas. I was a curious teen and I was always fascinated by porn.”

Since then, things have changed a lot for her. “Now when I’m fucking on camera it’s much easier than an interview like this,” she said.

White shared other insights about the realities of being a popular adult performer. Among them: “It is difficult to find a partner that you truly connect with.”

White stood by her career choice, however, noting that “They say do something you love and you’ll never work a day in your life.”

To watch Angela White on “You Can’t Ask That,” visit ABC (Australia) or view a teaser on YouTube.

Related: