What People Get Wrong About Ethical Porn, According to Performers

What People Get Wrong About Ethical Porn, According to Performers

What we talk about when we talk about “ethical porn,” and if we should even be talking about it at all

This is the third and final installment in a three-part series on ethical porn consumption in the aftermath of last month’s Pornhub controversy. Previously, industry professionals shared their insight on the best ways to pay for porn, and how to tell if the porn you’re watching was ethically produced. In this final segment, performers from various industry backgrounds address the biggest misconceptions surrounding society’s understanding of ethical pornincluding who should be having those conversations in the first place and whether or not so-called “ethics” is something people outside of the industry have a right to police.

InsideHook: What do you see as the most common, or biggest, misunderstandings about what it means to be an ethical porn consumer? What do you want to make sure viewers understand?  

Kate KennedyI don’t think most people think much about ethical porn consumption to begin with. Even the staunchest social justice warriors I know look at Pornhub for free. It just doesn’t cross their minds to think about the implications of what porn they’re getting and how. 

[People also get hung up on the idea that porn is only ethical if performers feel great about every piece of content they’ve made.] Every performer in every realm of entertainment has at least one performance they didn’t feel great about. Porn performers sometimes take scenes they might not otherwise be super horny for personally because, at the end of the day, this is a job. Everybody goes to work on days when they’d rather do something else. Within the context of capitalism, equating ethics with willingness to perform a given task for an agreed upon rate is nonsense. If you want to see me, as a person, getting off exactly how I please, then enjoy some footage of me emotionlessly masturbating with my Hitachi with the occasional groan. 

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How You Should Be Watching Porn, According to Performers

How You Should Be Watching Porn, According to Performers - Jamie jett discusses ethical porn consumption

LA Direct star Jamie Jett takes part in a star-studded roundtable conversation on everything from tube sites to exploitation to where to find “the farmer’s market” of porn

This is the first installment in a three-part series on ethical porn consumption by writer Mark Hay. In this segment, industry professionals share their insight on the best ways to pay for porn. 

Last month, a New York Times article accused adult streaming titan Pornhub of profiting off of videos of child sexual exploitation and assaults. That led Mastercard and Visa to cut off payment processing for the site. That in turn prompted the tube site to institute new rules limiting uploads to verified users — and to purge the vast majority of its videos, uploaded by anonymous users. 

The ongoing saga has been both dramatic and thorny. It raised legitimate concerns about the challenges of judging whether content was made or shared legally and considerately without being able to trace its provenance. However, Pornhub arguably faced disproportionate scrutiny just because it is a sexual platform. Major social media sites pose similar challenges — and self-report much more user-uploaded child sexual exploitation and non-consensual material on their sites than the Times identified on Pornhub. But regardless of its complexities, this mess has gotten people talking about how to watch porn ethically. After all, Pornhub is the default adult site for many. It is mainstream and massive. If it is indeed problematic, which sites are guilt free?  

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