Jump to content

Pornhub Deletes 10 MILLION Videos!


Lucky
This topic is 1219 days old and is no longer open for new replies.  Replies are automatically disabled after two years of inactivity.  Please create a new topic instead of posting here.  

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 51
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

I had a couple of hours today to review the damage on Pornhub and while initially I thought it was a total wipeout or almost, I found that while some of my favourite videos are gone from my Playlist, I added a few new ones that I hadn’t seen before, sometimes with new actors and some I recognized.

 

My tentative conclusion is that I will adjust and hopefully new content will be added, assuming of course that the whole enterprise doesn’t go down in flames.

 

My local small town newspaper just folded yesterday, after publishing for 180 years, so all is not good on the media front. On the upside, I was pleased that I got a mention by name in an article last week in their final edition, as it turned out. My name will go down in history LOL:)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

on a related note, I heard the 2020 Pornhub Awards are tonight - link here - I wonder if there are awards for most deleted videos by category or if there is some acknowledgment from the creators of the platform about this massive deletion of videos ?‍♂️

 

looks like they did address it before the opening ceremony for the awards.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

New Pornhub policy:

 

Videos that are not uploaded by official content partners or members of Pornhub’s model program will be removed pending verification and review beginning in 2021. “As part of our policy to ban unverified uploaders, we have now also suspended all previously uploaded content that was not created by content partners or members of the Model Program,” Pornhub said in an announcement. “This means every piece of Pornhub content is from verified uploaders, a requirement that platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and Twitter have yet to institute.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

New Pornhub policy:

 

Videos that are not uploaded by official content partners or members of Pornhub’s model program will be removed pending verification and review beginning in 2021. “As part of our policy to ban unverified uploaders, we have now also suspended all previously uploaded content that was not created by content partners or members of the Model Program,” Pornhub said in an announcement. “This means every piece of Pornhub content is from verified uploaders, a requirement that platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and Twitter have yet to institute.”

This suggests some of the videos may come back on my playlist. I guess I will just have to wait it out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

New Pornhub policy:

 

Videos that are not uploaded by official content partners or members of Pornhub’s model program will be removed pending verification and review beginning in 2021. “As part of our policy to ban unverified uploaders, we have now also suspended all previously uploaded content that was not created by content partners or members of the Model Program,” Pornhub said in an announcement. “This means every piece of Pornhub content is from verified uploaders, a requirement that platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat, and Twitter have yet to institute.”

 

Great so it will be mostly watered down preview clips only! Horrible.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On a related thread about who will inherit your porn collection, a gay porn archive, potentially for exclusive use by M4M forum members (that can be hosted in a separate server), is no longer sounding like such a bad idea. Lol. And no, @Luv2play, I do not think your statement below jinxed Pornhub a few weeks later ??.

 

Now I subscribe to pornhub and get all the stuff I want at the click of the mouse.

If someone wants to take this on, perhaps there could be an M4M Library, where members can donate or dispose of their collection for other forum members to peruse and check out in the future.

Wish we had a gay porn archive that collected and curated this stuff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pornhub states that two organizations are going after them: National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE - formerly known as "Morality in Media), and Exodus Cry ( a strange anti-porn Evangelical operation with ties to Trump and the Christian right per The Daily Beast - see (https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-exodus-cry-the-shady-evangelical-group-with-trump-ties-waging-war-on-pornhub).

 

But don't think these two groups will be satisfied with shutting down Pornhub. NCOSE says they will be going after the "Dirty Dozen":

  • Amazon, for distributing pornography and “sadomasochistic paraphernalia,” exposing children to sexually explicit images and content “with incest, rape, and child themes” with the Kindle e-reader, and for Amazon Web Services hosting pornography and prostitution websites
  • American Library Association, for encouraging public-access computers to stay unfiltered, “thereby allowing patrons, including children, to view illegal, obscene material”
  • Amnesty International, for supporting the decriminalization of prostitution, which “normalizes sexual violence and exploitation”
  • Backpage.com, for facilitating prostitution advertisements
  • Cosmopolitan Magazine, for hyper-sexualizing fashion and glamorizing “public, anal, and violent sex”
  • The Department of Justice, for “refusing to enforce existing federal obscenity laws against pornography”
  • HBO, for “providing increasingly graphic depictions of pornography and sexual violence as entertainment,” most notably in Game of Thrones
  • “Sexpresso” Coffee Shops, for having “pornified working conditions” that “result in frequent sexual harassment of staff, have been associated with indecent exposure and prostitution, and are an affront to public decency and health”
  • Snapchat, for being “frequently used for sexting and the sharing of child sexual abuse images”
  • Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide, for initially selling hardcore pornography via on-demand TV offerings, but then—here’s a twist—the hotel chain was removed from the list after eliminating porn from all of its hotels
  • Verizon, for profiting from “sexual exploitation each year through pay-per-view movies and dedicated pornography channels on its Fios TV services, as an Internet service provider, and wireless carrier”
  • YouTube, for being “a place where pornography and other explicit content is easily accessed and often promoted”

I encourage everyone who is concerned about this new Evangelical censorship to read The Daily Beast article referenced above.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pornhub states that two organizations are going after them: National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE - formerly known as "Morality in Media), and Exodus Cry ( a strange anti-porn Evangelical operation with ties to Trump and the Christian right per The Daily Beast - see (https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-exodus-cry-the-shady-evangelical-group-with-trump-ties-waging-war-on-pornhub).

 

But don't think these two groups will be satisfied with shutting down Pornhub. NCOSE says they will be going after the "Dirty Dozen":

  • Amazon, for distributing pornography and “sadomasochistic paraphernalia,” exposing children to sexually explicit images and content “with incest, rape, and child themes” with the Kindle e-reader, and for Amazon Web Services hosting pornography and prostitution websites
  • American Library Association, for encouraging public-access computers to stay unfiltered, “thereby allowing patrons, including children, to view illegal, obscene material”
  • Amnesty International, for supporting the decriminalization of prostitution, which “normalizes sexual violence and exploitation”
  • Backpage.com, for facilitating prostitution advertisements
  • Cosmopolitan Magazine, for hyper-sexualizing fashion and glamorizing “public, anal, and violent sex”
  • The Department of Justice, for “refusing to enforce existing federal obscenity laws against pornography”
  • HBO, for “providing increasingly graphic depictions of pornography and sexual violence as entertainment,” most notably in Game of Thrones
  • “Sexpresso” Coffee Shops, for having “pornified working conditions” that “result in frequent sexual harassment of staff, have been associated with indecent exposure and prostitution, and are an affront to public decency and health”
  • Snapchat, for being “frequently used for sexting and the sharing of child sexual abuse images”
  • Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide, for initially selling hardcore pornography via on-demand TV offerings, but then—here’s a twist—the hotel chain was removed from the list after eliminating porn from all of its hotels
  • Verizon, for profiting from “sexual exploitation each year through pay-per-view movies and dedicated pornography channels on its Fios TV services, as an Internet service provider, and wireless carrier”
  • YouTube, for being “a place where pornography and other explicit content is easily accessed and often promoted”

I encourage everyone who is concerned about this new Evangelical censorship to read The Daily Beast article referenced above.

 

 

I suspect the *Wood decision was also business related. Much easier to just fire up your laptop and avoid a questionable charge showing up on your bill. Usage was likely way down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

SHIT IS RIDICULOUS!!!! ....just went to my bookmarks after a hot session with a client to get off a third time...now the title was "MDMA PMV"...but besides the title was just a hot porn music video compilation to edm/rave type music over an hour long...literally nothing even remotly suggestive of anything illegal for the length of the entire video...my free time now is going to be consumed with downloading all my other bookmarks before they are censored ugh

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Having calmed down some from my earlier rant, Pornhub's actions were triggered by the NYT editorial and the subsequent actions of major credit card companies suspending use of their cards on the Pornhub site. Pornhub was also facing vocal public criticism and a threat of government intervention and oversight. Their response was a survival tactic in an increasingly hostile environment.

 

I get all that, and hope that what we have seen is only their initial reaction, using a hatchet instead of a scalpel to excise their demons.

 

The ultra-right nut-job agenda of NCOSE, et al, notwithstanding, Pornhub -and others, too, most likely- were too long remiss in monitoring content available on their platforms. Content produced by actual kidnap, rape, and torture in a basement or warehouse which is then uploaded and made available worldwide and without review, is clearly repugnant, and should have been removed. Pirated content, acquired in violation of copyright protections, were likewise illicit and subject to removal. Content posted by known and verified sources is what we're left with after the purge. The fact that only about 3 million videos from a previous population of around 13 million is itself good evidence of the magnitude of the problem and the extent of previous neglect.

 

I can only hope that Pornhub and other such sites will review their suspended content with an eye toward categorization into good, suspect, and bad buckets, then move on to a restoration phase of their content so that the decent among us can get back to enjoying our indecent pleasures.

 

Christopher Hitchens told a story of an organized party of moral London women commending Samuel Johnson for not including immoral and perverse words in his new dictionary. Johnson, said Hitchens, commended the women for their industry in looking them up.

 

And the beat goes on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On a related thread about who will inherit your porn collection, a gay porn archive, potentially for exclusive use by M4M forum members (that can be hosted in a separate server), is no longer sounding like such a bad idea. Lol. And no, @Luv2play, I do not think your statement below jinxed Pornhub a few weeks later ??.

 

I was thinking the same thing: this is a very timely idea!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Once upon a midnight dreary,

while i pron surfed, weak and weary,

over many a strange and spurious site of 'hot xxx galore'.

While i clicked my fav'rite bookmark,

suddenly there came a warning,

and my heart was filled with mourning,

mourning for my dear amour,

" 'Tis not possible!", I muttered,

"Give me back my free hardcore!".....

quoth the server, 404.

source

Link to comment
Share on other sites

DEAR ABBY: A friend of mine has recently discovered that her husband of 40-plus years has been hiding a decades-long porn addiction. The discovery has caused a problem in their marriage. They have had counseling.

 

He says he wants to save their marriage and has vowed to give up the porn. I was told he told his wife that if she decides to divorce him, he will tell the entire family and their children that SHE was the one addicted to porn, and it is the reason he's divorcing her. My question is, what kind of person would treat his wife this way and think this is an appropriate way to save the marriage? -- TWISTED IN KENTUCKY

 

DEAR TWISTED: Unfortunately, the husband has a problem greater than his porn addiction. It's his lack of character and honesty. His threat is not only inappropriate, but also a valid reason to end the marriage.

 

P.S. I can't imagine why her family would buy that lie. NOSY BITCH: Give the guy a break. He just suffered a devastating trauma. Haven't you heard about Pornhub?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...