Posts Tagged ‘in the news’

A victory for sexual freedom

For the past few days I’ve been watching the development of #ObscenityTrial, a landmark case in which Michael Peacock (AKA Sleazy Michael) was tried for distributing “obscene” DVDs showing gay fisting, watersports, CP and BDSM. Today the jury returned a unanimous verdict of not guilty on all counts. It’s been a fascinating case, particularly the live tweets from the courtroom by @ObscenityLawyer, @LexingtonDymock and @NichiHodgson.

Plus there’s been all those opportunities for fisting puns. I mean, without first hand experience of the acts depicted it was all quite a lot to take in, so we should give the jury a hand for knuckling down and returning a sensible judgement.

If you’ve not been following, here’s a quick roundup to bring you up to date.

Why opt-in filters for “adult content” are misguided and dangerous

Last week, the government unveiled a deal with four of the UK’s biggest internet service providers – BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin, collectively comprising about 90% of the market – which will oblige new subscribers to “opt in” if they want to view web content which has been categorised as sexually explicit.

I wrote about this in December last year when the Tory proposals were first publicised. This is part of a large-scale campaign against the so-called “sexualisation of children” which include such regressive proposals as Nadine Dorries’ sexist plans for abstinence-based sexual education for teenage girls, and which collectively poses a significant threat to fans of sexual freedom, civil liberties and digital rights.

In June this year the government-commissioned Bailey Report was published by the Chief Executive of the Mother’s Union, a Christian charity, in conjunction with the Department of Education. Dr Brooke Magnanti wrote an excellent critique of the dodgy evidence used to substantiate the anti-porn agenda back in May, which also revealed the extent to which the whole programme has been fueled by the American Christian far-right:

Looking deeper, the ‘research’ turns out to be The Social Costs of Pornography: A Collection of Papers. It includes contributions from such notables as Patrick Fagan from the Family Research Council, a far-right American lobbying organisation. Fagan also works with the Heritage Foundation, once considered the architects of the Reagan administration’s covert Cold War operations, and active supporters of George W Bush’s international policy. Fagan’s other recent papers include “Virgins Make the Best Valentines” and “Why Congress Should Ignore Radical Feminist Opposition to Marriage”.

The whole anti-sexualisation campaign plays to a crowd which is prudishly suspicious of the adult creative industries. Feminist pornographer Anna Span points out that not only can access to porn have a positive impact on people and society, but that blocking commercial porn sites won’t stop teenagers from viewing it anyway, as (not having credit cards) they tend to access porn through filesharing rather than paying for it. Creating an adult pornsite blacklist will only penalise the legitimate producers, she argues:

If the government wants to stop children from accessing porn, all it needs to do is to listen to the world’s adult industries (who are united with everyone else in wanting to prevent underage access). We say they need to take down the (handful of) porn torrent sites, which give teenagers free, easy access to hardcore scenes – scenes whose copyright has been stolen from the producers.

As I wrote last year, it’s not only adult paysites that stand to be caught by the filter, but crowd-sourced sites such as Tumblr, hosted blog sites, LGBT and sexual education resources. The problem is the lack of democratic process and transparency in the creation of these blacklists, which rest entirely in the hands of the private sector.

Tech journalist Violet Blue sums up the problems with the proposals as follows:

I refuse to overlook the fact that each ISP has not revealed what is on these blacklists, while at the same time they have all made it clear that their filtering blacklists contain websites beyond the scope of adult pornography. Nor have they defined pornography. [...]

With the UK conservative government electing to put the onus on the private sector and avoid a public legislative smackdown – and a particularly charged on over the evils of pornography – this has produced a situation where there is a frightening lack of technical and peer scrutiny of the mechanisms being employed.

Cory Doctorow points out that many “adult content” filters include gambling and dating sites; crowd-sourced content sites like Livejournal are included in some filters and not others; and finally that the internet is simply too damn big and constantly evolving for any filter to be kept accurate and up-to-date. A US 2003 investigation found 78-85% of sites included on adult content filters for schools and libraries were miscategorised, with tens of thousands of child-safe educational resources blocked by mistake. He writes that parents who choose not to opt their families out of the default filter

… are in for a nasty shock: first, when their kids (inevitably) discover the vast quantities of actual, no-fooling pornography that the filter misses; and second, when they themselves discover that their internet is now substantially broken, with equally vast swathes of legitimate material blocked.

Quite aside from the dodgy religious agenda and bad research behind these proposals and the technical problems with their implementation, they pose a massive threat to the sexual education the internet has facilitated over the last two decades. How many of us first came to an understanding and acceptance of our kink online? Members of the pre-internet generation often tell me that they envy those of us who grew up with access to the internet, who were able to inform, educate and reassure ourselves about our sexualities before getting trapped in vanilla marriages or spending years thinking our tastes meant we were sinful, freakish or mad.

Any top-down attempt to control public access to information is regressive; and no censorship of this kind has ever survived in the long term. We need to fight against the mindset that thinks this is a fair price to pay to prevent children from encountering sex too soon, and which thinks that blanket governmental controls can replace attentive parenting and common sense.

The neurological connection between pain and pleasure

What happens in the brain during orgasm? I don’t know about you, but I’ve always wanted to know. It turns out to be pretty cool. Did you know that the clitoris alone has more than 8,000 nerve-endings? Or that women with a severed spinal cord can still enjoy vaginal orgasms? Interestingly, they discovered that there [...]

Extreme porn legislation: after the Act

To some extent, I’ve been blithely assuming that the “extreme porn” sections of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 wouldn’t have any real effect in law. Yes, the wording is dangerously vague and creates a ‘thought crime’ in UK legislation, but wasn’t that case with the comical tiger sex clip dropped in January after [...]

Erotic asphyxiation: treatments of kink in therapy and the media

Just before Christmas, Dr Petra Boynton called my attention to a worrying article in Psychologies magazine (remember, the one which supplied the bad science which has been used to justify the idea of a UK opt-in system for online porn). This nuanced piece of journalism, entitled “Erotic asphyxiation — why do people do it?” springboarded [...]

UK porn ban?

A month ago, Tory MP Claire Perry called for British ISPs to implement an “opt-in” system for internet pornography based on age verification, to prevent under 18s from looking at sexually explicit content online, because she believed that “British internet service providers should share the responsibility to keep our children safe.” Fortunately for us, culture [...]

Tennis Girl photographer dies

The photographer who took the famous “Tennis Girl” photo – the most published photo in the world – has died. Martin Elliott took the photo in 1976 for an Athena calendar, and his 18-year-old girlfriend at the time, Fiona Butler, was happy to pose for it. She’s been quoted as saying “I’m not at all [...]

Anna Span’s pornography may not always be serious, but it is absolutely political

The news this week has been full of stories about Anna Arrowsmith, the former porn director who is now running as a parliamentary candidate for the Liberal Democrats. Perhaps surprisingly, most of the coverage has been positive. Heresy Corner has a rundown of the response from most of the major papers – it seems everyone’s [...]

arousal is not consent

If you’re a woman and you’re raped in the UK, chances are your rapist will get away with it. Nationally, on average only 5.6% of reported rapes result in convictions. While more rape survivors are reporting their rapes than in previous decades, far fewer rapists are successfully prosecuted. This morning, this state of affairs reached [...]

provocative protest

As various kinky expats will know, the Ukraine is a long way behind the UK on gender equality and women’s rights. Sex tourism is a real problem, exacerbated by the country’s depressed economic situation. Most sex workers are under the age of 18 or living in fear. “We can’t turn any [client] away now with [...]

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