Sunday, 04 December 2011

  • The use of x video on web and video sites.

    Natural, Fritz the Cat and Truckin' fame still gets many feminists in a uproar.

    Whereas doing porn used to hurt a celebrity's career, today it is the opposite. Although both women protested that their boyfriends, without their permission, circulated the porn videos of each, immediately after, Pamela Anderson's career was refreshed, and Paris Hilton became a celebrity.

    Publicly, proudly and hypocritically claimed by many, cleaving to otherwise "really high moral standards," 53% of the men at the 2003 Promise Keeper's Convention reported that they "had visited an Internet porn site just in the week before." 47% of Christians report "pornography as a continuing and growing major problem in the home." Porn is an increasingly growing "aha" moment for not just Christian women, but all women. Not because women watch it, some do, but because just how much all the men in their lives watch it, and incessantly watch it. The evidence is that their fathers, teachers, boyfriends, bosses, colleagues, husbands, sons, doctors, etc., watch porn, watch it a lot, and are watching more of it. Moreover, watching high-tech quality porn.

    Today Blue-Ray Disc and HD DVD jockey to be the video standard. Both have alliances with the porn industry, and that is what put them on top. Their dominance follows the trend established in the 1980s when VHS topped Betamax because of its X-rated movies. That has made porn providers some of the biggest customers of technology companies

    12% of the Web's sites, more than 4 million, are porn sites. Each day, 25% of the search engine requests are for porn. No other category comes even close. Porn sites are visited three times more than Google, Yahoo and MSN combined.

    According to Websense, a vendor of Web security and filtering software, in a 24-hour period, 70% of porn is downloaded between 9 am and 5 pm. 20% of American men admit to watching Internet porn at work.

    In 2001, American revenues of porn were larger than the combined revenue that year of America's major league baseball, football and basketball.

    In 2006, porn was a $57 billion dollar global industry with $12 billion of that in the U.S.

    In 2006, revenues of American Internet porn were twice

    Pornography: there are those that love it and does that hate it. Regardless of your thoughts about it, chances are very high that if you own a computer you may have stumbled upon it in a way or another. Truth is, pornography is just about everywhere, you may find it in all the nooks and crannies of the virtual world. It may come up as a result of an innocent search, it may pop up on a website or you may recieve some in an a naughty e-mail straight to your inbox.

    Banning the production of porn is like looking for a needle in a hay stack. It would be nearly impossible to accomplish. There are way too many websites, pop ups, e-mails, pictures and videos on the internet that while one site may be banned one hundred more will be produced.

    As much as one may appreciate a much cleaner and safer virtual environment for children to browse, a law banning pornographyis unfortunatey is very likely not to be passed. For more, check out nuogos merginos

Tuesday, 29 November 2011

merginos718

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