- Feb 5, 2002
- 166,334
- 56,045
- Country
- United States
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Others
The researchers only examined the titles, tags, and descriptions, rather than reviewing the content, meaning that plenty of inappropriate content videos featuring degrading and violent behavior are not included.
April 12, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) — One of the few encouraging cultural indicators these days is that string of exposés affirming, once again, that the inappropriate content industry is rife with rape, sex tracking, and sexual abuse is starting to wake people up. Mindgeek executives were grilled by Canadian Members of Parliament; major mainstream media outlets covered the revelations; American politicians began to discuss legislation targeting inappropriate contenthub.
The more people are forced to confront the violence and ugliness of digital inappropriate content, the more difficult it becomes to ignore the fact that we are a culture having a public #MeToo moment while privately watching women and girls get brutalized and assaulted for entertainment and sexual satisfaction.
In case anyone needed more evidence that inappropriate contentography is fueling a new, subterranean rape culture, British researchers Fiona Vera-Gray, Clare McGlynn, Ibad Kureshi and Kate Butterby have just published the largest study of online inappropriate content to date in the British Journal of Criminology. Titled “Sexual violence as a sexual script in mainstream online inappropriate contentography,” the study included a survey of 131,738 videos from the UK’s most popular inappropriate content sites, inappropriate contenthub, XHamster, and Xvideos.
Continued below.
Largest study of online inappropriate content to date: Thousands of videos depict sexual violence, incest
April 12, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) — One of the few encouraging cultural indicators these days is that string of exposés affirming, once again, that the inappropriate content industry is rife with rape, sex tracking, and sexual abuse is starting to wake people up. Mindgeek executives were grilled by Canadian Members of Parliament; major mainstream media outlets covered the revelations; American politicians began to discuss legislation targeting inappropriate contenthub.
The more people are forced to confront the violence and ugliness of digital inappropriate content, the more difficult it becomes to ignore the fact that we are a culture having a public #MeToo moment while privately watching women and girls get brutalized and assaulted for entertainment and sexual satisfaction.
In case anyone needed more evidence that inappropriate contentography is fueling a new, subterranean rape culture, British researchers Fiona Vera-Gray, Clare McGlynn, Ibad Kureshi and Kate Butterby have just published the largest study of online inappropriate content to date in the British Journal of Criminology. Titled “Sexual violence as a sexual script in mainstream online inappropriate contentography,” the study included a survey of 131,738 videos from the UK’s most popular inappropriate content sites, inappropriate contenthub, XHamster, and Xvideos.
Continued below.
Largest study of online inappropriate content to date: Thousands of videos depict sexual violence, incest