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I considered using a calm analytical tone here, but I opted for a no-nonsense one as it really isn't the time for that.

If you paid close attention, you might have seen a slightly older version of this post ;)

I don't think it is necessary as I post about that regularly enough but I figured it might be better to post it anyway just in case.

Olives  
I'd like to cover "Aylo's" / "PornHub's" shenanigans here further. "Aylo" is notorious for speaking over other people for their own gain (and to tr...

I'd like to cover "Aylo's" / "PornHub's" shenanigans here further.

"Aylo" is notorious for speaking over other people for their own gain (and to try to cover their historic reputation). For instance, they "endorsed" "age verification" which hurt their competitors and is poor for user privacy, before changing their mind later and vigorously campaigning against it.

Still, for Aylo, invading user privacy and leaking sensitive information about the sexual interests of users is just a small price to pay. It's just another part of doing business to them. Of course, once they realized that users were using their sites less due to it, they suddenly decided to change course.

Now, they're giving credence to anti-obscenity org advocating against things like VPNs and for censorship, and crucially, namedropping them while doing so and trying to present them as the "leader of the industry". It is extremely disturbing and it is paramount that these shenanigans are shut down immediately without giving it a single modicum of legitimacy.

Update: qoto.org/@olives/1124325930640 I figured I'd cover the new porn science post here too but it shouldn't really be necessary.

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sneaking their "" (like , it tackles "harms" to "children" in vague ways which are likely to chill speech) into another bill is very concerning.

"Aylo" keep embarrassing themselves. One moment, they'll "support" "age verification" (to try to pander to someone), before turning around and campaigning against it (to be clear, campaigning against it is a good thing).

This story with the awful org is really just the newest episode in that saga.

The Japanese language is very context dependent.

I don't particularly like Biden but I think there would be fewer weird judicial shenanigans or other things under him. The other people are unpredictable.

Olives boosted

I spotted this car on the road, and my daughter asked why I thought it was cool. After I explained, she said, “Why would a company name a car 9/11?”

knightcolumbia.org/blog/in-a-v
"A Superior Court recently rejected an attempt to dispose of a lawsuit challenging San Mateo County’s policy of destroying and digitizing physical mail sent to people incarcerated in its jails."

"Since 2021, San Mateo County has prohibited friends, family, and other community members from sending physical mail to individuals incarcerated in its jails. Under the policy, all non-legal mail—including letters, pictures, birthday cards, and children’s drawings—must be sent to Smart Communications, a private surveillance company that scans copies of the correspondence, destroys the originals, and retains the digitized versions for at least seven years."

knightcolumbia.org/content/sta
"The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University today published newly obtained documents from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) indicating that the controversial policy of requiring visa applicants to register their social media handles with the State Department—a policy adopted by the Trump administration but continued by the Biden administration—has been useless from a security standpoint."

@Tyjos84@mastodon.world The previous serieses are better than Enterprise imo.

knightcolumbia.org/blog/knight
"The Knight Institute, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and other press freedom, civil liberties, and international human rights organizations today sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland to express concern about the ongoing extradition proceedings relating to WikiLeaks founder Julian ."

eff.org/deeplinks/2024/05/eff-
"The government violates the privacy rights of individuals on pretrial release when it continuously tracks, retains, and shares their location, EFF explained in a friend-of-the-court brief filed in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals."

"Nor do studies show that law enforcement is employing electronic monitoring with individuals they would otherwise put in jail. To the contrary, studies indicate that law enforcement is using electronic monitoring to surveil and constrain the liberty of those who wouldn’t otherwise be detained."

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20 adds new way of sharing shopping data (such as whether someone is interested in movies or golf, based on past transactions) with retailers.

youtube.com/watch?v=eK3L7E4k-V Rumia is very cute.

She's a supernatural creature which eats humans though, lol. And I wouldn't be surprised if she has been lurking the woods for hundreds of years.

Olives boosted

Reposting as this seems like a good time to do so. Despite the scant / non-existent evidence for porn being such a bogeyman, it keeps getting cast as a scapegoat which is quite frustrating, so I am going to have to go over this... Again.

Even if online porn "might" be "problematic" to someone out there, it would not be anywhere remotely near proportionate to engage in censorship (or privacy intrusive measures, which among other things might pose a security risk), especially as it can be free expression to someone, and expression which someone might casually share as part of their more general interaction / engagement with others.

Sometimes, restrictions can lead to services becoming inaccessible entirely, rather than simply limiting them to people over a particular age.

A typical recommendation is sex education (perhaps, teach someone about respecting others boundaries?), not censorship (which is harmful in it's own ways). I don't mean criticizing someone for telling an offensive joke.

The science isn't really showing porn is this awful thing:

tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108
psyarxiv.com/ehqgv/
Two studies showing porn is not associated with sexism. One carried out by German scientists, another carried out by Canadians.

qoto.org/@olives/1104622745318
American scientists carried out a meta analysis of 59 studies. They found porn isn't associated with crime. A meta analysis is a study where someone studies studies.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/314325
Nor does it necessarily seem this is the case among adolescents (the meta analysis also points to that). Here, the minors who used more porn engaged in less sexual aggression.

psychologytoday.com/us/blog/al
qoto.org/@olives/1104002886657
There are even studies (across the United States, Japan, Finland, and more) showing that porn is associated with less crime, even among criminals.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/310420
While an older Dutch study showed there might be worse levels of "sexual satisfaction" among adolescents using porn, a Croatian lab failed to replicate that.

sciencedirect.com/science/arti
This is a meta analysis on sexualization in video games. It finds that studies tend to pick cut-offs where it's difficult to distinguish signal from noise. This increases the number of false positives.

There are also results which contradict the theory of sexualization being harmful. In the end, it fails to find a link between this and sexism, and this and mental well-being.

I'm also usually sceptical of apparent links, as the "scientific pile on effect" (as one described it) drives people to go looking for "links" between porn and "something bad" however tenuous it might be, or methodologically flawed an approach it might be (and later, that something is debunked, or the "link" is a phantom due to methodological limitations).

I could add it doesn't matter if they're "child-like" or "fictional children", (this is far, far more likely to hit someone good than someone bad who don't need it, and a bad actor could still do bad things)*. This necessarily excludes involvement of abuse or invasions of privacy. If it were actual real children, I'd oppose that on ethical grounds (though, I still wouldn't want to burn down the Internet / sites, because of unwanted bad actors). This is covered above but it is also kind of common internet sense.

While I'm not making a point about anything in particular, to inoculate you against potential problematic arguments, it's worth mentioning the basic precept that correlation does not imply causation.

Let's use ice cream as an example. Everyone loves ice cream, right? Well, I like ice cream. This also happens to be used as a classic example by others for this sort of thing.

Anyway, ice cream is correlated with crime. No one would say ice cream causes people to go out and commit crimes though. Just because there is a "correlation" doesn't mean it is meaningful. And that's not the only way in which correlation might not imply causation. For instance, warm weather is a far more compelling explanation for this phenomena. That might come in useful somewhere...

Here's a couple which were added for :

reason.com/2015/07/23/despite- U.S. data shows teens are having less sex with each other (in a world with more porn).

Misapprehensions about porn can be more about expressions of sexual orientations than porn. In fact, we've seen an Australian news outlet specifically singling out "anal sex" as a negative thing not that long ago, who would that disproportionately impact? pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/297020 Also, moralizing can be harmful (and ineffective).

Typically, responsibility is put on individuals to behave in a manner that is reasonable to them, instead of looking for a scapegoat whenever someone behaves in a manner which could be argued to be negative. This isn't to discount external factors (i.e. socioeconomic ones) entirely but there isn't always something sensible which can be done. People live their own lives.

We might also want to look at how alcohol is handled. We tend to look at this through the lens of personal responsibly, that someone is reasonable for consuming it responsibly, and not behaving inappropriately. Now, alcohol is not the same thing as porn, it is an actual substance, not some pixels on the screen. It further illustrates though how strange and unusual the idea of censorship here is.

Quite a few things which might get blamed on "the porn" are actually general mental health issues which could be dealt with more normally, and crucially, without conflating it with porn (which might even detract from dealing with someone's actual issues).

In fact, online censorship has increased in quite a few ways over the past few years and it doesn't appear to be any sort of panacea. It has, however, created a number of harms in it's own right, including even murder by practically forcing some sex workers to work with more dangerous clients. It also provides a space for abusive bigots to dwell in.

An addendum (from another post which might be useful to add useful context, we won't delve too deeply into this section):

An additional bit on why "porn censorship" (perhaps, even some themes) is bad.

Some points about censoring fictional content there (censorship is a bad idea):

It might fuel someone's persecution complex, especially in the context of *. The idea of a dangerous world where people are out to get them. Feeds anxiety, alienation. It's happened a fair bit. It doesn't seem to do anything positive.

Someone might be more inclined to see someone as an idiot or crazy (that's not wrong, lol). In any case, it poisons the well as someone is not seen to be credible or competent in these matters at all. Promoting distrust doesn't seem like a positive outcome.

It violates someone's free expression. People have these things called rights, that's important. This point comes from the original post, I'm aware I've covered this here more generally, still there may be value in reaffirming it.

Bad people don't need it. They could still do bad things. Good people are who'd suffer.

It violates the Constitution. Multiple constitutions.

Punishing someone because they resemble someone unpleasant isn't good. Also, due process still applies, in any case...

Can be a coping mechanism.

qoto.org/@olives/1124325930640 I'm thinking of what I could add to the porn science (the porn isn't spooky) post, I kind of want to avoid turning it into too much of an everything post though.

Ugh, a new (strange) federation bug.

Olives boosted

🚨 Spyware abuse by EU states is a grave threat to democracy & human rights. @cdteurope hosted a high-level panel exploring ways to combat this nefarious practice in the aftermath of the Pegasus scandal. Key insights from our EU office 👇 cdt.org/insights/cdt-europe-ho

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