Tag Archives: XTube

COL638: EARN IT Act 2022

In this episode of Cubs Out Loud, remember SESTA-FOSTA from 2018? Well, learn more about their newest family member EARN IT in this informative talkback. Listen in as the cubs share their opinions on the next “problem solving” legislation to combat the exploitation of those special victims. Is it really helpful or is it more harmful?

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Remember FOSTA-SESTA? Meet their newborn cousin, EARN IT Act 2022

THE 2020 PREVIOUS VERSION: 

The Amended EARN IT Act Is a Tool for Censorship.

The Supreme Court has long recognized that the Constitution forbids laws having the collateral effect of disproportionately censoring legal speech.3  By allowing states to lower the standards for liability even further than SESTA/FOSTA, the amended EARN IT Act would create just such an impermissible collateral effect and presents even graver risks to online expression than SESTA/FOSTA, especially for the LGBTQ and sex worker communities.

As we said in our previous letter, the aftermath of the passage of SESTA/FOSTA,4 which eliminated Section 230’s liability shield for content related to sex trafficking, makes the overbroad implications for online speech clear.5  Even if the speech covered by the law could be restricted without raising constitutional concern, the content moderation practices the companies will deploy to avoid liability risk will sweep far more broadly than the illegal content.6  SESTA/FOSTA was intended to protect people engaged in sex work from being trafficked against their will. It has, instead, sent them back out into the streets and made them less safe.7  Moreover, the platforms’ content moderation practices have disproportionately silenced the LGBTQ community, making it more difficult for them to come together and create community online.8 Under the amended EARN IT Act, Section 230’s shield for all state criminal and civil aws “regarding the advertising, promotion, presentation, distribution, or solicitation” of CSAM, as that term is defined by federal law, would be eliminated, permitting states to assign liability for negligence or recklessness. In other words, states would be able to go even further than SESTA/FOSTA in lowering the standards for liability for platforms.

THE 2022 CURRENT VERSION: 

Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies Act of 2022 or the EARN IT Act of 2022

This bill revises the federal framework governing the prevention of online sexual exploitation of children.

The bill establishes the National Commission on Online Child Sexual Exploitation Prevention. The commission must develop best practices for interactive computer services providers (e.g., Facebook and Twitter) to prevent, reduce, and respond to the online sexual exploitation of children.

Additionally, the bill limits the liability protections of interactive computer service providers with respect to claims alleging violations of child sexual exploitation laws.

The bill replaces various statutory references to child pornography and material that contains child pornography with child sexual abuse material.

Finally, the bill makes changes to the reporting requirements for electronic communication service providers and remote computing service providers (providers) who report apparent instances of crimes involving the sexual exploitation of children to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Among the changes, the bill requires providers to report facts and circumstances sufficient to identify and locate each minor and each involved individual. The bill also increases the amount of time that providers must preserve the contents of a report.

The EARN IT Act Threatens Free Expression

Looking to the past as prelude to the future, the only time that Congress has limited Section 230 protections was in the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act of 2017 (SESTA/FOSTA). That law purported to protect victims of sex trafficking by eliminating providers’ section 230 liability shield for “facilitating” sex trafficking by users. According to a 2021 study by the US Government Accountability Office, however, the law has been rarely used to combat sex trafficking. 9 Instead, it has forced sex workers, whether voluntarily engaging in sex work or forced into sex trafficking against their will, offline and into harm’s way.10 It has also chilled their online expression generally, including the sharing of health and safety information, and speech wholly unrelated to sex work.11 Moreover, these burdens fell most heavily on smaller platforms that either served as allies and created spaces for the LGBTQ and sex worker communities or simply could not withstand the legal risks and compliance costs of SESTA/FOSTA.12 Congress risks repeating this mistake by rushing to pass this misguided legislation, which also limits Section 230 protections.

9 Government Accountability Office. (2021). Sex Trafficking: Online Platforms and Federal prosecutions. (GAO Publication No. 21-385),   (reporting that the Department of Justice had brought just one case under FOSTA, which at the time of the Report remained in court with no restitution sought, and that only one individual had pursued civil damages, in a case that was dismissed).

10 See Online Platforms and Sex Worker Discrimination, Hacking//Hustling (last visited Feb. 3, 2022), (continuously updated document listing companies, institutions, and products “that in some way discriminate or ban sex work or adult products OR have been shut down completely following increased anti-sex work legislation”); LaLa B Holston-Zannell, PayPal and Venmo are Shutting Out Sex Workers, Putting Lives and Livelihoods at Risk, ACLU (06/23/2021),

11 See, e.g., Amanda Waltz, Sex workers in Pittsburgh discuss local impact of damaging anti-trafficking law FOSTA-SESTA, Pittsburgh City Paper (08/07/2021), (quoting a researcher at the University of Pittsburgh describing how SESTA/FOSTA has led platforms to suppress the political speech of sex workers, including online organizing efforts); Jessica Stoya, What We Can Really Learn From the OnlyFans Debacle, Slate (08/25/2021),  (describing how SESTA/FOSTA led platforms to “decimate” online sex worker spaces—“from bad-date lists that providers use to warn one another about dangerous clients to Instagram hashtags where we’d organized to fight the very law causing these problems”).

 

12 See Danielle Blunt and Ariel Wolf, Erased The Impact of FOSTA-SESTA, Hacking//Hustling (2020),; Makena Kelly, Democrats want data on how sex workers were hurt by online crackdown, The Verge (12/17/2019)

The EARN IT Act Jeopardizes the Security of Our Communications

The EARN IT Act Risks Undermining Child Abuse Prosecutions

The EARN IT Act would have devastating consequences for everyone’s ability to share and access information online, and to do so in a secure manner. We urge you to oppose this bill. Congress should instead consider more tailored approaches to deal with the real harms of CSAM online.

 

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COL627: What’s Going On – November 2021

In this episode of Cubs Out Loud, it’s our What’s Going On for the month of November. As the cubs approach the end of 2021, listen in as they bring you up to speed on their month of Thanksgiving. From Final Fantasy to contest fantasy scenes, the guys share what’s been up with them.

What’s Going On?

  • Jeff: Vacation/Endwalker
  • Damon: AJ / Staying Home / Cinci Leather 
  • Gary: Year End Slide after the BUSYNESS

Feedback 

Facebook Likes:

  • Assadullah Mohammadi
  • Grae Krause
  • Vann BearMan
  • Xander Fogle
  • Bradley Jones
  • Kenneth Quarles
  • Sean Christopher
  • Alex Holmes
  • Christopher David

YouTube Comment:

  • COL582: R.I.P. XTube/Pornhub? – xyz: Rip. What happened to xtube?
  • COL622: LTAS: Horror Stories – Oan R.: Lol, Gary’s story was weird. Aww, that was a nice little wrap up from Gary. 
  • COL623: What’s Going On – October 2021 – Oan R.: To be clear, I wasn’t saying I wanted to make Gary a pie. Although that’d be one hot pie. Sticky sweet….I need to go now. Watched the reactions again about the Gary-apple thing, it’s just interesting to see how different the responses are. Like am I talking about baking a pie, baking Gary into a pie, or turning Gary into an adult fantasy where he’s the main part of a pie with his torso covered in pie filling and surrounded by an outline of pie crust? … … Again, I need to go now and…do things. 
  • COL624: LoR: Unfriending – Oan R.: Lord of the rings, unfriending. Like when the fellowship fell apart
  • COL625: LTAK: Gear – Part 4: Oan R.: Claw la la la law…

Twitter Followers

  • @marekplosza
  • @bearclaw0991
  • @Batorcub2
  • @Mark54657799
  • @BiceSpice
  • @LucasF951055
  • @verdibare
  • @JoseGon44516929

Recent Shows

  • COL623: WGO: October 2021 
  • FB338: TTO: From the Waist Down
  • COL624: LoR: Unfriending
  • COL625: LTAK: GEAR – Part Four
  • COL626: LTAF: The White Stuff

Tweet Tweet:

https://twitter.com/dustinmcash/status/1467308344037707781?s=20

https://twitter.com/woofbound/status/1465155019783692297

https://twitter.com/dox_gay/status/1465134673571553288

https://twitter.com/exhibitb2/status/1465172593552629761

Links:

COL616: LTAF: Gross Foods

In this episode of Cubs Out Loud, it’s time for another Let’s Talk About Food. For this installment, the guys get gross as they reminisce on foods that made them drop their forks as children. From then, the guys move on to foods they changed their minds on and foods they will NEVER EAT IN A MILLIONDY BILLIONDY YEARS!! From jumbo shrimp to bull balls, get a taste of what the cubs hate.

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Let’s Talk About Food: Gross Foods 

Which foods do our co-hosts turn their nose up when it comes to the table? Is there anything they absolutely feel queasy about now? Have their tastes changed since childhood? What dishes are avoided at all costs?

  • Childhood Disgust
    • Damon: Chitterlings
    • Gary: Broccoli / Cauliflower
    • Jeff: Liver / Fish
  • Can Admit I Was Wrong
    • Damon: Brussel Sprouts
    • Gary: Vegetables That Are Not Potatoes or Corn
  • Never Ever On My Life
    • Damon: Rocky Mountain Oysters
    • Gary: Shellfish
    • Jeff: Pickled Pigs Feet / Most Fermented Foods
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COL608: ATNS: Goodbye XTube

In this episode of Cubs Out Loud, it’s another All T, No Shade show. This time around, the cubs express their opinions on the recent decision of XTube to shutdown its site in September 2021. After 13 years of providing user-created adult content, how have recent legal allegations and other factors affected the site? The guys give their thoughts on this question and more.

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ATNS: Goodbye XTube

At the beginning of July 2021, the online adult video community found itself suddenly facing the news that XTube.com announced that it will be no longer operational as of September 5th.  In COL582, we discussed the potential end of PornHub and… XTube. Just over six months later, this news brings further attention to the intersection of pornography, human trafficing, and illegal uploaded content. 

 

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COL602: LTAS: JustForFans / OnlyFans

In this episode of Cubs Out Loud, the cubs get sexy online. For this installment of Let’s Talk About Sex, the guys discuss the creator-driven content sites such as OnlyFans and JustForFans and their recent uptick in popularity during the pandemic, particularly for those wishing to share their body positivity and other sexual exploits for profit. As the guys share their thoughts on these sites and their popularity, what kind of impact is this having on traditional pornography? Is this another fad or the eventual evolution of the porn industry?

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Lets Talk About Sex: JustForFans / OnlyFans

The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 shifted the world economy in serious ways. Prior to the global pandemic, the landscape of self-promotion as an artist was already taking off in the digital realm. Social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube rose to the top of the field. However these entities expend a lot of effort, time, and energy to limit access or remove adult content out of their own legal protective interests. Sites like XTube have recently taken actions that have limited adult content creators options. 

Now it’s 2021 and over that past year it appears that the LGBTQIA broader community has become more familiar and possibly comfortable with sites like JustFor.Fans and OnlyFans.com as platforms where personal freedoms are housed for body positivity, sexual expression, art/modeling, and more. 

What do we think about this development? How much have these options helped people financially through the past year plus? Is this a natural evolution while portions of society struggle with conservative vs progressive viewpoints? 

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