Small Porn Producers Will Be Hurt Most by New Age Verification Laws
New mandates in states like Utah and Virginia will lock in large incumbents like PornHub while discouraging positive trends and self-regulation in the industry.

For the first time in history, performers have the bulk of power in the porn industry. But a wave of laws requiring specific forms of age verification for viewers of websites that depict or discuss sexuality is threatening to wipe out small studios and solo self-producers.
This legislative trend started in 2022 with Louisiana's Act 440, which requires websites containing more than 33.3 percent "material harmful to minors" to engage in age verification processes for each site user. The act features phrases familiar to those of us who work with sexuality, such as "prurient interest" and "lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." These phrases are vague and subjective, as is the language describing which age verification mechanisms are acceptable to the state. Similar laws followed in Utah, Mississippi, Arkansas, Virginia, Montana, and Texas. Other countries, including Germany, France, and the United Kingdom, have also developed legal requirements for consumer age verification.
Most of my adult industry colleagues, including legal representatives of studios, declined to be named or to speak at all for this piece. Some cited fears of retaliation, while others expressed reluctance to go on the record during a time of immense industry upheaval.
Pornographers were searching for suitable age verification methods long before lawmakers decided to impose them. Before the advent of free tube sites—platforms for user-uploaded videos—it was standard practice for California-based studios with their own pay sites to require users to state they were 18 or older and allowed to view the content in their location. The sites usually displayed minimal previews on the front page and kept most of the explicit stuff behind a paywall. One web developer recalls being tasked with "pixelating" a body part on Vivid's homepage after the company put up a billboard in Times Square: "The difference between nipple and not-nipple was the exact placement of a few shades of color in a 2-3 pixel grid." No matter how minimal, the nipple had to be nixed ahead of that large of a promotion.
The age verification procedures required by new laws will be far more expensive and time-intensive. Since verification must be done well before a website viewer becomes a customer, it's as though a brick-and-mortar clothing shop had to pay a dollar every time someone looked in the window.
Larger production companies and tube sites are already based overseas or have the capacity to move to countries that are unlikely to cooperate with U.S. federal or state requests. What will be lost are the smaller "ethical porn" companies. While ethics vary across and between groups, in pornography and outside of it, companies that label themselves ethical are often genuinely concerned with developing a standard set of ethics. They are often founded by performers. They take extra care for the well-being of both cast and crew and often for the consumer as well—from asking about dietary restrictions for catering to considering how content choices impact viewers.
Handling both the implementation of age verification procedures and the questions of consumers will simply require more labor than these small companies may be able to afford. And, after OnlyFans' porn ban flip-flop in 2021, I imagine many larger platforms that allow sexual content alongside G-rated stuff may be considering banning eroticism entirely.
Over a decade and a half ago, pornographers were bemoaning the fact that tighter age verification would require consumers to turn over more identification than they were likely to be comfortable with. This turned out to be prescient: One platform's survey in the first quarter of this year indicated that 20 percent of existing customers would stop patronizing their site rather than undergo the kind of age verification required by these new state laws. Mike Stabile, director of public affairs at the Free Speech Coalition, describes pay sites since countries and states began requiring age verification where 30 percent of customers who were already subscribed left the site rather than hand over their ID.
One adult industry worker expresses concerns about the viewing histories of consumers being improperly protected, and those histories harming consumers' reputations. As another worker paraphrases, "The only way to make a site subpoena-proof is to not have the info," speaking to the desire to handle as little information as possible. Another expresses dismay that large tech companies have not stepped up to handle this vetting of adulthood (for a fee). Reputable sites should make their privacy policies clear regarding age verification or other sensitive data. Consumers should beware and know to ask these questions.
Though age verification laws ostensibly protect minors, many minors have likely already seen pornography—in no small part because only 16 percent of parents used filters to control their teens' phone use, according to a 2016 Pew Research Center survey. Yet pornographers still attempt to pick up the slack. One example is The Porn Conversation, a nonprofit founded by adult filmmaker Erika Lust, which offers "tools for parents, educators, and individuals to navigate conversations around pornography in a responsible and informed manner," recognizing "the prevalence and accessibility of pornography in today's digital age." Deakin University health and sexuality researcher Debbie Ollis echoed this, telling The Guardian that we "have to acknowledge young people's use of porn and provide education that can help and guide them, with a framework that helps them make sense of what they see in porn."
New age verification laws won't accomplish that. They're simply an attack on freedom of expression. As Stabile puts it, porn and terrorism are "where people lose their minds around civil liberties." And those who will bear the brunt of these laws are the small production companies that innovate, pursue ethics, and care about cast, crew, and customers.
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"Small Porn Producers Will Be Hurt Most "
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Criminy! I'm all in favor of getting government out of bedrooms and movie studios, but this is what you report, instead of any of the Biden corruption hearings or woke gender mutilation bannings?
You're so far out of touch, you make Libertarian political conventions looks family-friendly.
instead of any of the Biden corruption hearings"
Are you crazy? They don't want to get fired and blackballed.
I know Stoya, a pornstar, should have reported on the geopolitics of Sweden joining NATO.
Scene: Morning Zoom(er) huddle.
Nick Gillespie: What’s going on in the world today that could be of interest to libertarians?
*reason writers check their twitter feeds*
Elizabeth Nolan Brown: That age verification thing is trending AF in my feed.
Gillespie: Ok, I like that. But we should outsource that to an expert.
ENB: No problem, I know someone, let me snapchat her.
"Hey Beavith. Their porn ith thmall."
For the first time in history, performers have the bulk of power in the porn industry.
With deep thinking like that, there's probably a reason why you feel enslaved by porn and it's got nothing to do with the consumers or producers. Imagine being so detached from reality as to believe that women/performers have never had the right to refuse to participate in porn.
JFC pick a narrative and stick with it. Is sex for money liberating and empowering or are you all slaves and oppressed descendants from the days of the Transatlantic Porn Trade? Because when I think heroes of the women's sexual revolution Larry Flynt, Hugh Hefner, and Tim Stokely, Fabian Thylmann are the names right there at the top of my list. Don't quit your day job.
You should hear what some former mainstream, pre-internet/rise-of-only-fans porn actresses say about the industry now. Several have left the industry because as the porn industry got flooded with cheaper and cheaper labor, the price dropped dramatically and suddenly if they weren't willing to do all kinds of things they previously could say to a producer "I won't do that" caused the phone to stop ringing.
I'm not entirely unfamiliar. And while the actresses aren't wrong and have more of a clue or wisdom than their modern counterparts, they're still too clever by half.
Adult FriendFinder has been accused of committing systematic billing fraud.[16] According to the complaints filed, the company has a practice of continuing to bill customers even after they have cancelled their service. Former employees of the company have claimed that this is their standard policy and not the result of errors. These employees have stated that the majority of customers do not notice the charges for many months.[17][better source needed] As of October 2014, hundreds of civil cases have been filed against the company and a criminal indictment was made by the Federal Trade Commission against the company.[18] In 2007, Adult FriendFinder settled with the Federal Trade Commission over allegations that the company had used malware to generate explicit pop-up ads for the service on computers without user consent.[19]
Conclusion: Adult Friendfinder billing needs a section 230.
Small porn?
I thought the point of porn was BIG.
REALLY BIG!
Yuuge!
I hope these mandates don't go through. It's hard enough finding Lilliputian porn already.
The same fundamentalist Christian theocrats (aka Conservatives) who insist upon banning women from legally accessing abortion and contraception also lead the campaigns to ban pornography (and sex education).
In the past, the religious extremists (aka Puritans) burned witches, banned commerce on Sundays (aka Blue Laws), imposed Christian prayers at all government events and public schools, banned nudity, homosexuality, alcohol, marijuana and many other drugs, banned sex education and imposed "Creationism" in public schools, and (in the 1950s) mandated "In God We Trust" on all US currency and added the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.
Sure, because no leftists or feminists have ever tried to ban porn, or even "inappropriate" framing of sexuality.
As for unlimited abortions, clumps of cells, right?
Try as you might, you will never convince non-crazy people that having teachers show porn to kids is a good idea.
You realize that pro-abortion groups such as Planned Parenthood are the ones most opposed to OTC birth control, right? Gee, I can’t imagine why. Conservatives are not anti-contraceptive. They are anti-abortifacient.
The people who believe that anything short of total approval of abortion by any method at any stage of gestation, with or without parental notification, is oppressive to “birthing people,” or that keeping queer sexual self-discovery guides for minors out of public school libraries amounts to “book-banning,” are the same moral iconoclasts who think that age verification requirements for pornographic websites is proof of a theocratic "porn-banning" conspiracy.
But keep clutching those child sexual liberation activist pearls. If there’s one thing that rivals the Stupid Party’s capacity to make world-class fools of themselves, it’s the Evil Party’s capacity to sink to new depths of depravity.
Seems to me that a blockchain oriented towards verifying identity via the Byzantine generals problem would be well suited for this.
Too bad blockchains don't seem to care about use cases - and regulators/pols want to suppress blockchain.
Politicians think, oh let’s do this. Me, you never heard of VPN.
Is James Deen or Christy Canyon writing an article next week?
What the fuck?
Ron Jeremy is unavailable at the moment.
Huh, I thought 'small porn producers' was a specific fetish.
“Small Porn Producers Will Be Hurt Most by New Age Verification Laws”
That sounds like some joker trying to come up with a parody of a Reason headline.
"Jessica Stoya is a part time adult performer and sex advice columnist living in Serbia. Her first book, Philosophy, Pussycats, & Porn was released in 2018 and is now available as an audiobook."
Do you want to learn more? She has a Wikipedia page.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoya
ENB came three times proofreading this article.
Small Porn Producers Will Be Hurt Most by New Age Verification Laws
Hey, I was already in favor of these laws. You don't have to keep hard selling them!
"... companies that label themselves ethical are often genuinely concerned with developing a standard set of ethics." Oh, Reason, .... And in the porn industry? Wow, I mean..., yeah, wow. You're not going to mention self-regula..., no, wait, there it is, right in the subtitle. Oh, man. "(I)t's as though a brick-and-mortar clothing shop had to pay a dollar every time someone looked in the window," or, maybe, it's like preventing ten-year olds from paying only a dollar, or even nothing, to look into an unlimited number of whorehouses.
Stoya? No. Freaking. Way.
It's all, mostly, poison.