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Privacy

Porn Sites Must Block VPNs To Comply With Indiana's Age-Verification Law, State Suggests in New Lawsuit

It's an insane—and frighteningly dystopian—interpretation of the law.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 12.17.2025 12:18 PM

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A phone with the Pornhub logo on the screen | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Nano Banana
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Nano Banana)

Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita is suing dozens of porn websites, claiming that they are in violation of the state's age-verification law and seeking "injunctive relief, civil penalties, and recovery of costs incurred to investigate and maintain the action."

Last year, Indiana Senate Bill 17 mandated that websites featuring "material harmful to minors" must verify that visitors are age 18 or above. Rather than start checking IDs, Aylo—the parent company of Pornhub and an array of other adult websites—responded by blocking access for Indiana residents.

Now, Indiana says this is not good enough. To successfully comply, Pornhub and other Aylo platforms (which include Brazzers, Youporn, and Redtube, among others) must also block virtual private networks and other tools that allow internet users to mask their IP addresses, the state suggests.

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This is an insane—and frighteningly dystopian—interpretation of the law.

Broad Anti-Privacy Logic

In a section of the suit detailing how Aylo allegedly violated the age-check law, Indiana notes that last July, "an investigator employed by the Office of the Indiana Attorney General ('OAG Investigator') accessed Pornhub.com from Indiana using a Virtual Private Network (VPN) with a Chicago, Illinois IP address."

"Defendants have not implemented any reasonable form of age verification on its website Pornhub.com," the suit states. It goes on to detail how Indiana investigators also accessed Brazzers.com, Faketaxi.com, Spicevids.com, and other adult websites using a VPN.

Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita
Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita (Indiana AG's Office)

The state argues that because some Indiana residents could use tools to get around location-based blocks, location-based blocks "are insufficient to comply with Indiana's Age Verification Law."

The logical conclusion from this is that if a porn platform doesn't want to check IDs or to stop existing, it must then stop anyone from using a VPN.

This is the sort of logic that won't stop with porn platforms, of course.

Increasingly, states are trying to require social media platforms, app stores, and other web services to verify users' ages. Indiana's logic could be used to justify sanctioning all sorts of apps and services for failing to block VPNs and other anonymity-aiding tools.

Sure, you might prevent a few more teens from seeing boobs or watching TikTok videos, but at the cost of massively impeding privacy for people of all ages. It's a regrettable situation in any circumstance, but especially bad for people in countries or situations where free speech online could be dangerous or where repressive governments have blocked access to outside information. No longer could they turn to popular social media platforms to access news or communicate with wider audiences.

And, of course, people aren't always using VPNs to hide their location. VPNs are also used by people whose employers require them in order to access work email and websites, college students and faculty who may need them to access school websites, and others.

The logic of Indiana's lawsuit also justifies action against privacy measures of all sorts. For instance: Might companies that sell clothing that help people avoid facial recognition cameras be liable for helping people avoid detection?

Liability Based 'on the Failure To Accomplish Impossibilities'

The Rokita lawsuit accuses Aylo and its affiliate companies of violating not just the Indiana age-verification law (Senate Bill 17) but also its Deceptive Consumer Sales Act.

"Defendants' misrepresentations regarding the extent to which Indiana residents, including Indiana minors, could continue to access adult oriented websites after passage of Indiana's Age Verification Law were unfair, abusive, and deceptive," the suit claims.

David Greene of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) called this "quite ridiculous."

"What the state's lawsuit seems to be doing is saying that Aylo deceived Indiana consumers when it said it was geoblocking Indiana users from its sites when it knew that VPN users might be able to evade that geoblock," Greene told AVN. "It essentially bases liability on the failure to accomplish impossibilities."

It's also part of two larger trends when it comes to online censorship and surveillance: trying to use deceptive trade practices to punish online entities for not suppressing certain sorts of content, and trying to ban VPNs and other tools that may help people avoid any number of state- or country-specific internet restrictions.

The latter represents a disturbing doubling down on attempts to end online privacy and anonymity. Politicians and regulators have been repeatedly warned that age-verification laws won't actually stop people from viewing porn, or using social media, or whatever it is that's deemed in need of restrictions, since the internet is global and there are many ways around location-specific rules. Rather than accept that these sorts of invasive schemes won't work and come with all sorts of negative side effects, they're intent on enacting even more invasive schemes with even more side effects.

"Aylo has restricted access to its platforms for users in Indiana, and in doing so, is fully compliant with the law," an Aylo spokesperson told AVN.


Watch Reason's Big Tech Debate

Did we deserve to lose? Reason's latest debate, in which Robby Soave and I argued against Breaking Points' Emily Jashinsky and Ryan Grim about Big Tech, is now online. Watch or listen here and tell us what you think. (If you don't have time for the whole thing, I urge you to at least check out my portion of the prop section, around minute 58.)

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Two Victories for Free Speech Online

Two wins this week for tech-industry trade group NetChoice: A U.S. district court permanently blocked a Louisiana law requiring age verification by social media platforms, and another court issued a preliminary injunction against an Arkansas law that restricts "addictive" algorithms and requires social media sites to somehow protect minors from drug use, eating disorders, suicide attempts, and more.

In the former, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana struck down Louisiana Act 456, saying that conditioning access to protected speech (vis-à-vis social media platforms) on submitting to age-verification measures is unconstitutional. States can't use a "free-floating power to restrict the ideas to which children may be exposed," wrote Judge John W. deGravelles in his decision.

"This permanent injunction joins a growing list of federal court victories for NetChoice, following similar rulings in Ohio (NetChoice v. Yost) and Arkansas (NetChoice v. Griffin)," wrote NetChoice on X.

In NetChoice v. Griffin, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Arkansas this week granted a preliminary injunction against Arkansas Act 901. That means the law can't be enforced as NetChoice's lawsuit against it plays out. "This decision is a win for free speech in Arkansas, but it is also a signal to lawmakers across the country—including on Capitol Hill—that laws imposing liability on social media for displaying fully protected speech are unconstitutional," suggested NetChoice's Paul Taske.

The Arkansas ruling is also another reminder "that algorithms are protected by the First Amendment," notes NetChoice.


More Sex & Tech News

• Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D–R.I.) and Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) have announced plans to file a bill that would repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

Sen. WHITEHOUSE: We finally are moving to file a bipartisan Section 230 repeal bill. Waiting any longer serves no useful purpose. pic.twitter.com/4sD8hxXIMl

— Senate Judiciary Democrats ???????? (@JudiciaryDems) December 12, 2025

• Scott Yenor, director of the Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation, calls for updating state obscenity laws to include many depictions of "deviate sexual intercourse, female genitals, masochism, [and] nudity," among other things, and for states to "deal with the issue of live-camera sexual performances, perhaps under prostitution statutes."

• The Center for Christian Virtue (CCV) "began as a little-known group of anti-pornography crusaders in Cincinnati over 40 years ago. Now, it is Ohio's largest Christian policy group with headquarters directly across from the Statehouse," The Cincinnati Enquirer reports. "Over the past decade, CCV has lobbied on more than 300 bills" and "become a policy powerhouse in Ohio."

• Utah Gov. Spencer Cox is "full of righteous indignation about the impact of social media on children" and "believes tech companies should be confronted like the opioid makers of yesteryear"—and Jonathan Martin, Politico's politics bureau chief, really wants him to run for president because of it.


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Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

PrivacyPornographySex WorkSurveillanceTechnologyInternetIndianaChildrenTeenagers
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  1. Eeyore   3 hours ago

    Netflix has tried to block VPNs to protect licensees who sell regional licenses. Miserable failure. Even if they blocked every single VPN provider - I could just spin up my own VPN in a cloud provider.

    Log in to Reply
    1. ML (now paying)   2 hours ago

      They'll figure out how to do it eventually. There's just too much money to be made not to.

      Log in to Reply
      1. mad.casual   19 minutes ago

        There's just too much money to be made not to.

        No there's not. There's already plenty of evidence to show that people will either pirate or just not watch certain events rather than pay local or network licensing fees. Netflix rose to where it is in the first place putting all of the separate pieces of shows, networks, and movies into a single, cheap, platform and it's (now) notorious for raising fees to subscribers' ire and (still) never having cash on hand.

        Log in to Reply
  2. Longtobefree   3 hours ago

    Welcome to the party, pal!

    "They" got around the second amendment by legislation against things (guns), "they" are now going after the first with legislation against things (VPNs).

    Remember when we were called nut cases because we said they would gut the 2nd then go for the 1st?

    TOLD YA SO!

    (vote for fascists, get fascism)

    Log in to Reply
  3. MollyGodiva   3 hours ago

    Repealing 230 would be disastrous to the very core of the internet, that the users are the ones responsible for what they post.

    Log in to Reply
    1. ML (now paying)   2 hours ago

      The Good Samaritan clause in 230 was what allowed the FBI, CIA and Biden administration to censor the internet. We don't want to throw the baby out with the bathwater but the Good Samaritan clause has to go. It did the opposite of what 230 was intended to do.

      Log in to Reply
      1. MollyGodiva   2 hours ago

        The FBI, CIA, and Biden did not "censor" the internet. I can also assure you that getting rid of it would lead to actual censorship of the internet by Trump.

        Now, internet companies can ignore threats by Trump to sue them for what their users post. If 230 goes away Trump will sue them, leading to massive censorship based on Trump's whim.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Thoritsu   2 hours ago

          You are a complete buffoon. Zuckerberg even admitted it. The data in the case against the Biden administration was completely damning.
          Get you head out of your butt.

          Log in to Reply
  4. MollyGodiva   3 hours ago

    "Americans purchasing their robot vacuum cleaners from China is not a national security threat." Well, ya it is when China puts always on microphones in these vacuum cleaners and can eavesdrop on millions of Americans in their home.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 hours ago

      Walz +6

      Log in to Reply
  5. Dillinger   2 hours ago

    is anyone still doing the internet porns?

    Log in to Reply
    1. shadydave   2 hours ago

      During the last election, Democrats ran an ad about how Republicans were gonna come for porn in an attempt to court the young male vote. You saw how that turned out for them.

      It sort of highlighted both their own prejudices ("men only care about one thing") and how out of touch they were with this demographic. A very large number of young men view porn as a drug they're hopelessly addicted to and wish to God they could get off of. The NoFap scammer market didn't arise without substantial demand fueling it.

      I really don't think ENB has caught up yet with the growing consensus that even if this stuff should remain legal, people would be better off avoiding it regardless.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Dillinger   2 hours ago

        fair enough. gracias

        Log in to Reply
        1. shadydave   2 hours ago

          What Buzzcocks joked about has become reality:

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mEsJo5Tg5k&list=RD3mEsJo5Tg5k&start_radio=1

          Log in to Reply
  6. Incunabulum   2 hours ago

    Gotta protect unlimited porn access for children, doncha know?

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   51 minutes ago

      An international porn conglomerate closed off the entirety of their business to a state rather than perform age verification as required, but Trump is the real asshole here because he said mean things about Rob Reiner.

      Take your balls and go home, Aylo.

      Log in to Reply
  7. Gregdn   1 hour ago

    When growing up in the 1950's, my brother and I used to find discarded pornographic magazines along the railroad tracks.

    Times change, but the desire to view pornography doesn't.

    Log in to Reply
  8. mad.casual   57 minutes ago

    "an investigator employed by the Office of the Indiana Attorney General ('OAG Investigator') accessed Pornhub.com from Indiana using a Virtual Private Network (VPN) with a Chicago, Illinois IP address."
    ...
    Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D–R.I.) and Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) have announced plans to file a bill that would repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

    Irony, thy name is Reason. Retarded, thy name Elizabeth Nolan Brown.

    Log in to Reply
  9. John F. Carr   49 minutes ago

    Calling a porn shortage "frighteningly dystopian" seems a bit strong.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   42 minutes ago

      +1 I was just going to say, "I'll give you 'an insane interpretation' but 'dystopian' is a reach."

      When, even if they, somehow, shut the VPNs down, you're still relatively free to MMS, email, IM, FaceTime, iCloud, Google Drive Share, etc., etc., etc. all the nakedness you want to anyone (of age) whose number you can dial (let alone show up naked in person), dystopia is still pretty over-the-horizon.

      Log in to Reply
  10. M L   41 minutes ago

    Not insane at all. If they can zone brick and mortar retail shops into a designated area and require age verification then they can do the same to online shops.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   33 minutes ago

      Disagree slightly. The analogy doesn't track per the facts as presented. Within the analogy, the business is legally zoned in IL or outside IN and, arguably, the OIAG used a straw purchaser to solicit business that was illegal in *their own* or home location from a legally-zoned business.

      It should be, once again noted that there is, whether any of us like it or not, another no-shit "shall not be infringed" right for which straw purchasing is a no-shit federal crime that ENB doesn't give a shit about.

      Log in to Reply
      1. M L   3 minutes ago

        Ok yeah I didn't really read the article, but you're right the VPN thing raises some issues.

        I mean, yeah I'm all for gun rights and free speech and all .. but the original meaning didn't protect pornography. Nor did it even apply to the states of course..

        Log in to Reply

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