You Will Die if You Vape While Watching Impeachment Porn
Reason editors discuss vaping deaths, the impeachment inquiry, and the resurgent conservative war on porn.
Reason editors discuss vaping deaths, the impeachment inquiry, and the resurgent conservative war on porn.
Nicole Prause and Donald Hilton, longtime opponents on the subject of pornography, are now facing off in court.
Plus: Florida legalizes vegetable gardens, Facebook bans anti-voting ads, and more...
That result "may strike some as unfair," the court says, but it's what state law required at the time.
A finding of guilt would be an attack on the autonomy and self-ownership of all young people
The new law rests on unsupported premises and vague language to penalize a victimless crime.
Human Rights Watch and other groups say these systems draw serious concerns.
The laws governing public pensions allow for horrible people to collect government benefits.
Behold HB 2444, which would have required a $20 fee to remove pre-installed porn filters on devices that connect to the internet.
Notre Dame student bravely responds, "Give Me Pornhub or Give Me Death."
Most are serving mandatory minimums, usually for crimes that did not involve assault or sexual abuse.
New rules ban erotic art, talk of shared sexual interests, kink groups, and anything that "encourages sexual encounters between adults."
Research shows a fifth of its users seek out sexual images. But the sharing site is now part of a massive media conglomerate.
Yet under Chinese law, some rapists get only three years behind bars.
The porn wars haven't died, they're just packaged differently.
It just makes sense to let jurors know about their already established power to exercise discretion over bad laws and ill-considered prosecutions.
All because one public servant downloaded porn onto his government-owned laptop.
Profs. Kal Raustiala & Chris Sprigman will be guest-blogging about this week, based on their new law review article.
Democrat Leslie Cockburn says she's "exposed" her Republican opponent as a "devotee of Bigfoot erotica."
...and reminds everyone that sometimes a strip show is just a strip show.
Since Ohio's age of consent is 16, it was legal for Edward Marrero to have sex but not to sext.
The antivirus-software pioneer is flying the crypto flag, while the adult actress is running on weed, Net Neutrality, and #MeToo.
The state law targeted people who share erotic photographs of others without their consent.
Plus: YouTube shooter bought and registered gun legally.
And President Trump is mad at Amazon for...ruining the postal service?
Device makers would be required to block porn, prostitution hubs, and all content that fails "current standards of decency."
How can a company be expected to arbitrate "fake news" when it can't even tell ancient artifacts from porn?
Prohibition never works, and internet smut is no exception.
New technologies are helping the adult industry adjust to government regulations and give more power to performers.
A social worker took three little girls from their home without a court order because she thought the pictures were "sexually explicit."
Parents complained about postcards that were part of an educational set kept in the school library.
We rounded up the year's best writing, reporting, and research on erotic industries, those who work in them, and how they're getting screwed by U.S. authorities and laws.
And he wants to censor online porn, too.
Their slogan? "Make American Fucking Awesome Again." But DeVille's real mission is to challenge stereotypes about sex workers.
From the man that helped Utah declare porn a "public health crisis."
From the Reason archives
The bill is being pitched as a way to help teens avoid harsh child-porn laws.
A new porn platform for women claims to promote ethical, feminist smut while pirating clips and stealing from sex workers.
The Washington Supreme Court's ruling implies that adolescents who engage in consensual sexting are child pornographers.
Cruz is walking back earlier support for sex-toy sales bans after his account liked a porn tweet on Twitter Tuesday.
Meet Charlie, a two-year-old dog with "game-changing abilities," according to law-enforcement types.
Prostitution and porn during the 1970s focus of new series.