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Old 12-28-2004, 06:02 PM  
FreakinWebmaster
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Mile High State
Posts: 935
Some interesting porn facts:

# There are 1.3 million porn websites (N2H2, 9/23/03).

# More than 32 million unique individuals visited a porn site in Sept. of 2003. Nearly 22.8 million of them were male (71 percent), while 9.4 million adult site visitors were female (29 percent)
(Nielsen/Net Ratings, Sept. 2003).

# Pornographic web pages now top 260 million and growing at an unprecedented rate (N2H2, 9/23/03).

# N2H2's database contained 14 million identified pages of pornography in 1998, so the growth to 260 million represents an almost 20-fold increase in just five years (N2H2, 9/23/03).

# The cybersex industry generates approximately billion annually and is expected to grow to -7 billion over the next 5 years, barring unforeseen change (National Research Council Report, 2002).

# The total porn industry - estimates from billion to billion (National Research Council Report, 2002).

# The two largest individual buyers of bandwidth are U.S. firms in the adult online industry (National Research Council Report, 3-1, 2002).

# 40,000 expired domain names were porn-napped
(National Research Council).

# Commercial pornography sites:

* 74 percent display free teaser porn images on the homepage, often porn banner ads.
* 66 percent did not include a warning of adult content.
* 11 percent included such a warning but did not have sexually explicit content on the homepage.
* 25 percent prevented users from exiting the site (mousetrapping).
* Only 3 percent required adult verification.
(Child-Proofing on the World Wide Web: A Survey of Adult Webservers, 2001, Jurimetrics. National Research Council Report, 2002).

# Sex is the #1 searched for topic on the Internet. (Dr. Robert Weiss, Sexual Recovery Institute, Washington Times 1/26/2000)

# 60% of all web-site visits are sexual in nature. (MSNBC/Standford/Duquesne Study, Washington Times, 1/26/2000)

# 58% of the public surveyed believed that "the government should be able to restrict the posting of sexually explicit materials on the Internet, even though those same materials can be legally published in books and magazines." (State of the First Amendment Study, First Amendment Center, Freedom Forum, 2000)




from: reportchildporn.com/news.php
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