The pornification of everything - How pornography are turning young boys into coombrained degenerates and young girls into e-whores.

Original
Every meme has its day, and “Rule 34” — the observation that on the internet you can find porn featuring every imaginable protagonist and situation — is now so banal that it’s been ages since I’ve seen it mentioned. It is said to have originated 20 years ago with a webzine cartoon of a man staring in horror at a screen. The speech bubble reads “Calvin and Hobbes?”, and it’s captioned “Rule #34: if it exists, there is porn of it. No exceptions.”
With hindsight, those were innocent times. The intervening decades have seen the arrival of Pornhub, now the world’s largest porn site; smartphones, which put free porn in everyone’s pockets, including children’s; and OnlyFans, which disaggregated and disintermediated live sex work.
Porn aesthetics have reshaped women’s bodies, with trout pouts and Brazilian waxes now mainstream, and breast and butt implants nearly so. Meanwhile porn tropes have made their way into bedrooms: young women report that spitting, slapping, choking and anal are now normal expectations on the dating scene.
Anti-porn campaigners tend to have three concerns: what porn does to the performers; what it does to the viewers; and what it does to the wider culture. The zeitgeist is uncongenial to thinking seriously about such issues.

Self-denial and delayed gratification are out of fashion. The rising identitarian mode of politics conceives of people as bundles of innate characteristics — not just race, sexuality and gender identity, but specific and sometimes outré sexual tastes framed as “kinks”, which supposedly come pre-installed. The main task of teenagers and young adults is thought to be self-discovery, not building character.

To this way of thinking, porn cannot teach arousal to distasteful material, only reveal that it is what the viewer was always fated to enjoy. For young people so open-minded that their brains have fallen out, the only sexual no-no is “kink-shaming”. It’s not your fault — or Pornhub’s — if you get off on urinating on people or soiling an adult nappy; indeed self-actualisation means learning that immutable fact about yourself early and acting upon it often. The sole admissible moral consideration concerning sexual encounters is consent.
But as Louise Perry writes in her excellent book, The Case Against the Sexual Revolution, consent is too shallow a concept to capture what is going on in today’s dating market. The pill, dating apps and porn have shaped it to suit only high-status, commitment-phobic men. Women who would prefer porn practices kept out of their bedrooms have little negotiating power. Is a teenage girl really able to say no to booty calls, choking and anal when she knows any boy she fancies has tastes and expectations shaped by porn?
Some campaigners put their hope in measures such as parental controls, age verification and blocking online payment and clearing services. I fear, however, that these will do little hold back the tide of filth. Meanwhile porn is once more being reinvented by technology — in ways that may alleviate the impact on performers, but at the cost of speeding up the pornification of everything.

The latest development is hyper-realistic CGI video of AI-generated characters. These are not “deepfakes”, in which stills or videos of real people are manipulated (often by superimposing female celebrities’ faces on the bodies of porn performers). Rather, they feature original characters created by machine-learning algorithms.
The result will soon be visually indistinguishable from flesh and blood, except in being impossibly beautiful — or simply impossible, endowed with flexibility and stamina beyond human capacity, and proportions beyond the dreams of plastic surgeons.
The technology still has glitches: an image of four ridiculously lovely blonde, bikini-clad cam-girls that went viral on Twitter earlier this year managed the faces and curves well, but fell down when it came to the hands. Even so, it garnered appreciative comments from men who didn’t spot the flaws — and many predictions that artificial beauties created and directed by men will soon displace performers on OnlyFans and other adult-content sites.
Some OnlyFans creators pushed back, saying that their subscribers value a personal connection. And indeed some porn viewers may be willing to pay for something they perceive as authentic, just as people still queue to see the Mona Lisa rather than settling for a faithful reproduction. Or they may value the proprietorial feeling of owning a private performance or direct link with a creator. That is, after all, why NFTs (non-fungible tokens, which create verifiable title to the original of digital art) have taken off.
Female celebrities might still be able to make money from adult performances, should they wish to — though few do now; very beautiful women usually have better options. The market in pretty young nobodies willing to be filmed having sex, however, is surely approaching its expiry date.
How can they compete with artificial women whose expressions, anatomy and every move have been shaped by a man’s insights into other men’s desires? And you’d have to be very naïve to think men who cannot tell or do not care about the difference between faked female orgasms and real ones care much about authenticity and personal connection.

Taking the performers out of pornography would do a great deal to increase the sum total of human happiness. The average OnlyFans creator makes just $150 a month, and few porn performers’ careers last for more than a few years. This is an industry that chews up gullible young women and spits them out with mental and physical injuries from PTSD to anal prolapse.
The shortness of careers in porn is largely because of the “Coolidge effect” — men’s evolutionarily-endowed desire for variety and novelty in sexual partners. It’s named for a possibly apocryphal anecdote about the former American president visiting a farm with his wife. On hearing that a particular rooster mated dozens of times a day, Mrs Coolidge supposedly said, “Tell that to the president.” Later, when he hears the same tale, the president asks “Same hen every time?” and when the answer is no, he says: “Tell that to Mrs Coolidge.”
As for the escalating demands on performers, they are driven in part by an effect common to all media. I don’t think it’s been named, but I think of it as action-filmitis: the repeated one-upmanship in which one film’s car chase is trumped by the next one’s bomb on a bus, and thence in turn by high-speed smash-ups involving helicopters, planes, rockets, satellites and spaceships.
The porn equivalent is bigger, harder, faster and longer. It’s more partners, more implants, more orifices, more bodily fluids, more violence and degradation.

The effect is amplified by the way exposure to any type of content desensitises the audience, and by algorithms that autoplay ever more extreme content. Material that once would have turned viewers’ stomachs becomes ejaculation fodder. AI-generated porn, unconstrained by the need to keep performers at least minimally happy — or even alive — will further accelerate this process.

It remains to be seen just how far AI-driven porn will stray from simulating reality. The female equivalent — written erotica — has always been more ingenious and varied. That is in part because evolution has shaped women to respond to a wider range of sexual cues than men, but also because the written word is less constraining than live-action film.
Given the chance, might large numbers of men like to watch AI-generated women having sex with the werewolves, vampires, demons and human-animal hybrids who stalk romance novels and fanfic? Might they be aroused by plots involving sex magic, soul bonds and time-travel?
I fear rather that the backhanded compliment paid by Rule 34 to the range of men’s erotic imagination will turn out to have been too generous. To adapt Orwell, if you want a picture of the future of porn, imagine a freakishly endowed man pounding into an impossibly pneumatic woman — for ever.
 
Like a lot of articles, it might have had a point if it wasn't filled with the author's bias, in this case - a woman understanding she's approaching the end of the time of easy sex and lashes at the convenient boogieman of AI porn as the reason men won't fuck her wrinkly ass and demand her to have a diet.

It remains to be seen just how far AI-driven porn will stray from simulating reality. The female equivalent — written erotica — has always been more ingenious and varied
"WHEN WE WRITE ABOUT FUCKING ANIMALS IT'S HIGH ART".
 
But as Louise Perry writes in her excellent book, The Case Against the Sexual Revolution, consent is too shallow a concept to capture what is going on in today’s dating market. The pill, dating apps and porn have shaped it to suit only high-status, commitment-phobic men. Women who would prefer porn practices kept out of their bedrooms have little negotiating power. Is a teenage girl really able to say no to booty calls, choking and anal when she knows any boy she fancies has tastes and expectations shaped by porn?

This might be the single most retarded thing I've ever read. If 95% of women are only going to look at 10% of men, as is apparently the case these days, it is hardly the fault of the men taking advantage of the situation.
 
The whole ai art thing is gonna really fuck some people up. We're already seeing the affect of the wide availability of pornography with the best example being trannies and their ilk. But when people can tailor make images and eventually videos of what ever they want, its gonna create a lot more degenerates. I already hate that coomers post their soft core ai pornography of women in any media and call it "fan art."
 
The whole ai art thing is gonna really fuck some people up. We're already seeing the affect of the wide availability of pornography with the best example being trannies and their ilk. But when people can tailor make images and eventually videos of what ever they want, its gonna create a lot more degenerates. I already hate that coomers post their soft core ai pornography of women in any media and call it "fan art."
I think Jersh is right when he says technology is creating a new major evolutionary pressure in favor of humans that are capable of regulating their various pleasure-seeking drives and against those prone to addictive behavior. The latter are just going to become completely dysfunctional.

Don't worry, if you do literally anything to address this some people will cry "slippery slope" and "government overreach" and act as if obscenity and modesty are unheard of concepts.
How would that even work? There are already ten quintillion hours of porn on the Internet - even if you started going after pornographers like pedophiles today, you can't take all that pee out of the pool.
 
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It remains to be seen just how far AI-driven porn will stray from simulating reality. The female equivalent — written erotica — has always been more ingenious and varied. That is in part because evolution has shaped women to respond to a wider range of sexual cues than men, but also because the written word is less constraining than live-action film.
Given the chance, might large numbers of men like to watch AI-generated women having sex with the werewolves, vampires, demons and human-animal hybrids who stalk romance novels and fanfic? Might they be aroused by plots involving sex magic, soul bonds and time-travel?
This makes me wonder if the author is totally unaware of what people have been trying to use GPT and other LLMs for. Dudes on 4chan were trying to write stories about their monster-girl waifus back on GPT-2, and that thing could barely string a coherent paragraph together. I don't know if they'd constitute a "large number", or how many women are using ChatGPT for their Literotica account, but written works aren't going to be immune from this increasing "un-realism" porn trend, even if they were more abstract than your average porno plot to begin with. Visual works just have more mass appeal, of course.

If anything, I'd imagine that a growing number of LLM-powered chatbots with a vaguely-human level of communication, coupled with increasing social isolation, is going to be even more deleterious to the social fabric than the guys jacking off to impossibly-huge AI-generated anime titties, especially if specifically fine-tuned for eroticism. Replika is just the start. You'll be seeing a double-whammy of unrealistic expectations for both physical/intimate and emotional aspects of partners.
 
You can either watch porn and detach yourself fully from women, allowing yourself to live your life free of strife and pain, or you can avoid porn, get taken advantage of by those same women, get married, get divorced, lose your kids and your wealth.

Either way, you end up alone. And either way, you're still just left jerking off.

People who tell me I'm wrong for hating women seem to think there's some mystical formula to convince women to stay committed. Make money. Get fit. Treat her right. There isn't. They're all disloyal, they all leave, and they blame you for it.

Enjoy the porn, gentlemen.
 
People who tell me I'm wrong for hating women seem to think there's some mystical formula to convince women to stay committed. Make money. Get fit. Treat her right. There isn't. They're all disloyal, they all leave, and they blame you for it.
"A bad thing can happen, therefore it does happen in 100% of instances."

This is the same retard logic that bitter women use to portray all men as rapists.
 
If anything, I'd imagine that a growing number of LLM-powered chatbots with a vaguely-human level of communication, coupled with increasing social isolation, is going to be even more deleterious to the social fabric than the guys jacking off to impossibly-huge AI-generated anime titties, especially if specifically fine-tuned for eroticism.
all these new generation of AI tools are just in their infancy, too. once they not only get refined but are set up to be coupled with each other human interaction is going to be in real trouble. imagine LLM tools linked together with SD image generators run through video AI animators...with a $1300 computer you can have a personal only fans AI model for basically free. or, you pay someone $20 a month to talk to your AI sex bot on your phone
 
I think Jersh is right when he says technology is creating a new major evolutionary pressure in favor of humans that are capable of regulating their various pleasure-seeking drives and against those prone to addictive behavior. The latter are just going to become completely dysfunctional.


How would that even work? There are already ten quintillion hours of porn on the Internet - even if you started going after pornographers like pedophiles today, you can't take all that pee out of the pool.
The modern porn industry couldn't really be destroyed realistically thanks to its international nature and the existence of the Internet but could be hindered greatly. The most hypothetical hard-line stance I can see be taken against it is to regulate the industry the death or make participating in pornographic films a crime, legally obligate ISPs within a nation to block access to sites or face punishment for it and if anyone is found out to be accessing porn via VPN or something else then give them a small amount of jail time. This would require a centralized government (unless all the members of a federal system went along with it) and rigorous enforcement to pull off most likely. It would most likely end up as a cat and mouse game similar to the situation in Communist China on the matter.

What I mean more is even in situations where something that makes a slights amount of difference (and may perhaps ultimately be ineffectual) like the American state of Louisiana wanting to try to stop children getting access to sites that consist of at least 30% adult content like porn by requiring ID, they get sued in the claim that such a law "violates the First Amendment":
The Free Speech Coalition is just one of many taking aim at a Louisiana law that went into effect last year.

It requires age verification for certain websites that consists of at least 30% adult content, like porn. The law’s intent is to keep minors off these sights, as the material continues to intensify on an annual basis.

“We’re not opposed at all to efforts to limit minors from accessing adult material, it’s called adult material for a reason. But the problem we have with these laws are they’re not only unconstitutional but they’re ineffective and dangerous,” said Director of Public Affairs for the group, Mike Stabile.

Stabile says the law’s vagueness makes it difficult for websites to abide by the standard to which the law holds them. Adding the 30% threshold these sites are held to is not specific enough on the type of content it’s referring to.

“We don’t know how that’s calculated. Is it the number of posts, the number of pages, the volume of data...I think what you see in this law and the other copycat laws you see in other states is that they’re the product of magical thinking,” Stabile added.

Stabile says instead of trying to legislate how sites should verify age and requiring citizens to subject themselves to potentially having their personal information and web browsing history exposed, the state should take the approach of a device-level filter.

“Fewer than 20% of parents include any type of filter on their kids’ devices. And what the supreme court has said in case after case is that so long as those filters exist, as long as a less restrictive method that doesn’t endanger people’s privacy that doesn’t limit their access to first amendment protected speech exists, these government filters and mandates are unconstitutional,” Stabile explained.
Free Speech Coalition, the advocacy organization for the adult industry, has filed a legal challenge in Louisiana over the state’s unconstitutional age-verification law. The Louisiana law gives the state the power to fine sites with adult content up to $5,000 per day, a direct violation of the First Amendment. FSC filed a similar suit against the state of Utah in May.

Joining Free Speech Coalition in filing the challenge are Elizabeth Hanson, a military veteran and spouse of an active-duty Coast Guard member residing in Slidell; Andrea Barrica, founder of the sex education site O.school; journalist, educator, and content creator Charyn “Ryn” Pfeuffer; and fan platform JustFor.Fans. The parties are represented by Jeffrey Sandman of Webb Daniel Friedlander LLP and D. Gill Sperlein of the Law Office of D. Gill Sperlein.

“These laws give the state the power to harass and censor legal businesses,” says Alison Boden, Executive Director of Free Speech Coalition. “We, of course, support keeping minors from accessing adult content, but allowing the state to suppress certain speech by requiring invasive and burdensome systems that consumers refuse to engage with is simply state censorship.”

Seven states have passed laws requiring sites with substantial amounts of “material harmful to minors” to check users’ government ID or other age and identity verification information in order to access content. But consumers have been reluctant to do so, with more than 90% of users abandoning sites that comply with such laws.

Last year, Louisiana passed a law allowing for a private right of action against adult sites without such age-verification for consumers, and other states followed suit. In June, Governor John Bel Edwards signed a new law give the government the power to fine sites directly — as much as $1M per year.

“The First Amendment protects our right to freely access legal content and ideas without government interference,” says Jeff Sandman, a New Orleans-based counsel for the Free Speech Coalition. “We’re fighting not only for adult businesses but for the right of legal adults to use the internet without government surveillance. Showing your ID in a checkout lane is simply not the same as submitting it to a government database.”

“For decades, our industry has voluntarily and enthusiastically worked with filters that allow parents and others to easily block adult sites,” says Boden. “Those who wish to can do so easily, and the Supreme Court has ruled that this is preferable to government-mandated censorship. We are again asking the courts to reject these unreasonable and dangerous restrictions on a free internet.”

The Louisiana complaint can be found here.

Just read what the Free Speech Coalition representative says and think out in your head what that means in effect. To add to this the Executive Director of the Free Speech Coalition was previously an adult entertainment industry executive and remains completely silent on identification requirements for alcohol or gambling.
 
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the first half of the article is good. Then it veers off into the man hating and loses the plot. This isn’t a man problem, it’s a society problem. But this from the start stood out and I think it’s true:
To this way of thinking, porn cannot teach arousal to distasteful material, only reveal that it is what the viewer was always fated to enjoy
This complete removal of shame, or the idea that some things are wrong, or that you can be trained to find certain stimuli arousing, has been corrosive to society. Make shame great again.
Porn is corrosive to society. But it’s hard to even talk about becasue you get called a prude. Men will always want to look at naked ladies, this isn’t weird or abnormal or even anything to worry about in and of itself, it’s normal.
What’s NOT normal is the oversexualised society we are in, the availability of hardcore degrading porn, and the age and frequency it’s used at. The scale of it.
We are bombarded with sexualised imagery, men and women and boys and girls. It’s everywhere. Kids are seeing hardcore porn via phones at an age that’s too young. And yes, thirty years ago they’d see it too but it’d be a magazine found somewhere and it was different content entirely.
Even weirder is what it’s doing to our tastes. The experience /visual/orgasm feedback loop is incredibly powerful and going back to that quote, weird stuff like inflation and furries is rife now which never was before. All that is created by inappropriate training of the brain and body to find things stimulating. People are being trained like pavlovs dogs to associate specific stimuli with pleasure.
Porn is free, and if it’s free you’re the product. It’s aimed at society to cheapen women and men, to cheapen sexual relations and community. It’s completely corrosive in its modern form.
The author could have explored a lot of this but chooses to go muh patriarchy instead of exploring how society so being damaged. Or even who pushes porn, what their financial trail reveals, etc.
 
The more you have of anything, the less value it can accrue.
But as Louise Perry writes in her excellent book, The Case Against the Sexual Revolution, consent is too shallow a concept to capture what is going on in today’s dating market. The pill, dating apps and porn have shaped it to suit only high-status, commitment-phobic men. Women who would prefer porn practices kept out of their bedrooms have little negotiating power.
Groom your ranks, ladies. Bust out the old slut shaming and gossip. You have the necessary social media tools to turbo charge it.

Taking the performers out of pornography would do a great deal to increase the sum total of human happiness.
This idea has always worried me. There's always some weirdo trying to minmax their good mood.

This might be the single most retarded thing I've ever read. If 95% of women are only going to look at 10% of men, as is apparently the case these days, it is hardly the fault of the men taking advantage of the situation.
They should be gentlemen and not take advantage of the situation! REEEEEEEEEEEEE.

It remains to be seen just how far AI-driven porn will stray from simulating reality. The female equivalent — written erotica — has always been more ingenious and varied. That is in part because evolution has shaped women to respond to a wider range of sexual cues than men, but also because the written word is less constraining than live-action film.
Given the chance, might large numbers of men like to watch AI-generated women having sex with the werewolves, vampires, demons and human-animal hybrids who stalk romance novels and fanfic? Might they be aroused by plots involving sex magic, soul bonds and time-travel?
I fear rather that the backhanded compliment paid by Rule 34 to the range of men’s erotic imagination will turn out to have been too generous. To adapt Orwell, if you want a picture of the future of porn, imagine a freakishly endowed man pounding into an impossibly pneumatic woman — for ever.
What even the fuck? Literally: my porn is better than your porn. When women do it, it's different!

Some campaigners put their hope in measures such as parental controls, age verification and blocking online payment and clearing services. I fear, however, that these will do little hold back the tide of filth.
You know what else to fear about that? Troons using that to pressure you to submission.
 
"A bad thing can happen, therefore it does happen in 100% of instances."

This is the same retard logic that bitter women use to portray all men as rapists.
When something is completely out of your control you should always assume the worst. You can 100% protect yourself from divorce by staying away from women.
 
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