The misconception aggravates us in part because porn performers were at odds with Pornhub until very recently. For most of Pornhub’s existence, adult performers viewed the site the same way Metallica viewed Napster: an enterprise that stole our content and let consumers consume it for free. But in the past few years, porn workers have decided to play ball with Pornhub, selling our content and buying ads on the site. Our relationship was improving, but it wasn’t perfect. Long before Kristof started typing about us, porn stars were begging Pornhub to ban unverified users. Many unverified users stole and uploaded our content that we need people to pay for, so we could make a living.
To me that doesn't sound like she's super enthusiastic about PH, but of course I might be wrong. She works with them and does some promotion for them when she poses in items from their clothing line i.e. . She seems to have a far more nuanced view than Asa Akira though.
The article focuses more on the current witch-hunt against Sex Workers by lobby groups and her aim is apparently to make a point that there's a huge difference between regulated porn and human trafficking.
That being said, I'm probably super biased, because I'm a huge fan...
Pornhub does need to be held accountable for a lot of horrible things, copyright infringements (an euphemism for "theft"), offering a platform for people to upload rape videos and making huge profits out of exploiting people.
I don't know if it's a good thing for performers that credit card companies still don't work with Pornhub now that there's finally a chance for the original content creators to get paid?
(A bit off topic, but a question because I never watched porn until like 2 years ago. Is it true or just my impression that tube sites accustom people to more and more extreme content? Even if I searched for something quite vanilla (with cookies and tracking off), I get the most brutal extreme results?)
edit: typo
Having too much sex can cause memory loss. I read that on page 69 in a medical journal on the 4th of May in 2008.