Porn warps culture. I hope credit-card checks nudge adults out of the habit | Christina Patterson | Opinion
Many of us can remember the shock. Naked ladies! In a magazine! A magazine your best friend found in a pile under her brotherâs bed! The ladies wore high heels. They were smiling. They were having a lovely time. But, still, to see those naked ladies, as you giggled with your friend, was a shock.
Porn has moved on a bit since then. Now, when children stumble across it, what they find is â" well, letâs not go there while youâre eating your breakfast or lunch. And they do stumble across it, on their phones. According to a report commissioned by the NSPCC last year, about half of 11- to 16-year-olds have seen explicit sexual material online. They were, the report said, more likely to find it accidentally than to seek it out.
The consequences are pretty awful: children trying to copy what they have seen; children not understanding the concept of consent; children thinking that violence and screaming are a normal part of sex. Expert witnesses told the women and equalities committee last year that girls are now wearing shorts under their skirts, in an attempt to survive the ânormalised culture of sexual harassment in schoolsâ. Children, in other words, are being stripped of their childhoods.
So it has to be good news that from April next year people in the UK will have to prove that theyâre 18 before being allowed to access porn sites. âThe UK,â said digital minister Matt Hancock in a statement to the Commons, âwill have the most robust internet child protection measures of any country in the world.â And this wonât just be a box you tick. There will, apparently, be rules. And companies breaking those rules may be blocked.
Oh, and users may be asked to give credit card details, and perhaps even be charged a small fee. A fee that might appear on a bank statement that might, for example, be seen by your wife. These things will be for a regulator to decide, but the thing is this: your porn habit will now have what tech companies like to call a bigger âfootprintâ, and one that might well make some users think twice.
Goodness only knows what Liberty will say. Or, of course, Julian Assange. Is this the end of freedom as we know it? Is it Tories trying to annex parts of the leftâs nanny state? Is our government trying to ânudgeâ its adult citizens into sexual behaviour and viewing habits that wouldnât bring âa little tearâ to a vicarâs daughterâs face?
The answer to all of those questions is: probably not, not least since a government that canât control a few middle-aged men in its cabinet is unlikely to get very far with 51 million adults. Itâs children they were trying to protect, and the only way to protect those children is to make all users of online porn leap through a few hoops. But if those hoops prove a bit of a deterrent to adult users of porn, then some of us might want to slap Hancock on the back. In a gentle, consensual way, of course.
Porn warps. Iâm sorry if you love it, and find it spices up your sex life, but the evidence is there. Last year, Pornhub had 23bn visits. Which would be fine if all those videos were of men and women having a lovely time. They are not. Some of the most popular search words were âcrying in painâ, âextreme brutal gangbangâ, âsleep assaultâ, âstepmumâ and âteenâ.
Itâs possible, of course, that people watch this stuff and remain loving partners and pillars of society. Itâs more likely that they donât. Iâve interviewed a number of men whose porn addiction, and sexting habits, have lost them their marriage, their jobs and their homes. These are the extremes, of course, but thereâs not much doubt that porn is changing our culture. Robert Weiss, one of the worldâs leading experts on digital sexual behaviour, told me that weâre âevolving to be a less intimate cultureâ. He thinks machines will soon supply a lot of our sexual needs. He didnât say whether or not they would be programmed to scream.
The internet has already changed so much of our culture. We rage. We shriek. We hate. We do this in the name of âfree speechâ. We buy things with a click. We swipe for sex. We want instant everything, all the time. And we want it all to be free.
When Tim Berners-Lee imagined âan open platform that would allow everyone, everywhere, to share information, access opportunities, and collaborate across geographic and cultural boundariesâ, he probably didnât dream of a wild west that would do us so much harm. We have laws to protect us from harm. Yes, those laws curb our freedom. And I canât wait for the day when weâre all a little bit less free.
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