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Blue Tube
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Four Reasons to
Keep Your Children Away From YouTube This Summer
By Matthew
Philbin and Dan Gainor
Executive Summary
Full Report|
Pdf Version
After criticism from pro-family groups, the popular
video site YouTube announced plans in December 2008 to become more “family
friendly.” Six months later, that site remains a haven for soft-core
pornography, obscenity and links to outside porn sites. Despite claims by
parent company Google that it would improve, a child surfing the site today
could find a universe of objectionable content with little difficulty.
The Media Research Center’s Culture and Media Institute
studied YouTube to determine the prevalence of pornography, obscenity and other
content inappropriate for children. CMI looked at the most popular search
results for the word “porn” – 157 videos that each had more than 1 million
views. The analysis showed that while actual nudity has been blocked by YouTube,
the site is filled with videos, images and spoken and written language that
children should not be exposed to and many adults would find objectionable.
Those range from clips of the Disney movie “Aladdin”
– dubbed with four-letter words and a porn movie theme – to scenes from actual
porn films.
Major Findings Include:
- YouTube is for Porn: YouTube’s own guidelines
state that it is “not for pornography or sexually explicit content.” But
there’s sexual material – including soft-core porn – all over the site. (A
search of the word “porn” returned more than 330,000 results.) While there
is little actual nudity, most of these videos are highly sexually suggestive
and include explicit language and themes from lesbianism to “gangbangs.”
- Top ‘Porn’ Videos Watched 438 Million Times:
Out of the 157 “porn” videos that received more than 1 million views, almost
two-thirds (101 of 157) advertised themselves to be actual pornography.
Those 101 videos had 438,318,147 combined views – or 1.38 views for every
man, woman and child in the United States.
- YouTube is a Marketing Vehicle for Porn Merchants:
Pornographers of all kinds used YouTube to drive traffic to their sites and
products. Twelve percent (12 of the 101) of videos mentioned porn stars by
name or were obvious clips from porn movies. Others were interviews with
porn stars and reports from porn industry conventions. In addition, there
were thousands of videos and repeated comments that served only as
advertisements for hardcore porn sites, “dating” and escort services, and
phone sex lines. Among the comments on these videos were numerous offers to
“text me and let’s talk dirty.” All of those were available to anyone
viewing the site.
- Obscenity Commonplace: If your children can
read, YouTube could teach them a whole new vocabulary. Profanity and every
imaginable obscenity, including graphic sexual language, were rampant on the
site. The “F***” word alone appeared in the titles of some 169,000
individual videos.
- GayTube: Gay content, including gay propaganda,
gay pornography and ads for gay escort services are easily found. There are
11,900 gay channels on YouTube, including 459 “gay porn” channels. A search
of “gay porn” returns 52,700 individual videos.
Recommendations
The Culture and Media Institute recommended ways for both
YouTube and parents to better cope with offensive online video.
What Parents Can Do:
- Adults should never let children search or surf
YouTube without constant supervision.
- Parents should remember that even seemingly harmless
videos and search terms can have disturbing results for children – including
obscenity and links to outside porn sites.
- Parents must be aware that YouTube is more than just
videos; children can be exposed to objectionable content in comments and ads
that appear on the site.
- Parents with YouTube accounts should not divulge their
username/password to their children, and must be careful to log out of the
account when they’re done using it.
- Parents must find out what access restrictions and
safety precautions their children’s schools have in place, and let teachers
and staff know of their concerns.
What YouTube Can Do:
- The company must further tighten its
obscenity/sexually suggestive content standards and cooperate with
pro-family groups to accomplish this.
- The company should take the advice The Parents
Television Council gave it in December 2008, recommending “formulating and
adopting a thorough, accurate and transparent content rating system which
would allow a parent to block a child from viewing age-inappropriate
material.”
- YouTube must remove obscene user comments from its
videos, and bar repeat offenders from posting comments.
- The company must construct a far more formidable
barrier than its current 18+ category, and then make sure all objectionable
content is behind it.
- YouTube must get out front and be more willing to talk
to critics in the media and in family organizations to address concerns.
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