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The World Wide Web is very much like a cocktail party: You aren't sure who you'll meet, & drinking is optional.
In the realm of the Adult Webmaster, this is especially true. For like most parties, there are always the concerns of under-age attendees, party crashers (hackers), and those dreaded conservative neighbors who may call the cops.
Like any good host (or guest), we must be wise about our guest list ~ we should never tease minors or lure them into our festivities. We ought to do our best to not only be on the look out for the uninvited, but have plans in place in the event we do need to toss someone out as well as repair the damage done by such unwelcome guests. And we should do our best to make sure our party doesn't disturb our neighbors, or otherwise incite them into causing us legal problems. And if one angry person does make the call, we should have all our necessary papers at the ready (2257 etc), so that the interruption doesn't last long.
Thou Shalt Not Search Adult Tumblr Blogs: If you’ve got an adult blog on Tumblr, there’s a good chance Tumblr uses robots.txt to exclude the search engines from indexing it. Did you know that?
Via Craftypants Carol
Advertising for adult content is disallowed, except for advertisers that have been accepted into the Adult Advertising Program. The following markets support the Adult Advertising Program: Canada, France, Germany, Republic of Ireland, United Kingdom, and United States.
This infographic lists 26 things you should consider before developing your website. These are things to think about before you actually start the process.
Via Kenneth Mikkelsen, Deanna Dahlsad
Our top models earn over $100000 a year and you can too! FetishModels.com has proven that you don't have to go hardcore or explicitly nude to make money!
Prostitutes call foul on a recent report that Facebook is the "new Craigslist." They give us the real scoop...
Robin Good: If you are about to be interviewed online, or need to record a quality video talk with a prestigious special guest, here is a good and comprehensive guide to everything you need to know. From quality webcam alternatives, to microphones, lighting and backdrops, and recording software, Houston Neal has put together a useful reference that is useful for both PC and Mac users alike. Useful. Resourceful. 8/10 Full guide: http://blog.softwareadvice.com/articles/crm/how-to-capture-great-web-interviews-1101212/
Via Robin Good, Rebeca Zuniga, Timo Ilomäki, Jim Lerman, Ileane Smith, Deanna Dahlsad
If you've been peeved that you can't pay for clicks to your adult site, rejoice! Paid search only accounts for 6% of total clicks from search engines versus natural search at 94% of clicks, according to research from GroupM UK carried out with Nielsen.
Via Deanna Dahlsad
I believe search engine optimization (SEO) is best and primarily served via the content you write. If you believe that, you may stop reading; but if you aren’t convinced… People...
Via Deanna Dahlsad
Last December I wrote of the need for more brand ambassadors.
Via Deanna Dahlsad
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The Pornocalypse Comes For Us All: Recently I’ve been seeing lots of tweets and headlines suggesting that Amazon is going through another round of cracking down on porn ebooks, generally burying them deeper and making them harder to f...
Via Craftypants Carol, Deanna Dahlsad
American journalism has a beginner's complex when it comes to fucking. Gawking instead of touching, overthinking instead of cozying up, giving tips instead of giving tip. One in five Americans view porn, and between a quarter and a third of all global Web searches are for porn. Yet magazines and newspapers keep sex at a gigantic arm’s length. For an industry stuck at second base (specifically, side boob), there’s finally a foreshadowing of journalism’s sexy coming of age. Thanks to foreigners, porn and women. But mostly porn, in the hands of women. The foreigners are key. Relentless, fast, dismissive of America’s tormented sex drive. Canadian-born, New York-based Vice investigates Swiss brothels, tests out homemade sex toys and runs an entire Not Safe For Work section next to Travel and Tech. Gawker Media, founded by a British-Hungarian, launched, ran and released Fleshbot, a blog with more ass-fucking than “Before Night Falls.” Its Jezebel site is always talking sex and publishes gems like the “March Madness Sex vs. Chocolate” competition, a clever play on the annual month-long U.S. college basketball tournament. (Blow jobs easily beat hangnail fingerbang in the first round.) Ten years ago, Vice and Gawker were considered journalism backwaters. Now they’re valued at $1 billion. Sex should already be everywhere in American journalism. The media are part of a sensual family of artists, singers, musicians, novelists, writers, filmmakers and poets. Every song is about foreplay, fucking or fallout; “Fifty Shades of Grey” is the latest bestseller and a painter’s raison d’etre is the nude. I remember in Dorothy Allison’s “Bastard Out of Carolina,” the leading lady, Bone, masturbates against a tree limb at 12 or 13. That’s honesty you’ll never read in a newspaper, which is ironic, because papers are supposed to reflect the public’s interests. Journalism’s always been tied down by two prude dudes: America, who decided that political gossip and violence stories are more acceptable than naked booties. And advertising, who always bows to political heat or gets up in arms when an ad is placed too close to sex. As if a Chevy is more sacred than fucking. Scram, guy! Then the Internet came, tsunami-style, to rearrange the madness. Conservative as an ism is suddenly floating upside down in a bottomless sea of everyone. Every second, another voice, another layer, another site, a billion times over. The Internet unmoored civilization’s three deepest anchors: Money’s no good here, everything’s free; assault is impossible; and property doesn’t exist. The Web is generally a very kind place: LOL cats conquered the world without displacing a soul. We get a much more beautiful equilibrium between masculine and feminine tastes, especially when it comes to sex. By 2010, one in every two-and-a-half Web pages was porn. Two years later, hard core is giving way to more sensual porn, women are taking over the director’s chair and sites like Viv Thomas, X-Art and Hegre refine the pace.
Via BeUnity
A status given to an ad when it or its website is considered to have adult content that might not be appropriate for all audiences. These ads can still appear, but only in certain situations.
The group selling .xxx addresses online says it makes it easier to identify adult content and block it for children. But that won't happen if adult entertainment companies don't move their sites — and some of them hate the new suffix.
Via Luca Baptista, BodyFlashWorld.com
Once Snip.It pulled the plug on the content curation site, thereby pulling the rug out from under the feet of content curators like myself, I began speaking with the fine folks at Scoop.it
Via Deanna Dahlsad
On Nov. 26, at 9:30 in the morning, two very bright lawyers will square off before U.S. District Judge Michael M. Baylson in a high-rise courthouse in Philadelphia to conduct a hearing about whether the Free Speech Coalition's constitutional objections to 18 U.S.C. § 2257 inspections, based on the Fourth Amendment's prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures, can go forward - or whether those allegations - and this set of arguments about the 2257 scheme's ultimate constitutionality - will be dismissed.
Cuties Tools offers professional websites for escorts and other tools to help escorts maximize their earnings. If you want a professional custom website for your escort, massage, or escort agency business, Cuties Tools is the perfect solution.
Via PunterPress
"Last year Mark Zuckerberg spoke out against email marketing claiming that in the future, email will be replaced by message-based services such as Facebook. While it’s true that we now have more choice when it comes to our preferred method of communication, this doesn’t mean that email no longer has a place. In fact, research has shown that the use of email in our marketing and CRM activities has grown significantly over the past few years. And let’s not forget that in order to sign up to Facebook you still need an email address." [If you bemoan the fact that adult services, sex workers, adult sites, etc. are (largely) unwelcome at social sites, this should lift your spirits.]
Via Deanna Dahlsad
But what does curation mean? How is that really different from blogging? And why on earth would we need another means of adding to information overload? [Help for those working with sex on the 'net.]
Via Deanna Dahlsad
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