trends

2008: A Traffic Trader's Report

With 2008 now behind us, it's time to give my report on traffic trading patterns over the past year. While I wouldn't call myself "king of traffic trading" I probably trade with more webmasters than most anyone else; my greatest milestone for this year was passing 10,000 registered and active trades.

Although many of you may already be aware of the trends I'll elaborate on, some of you may be entirely in the dark and others may simply have forgotten how important these phenomena are. Most of this information has been culled from the years of traffic logs I've archived since I first started as an adult webmaster.

I've seen a plunge in the number of new thumbnail gallery post sites (TGPs). Many older TGPs have been falling off the map as well. If you're still holding onto your TGP, your days may be numbered unless you adapt and grow. You'll be left behind wondering what happened. More tube sites are trading now as well, especially the bigger ones. The growth of video upload sites has also exploded; as a result of this growth some of these sites needed to upgrade their hosting services in order to keep up.

There were 1.4 billion people who went online in 2008, a number that has continued to grow from year to year. However not all the relevant statistics have increased — the percentage of English-speaking traffic passing through my system has actually fallen. It's not that traffic in the West has decreased; it's only that the East has already surpassed us in sheer numbers and shows no sign of slowing down. If I had one wish for 2009, it would be that more webmasters would get into trading Asian traffic.

General productivity has gone up and a good portion of sites are able to achieve 100 percent or better. It's not like the good old days, but productivity has actually improved in 2008 and I've seen a lot less wasted traffic. We can only hope that's because the consumer is getting smarter.

Improved traffic-trading methods have also helped. Even though I wrote my own system, from time to time I look at the code that others are using and I've noticed that most available trading traffic scripts have been updated. There has also been a decrease in blind link usage, although these links are still popular and able to send more than their share of traffic.

Some other small but notable trends include a general decline in trading cheaters and, my favorite, fewer pop-up ads. However install abuse still climbs.

Another 2008 trend, which may be more relevant than it seems at first glance, is a decline in the quantity of blog-comment spam. When I look at other spam statistics for the end of 2008, I also see a sustained dip in both reported and caught spam. These may seem like small and inconsequential trends but such phenomena can quickly add up.

I've noticed that new webmasters are more educated than ever before. Whatever they don't know they learn quickly, more quickly than the seasoned alumni that I know were able to grasp new skills when they first started out. I only had to explain "productivity" to a novice webmaster once in the course of the entire year. Many of these novices even have advanced skills right out of the gate, and already know how to use PHP and install web applications.

Nothing I've mentioned so far is as important as the number of websites that have stopped sending me traffic all together. Even the first website I started, and later sold, has disappeared.

As a result of these trends, I've been exploring new directions and starting up new projects. At the moment I'm in the minority. If these trends continue, however, I may simply be at the vanguard of traffic traders.

Related:  

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

Manifesting Creator Success Through Action and Intention

As we enter a new year, it’s the perfect time to channel your erotic life-force energy toward your goals — and sex magic offers a powerful way to do so.

Domina Doll ·
opinion

A Creator's Guide to Starting the Year With Strong Financial Habits

Every January brings that familiar rush of new ideas and big goals. Creators feel ready to overhaul their content, commit to new posting schedules and jump on fresh opportunities.

Megan Stokes ·
opinion

Pornnhub's Jade Talks Trust and Community

If you’ve ever interacted with Jade at Pornhub, you already know one thing to be true: Whether you’re coordinating an event, confirming deliverables or simply trying to get an answer quickly, things move more smoothly when she’s involved. Emails get answered. Details are confirmed. Deadlines don’t drift. And through it all, her tone remains warm, friendly and grounded.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Outlook 2026: Industry Execs Weigh In on Strategy, Monetization and Risk

The adult industry enters 2026 at a moment of concentrated change. Over the past year, the sector’s evolution has accelerated. Creators have become full-scale businesses, managing branding, compliance, distribution and community under intensifying competition. Studios and platforms are refining production and business models in response to pressures ranging from regulatory mandates to shifting consumer preferences.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

How Platforms Can Tap AI to Moderate Content at Scale

Every day, billions of posts, images and videos are uploaded to platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X. As social media has grown, so has the amount of content that must be reviewed — including hate speech, misinformation, deepfakes, violent material and coordinated manipulation campaigns.

Christoph Hermes ·
opinion

What DSA and GDPR Enforcement Means for Adult Platforms

Adult platforms have never been more visible to regulators than they are right now. For years, the industry operated in a gray zone: enormous traffic, massive data volume and minimal oversight. Those days are over.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Making the Case for Network Tokens in Recurring Billing

A declined transaction isn’t just a technical error; it’s lost revenue you fought hard to earn. But here’s some good news for adult merchants: The same technology that helps the world’s largest subscription services smoothly process millions of monthly subscriptions is now available to you as well.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Navigating Age Verification Laws Without Disrupting Revenue

With age verification laws now firmly in place across multiple markets, merchants are asking practical questions: How is this affecting traffic? What happens during onboarding? Which approaches are proving workable in real payment flows?

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

How Adult Businesses Can Navigate Global Compliance Demands

The internet has made the world feel small. Case in point: Adult websites based in the U.S. are now getting letters from regulators demanding compliance with foreign laws, even if they don’t operate in those countries. Meanwhile, some U.S. website operators dealing with the patchwork of state-level age verification laws have considered incorporating offshore in the hopes of avoiding these new obligations — but even operators with no physical presence in the U.S. have been sued or threatened with claims for not following state AV laws.

Larry Walters ·
opinion

Top Tips for Bulletproof Creator Management Contracts

The creator management business is booming. Every week, it seems, a new agency emerges, promising to turn creators into stars, automate their fan interactions or triple their revenue through “secret” social strategies. The reality? Many of these agencies are operating with contracts that wouldn’t survive a single serious dispute — if they even have contracts at all.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
Show More