Study: Google Trends Reveals Porn Habits of Political, Religious Conservatives

LOS ANGELES — A study conducted by researchers at Brock University in Ontario, Canada found that those who identify as more religious are more likely to use pornographic search terms on Google than their less religious peers. 

The researchers drew their conclusion after examining two years of data culled from Google Trends broken up by states in the U.S. They reported to have controlled for demographic variables.

“We observed moderate-to-large positive associations between: greater proportions of state-level religiosity and general web searching for sexual content and greater proportions of state-level conservatism and image-specific searching for sex,” the researchers wrote in the abstract.

For the purposes of the study, they divided states into categories, including those that are on the whole more religiously conservative and those that are politically conservative. 

“Prominent political scandals and recent research suggest a paradoxical private attraction to sexual content on the political and religious right,” the researchers wrote, extrapolating from their findings. 

But the researchers found that its two conservative groups exhibited nuanced differences. Most notably, the politically conservative searched for more specific sex terms (e.g., gay sex free porn, xxx), while the religious group sought out more generalized sex terms. 

The researchers do offer an alternative — albeit unlikely — to their findings: that the percentage of people searching pornographic terms is driven up by the liberals and secular living in politically and/or religiously conservative states. 

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 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 News

Opinion: Why Device-Based Age Verification is the Key to Protecting Minors Online

Across the United States, state legislators on both sides of the aisle have attempted to tackle the crucial goal of preventing minors from accessing adult content.

TMZ: VMG's Mike Moz in Talks About 'Potential Collab' With Yeezy

Vixen Media Group’s Mike Moz told TMZ that the company has been discussing a potential collaboration with Kanye West’s brand Yeezy.

Age Verification: FSC's Mike Stabile Reports from the Frontlines

Two years into the religiously-inspired crusade to ban free access to adult material in the U.S. through carefully drafted "age verification" legislation, the constant onslaught of state-by-state proposals and laws — many of them copied from each other — can be hard to follow.

Written Erotica Platform 'Hevvn' Launches

Hevvn, a new platform aimed at erotica writers seeking to publish, promote and profit from their work, debuted Thursday.

Sssh.com's Angie Rowntree Speaks at Brown University

Sssh.com founder Angie Rowntree spoke at a Brown University class last week, discussing several topics related to adult filmmaking.

Online Industry Veteran Joe E. Passes Away

Online industry veteran Joe E has passed away, according to friends and industry associates.

Judge Acquits Backpage Defendants of Most Charges Before 2nd Retrial

A federal judge acquitted former co-owner of Backpage.com Michael Lacey and two co-defendants on most of the counts remaining from the protracted trial launched against the website operators by the Justice Department in 2018.

Adult Time Partners With Animation Studio 3DGspot

Adult Time has signed a deal to stream content from animation studio 3DGspot.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Signs Age Verification Bill Into Law

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp this week signed into law a bill that includes provisions requiring age verification for viewing adult content in Georgia, mirroring legislation being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches by Country for February, March

AEBN has released the popular searches from its straight and gay theaters in more than three dozen countries during February and March.

Show More