FOSTA Kills Ads for Dan Savage's Hump! Amateur Adult Fest

FOSTA Kills Ads for Dan Savage's Hump! Amateur Adult Fest

CYBERSPACE — Targeted online advertising by the Hump! Film Festival has been kneecapped by FOSTA/SESTA, according to festival founder Dan Savage.

Savage, a noted sexpert and activist, founded the festival as a platform for self-expression. But the after-effects of the passage of FOSTA/SESTA have left festival organizers unable to advertise their event on Facebook and Instagram.

“Hump is in its 14th year, and has only gone from strength to strength, celebrating sex-positivity for all bodies, gender expressions and identities,” writes tech blog BoingBoing.

“However, Hump is largely dependent on targeted Facebook ads for ticket sales, and thanks to Facebook's overreaction to the admittedly terrible SESTA/FOSTA law passed by the U.S. Congress in 2018, it will not accept ads for the festival any longer, despite the fact that the ads themselves are G-rated and are only targeted at adults.”

Savage used last week's episode of his “Savage Lovecast” podcast to lay out the problem in greater detail.

“So there’s porn on the internet. Even in our post-FOSTA/SESTA dystopia, you can find porn on the internet,” he said “A quick refresher: FOSTA/SESTA was signed into law last year and imposes fines and prison time on owners and managers of tech companies whose platforms are, whether the owners know it or not, being used by sex workers. The law is so broadly worded that it not only made it impossible for sex workers to share information online about safety, to find clients and, crucially, to warn each other about dangerous clients, it prompted major tech companies to start censoring sexual content, just to be on the safe side — to protect themselves, not to protect sex workers.”

FOSTA/SESTA is so “broadly and vaguely worded” that “tech companies immediately began pulling out all sorts of sexual content. It’s why we don’t have Craigslist personals anymore; it’s why Tumblr banned adult content. It’s also why sex work is now more dangerous than it was a year ago.”

Savage notes that “Facebook no longer allows ads for, quote-unquote, adult content. You can still buy ads on Facebook for family planning and contraception, but those ads must focus on, and I quote, ‘the contraceptive features of the product and not on sexual pleasure.’ Facebook didn’t have to do that to be in compliance with FOSTA/SESTA. And as a result of the ban on adult content, we can no longer advertise on Facebook and Instagram, which Facebook also owns. And this is bullshit.”

He describes Hump! as featuring “short films made by amateurs. You know how a lot of people say they dislike porn because it’s dehumanizing? Not the porn at Hump! The porn you see at Hump! is very deeply humanizing porn. Hump! films are made by friends and lovers and the films range from comedic shorts to animation to erotica to softcore to hardcore.”

However, the festival’s Facebook business account was “shuttered” and the event is “no longer allowed to advertise or promote or let people know about Hump! on Facebook or Instagram,” Savage said. “Hate, violence, murder — all of that has a home on Facebook. But human beings, friends and lovers, expressing their affection for each other, enjoying themselves with their genitals out sometimes, no, we cannot have that! And that’s not what we were putting on Facebook! We weren’t putting Hump! films on Facebook; we were just advertising screenings of the Hump! film festival on Facebook. So, while there’s porn all over the internet, we can’t advertise our screenings in movie theatres — Hump! films are never released online — because, I don’t know why exactly.”

The ban not only makes it more difficult for audiences to discover the festival. “It makes it harder… for people to create and experience a different kind of porn, but also harder for people to realize that, yeah, under that thin veneer of difference, we are all the same-ish," he said.

“It seems incredibly hypocritical to me to ban advertising for a thing as good and fun and, for some people, healing as Hump! because you want to keep information about this particular kind of porn (and) ads about that kind of porn off Facebook and off Instagram, which, for now, means off the internet.”

Savage urged listeners to follow Hump! on their social media channels and to subscribe to the festival’s official newsletter to stay up-to-date. “We can’t advertise on Facebook and Instagram, but we are stuck with Facebook and Instagram right now. And we’re relying on you to help us bring Hump! to new audiences by sharing on your social media platforms,” he said.

Visit Hump! online here and follow its Twitter here. Find Savage on Twitter here.

Copyright © 2025 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

Eroutique Relaunches Site Through YourPaysitePartner

Eroutique has relaunched its official website through YourPaysitePartner (YPP).

Update: Pornhub Will Not Block Ohio, Despite AV Law

Pornhub parent company Aylo will not block access to its websites in Ohio, despite new state age verification rules that came into effect Sept. 30.

Pineapple Support, Pornhub to Host 'ADHD-Friendly' Support Group

Pineapple Support and Pornhub are hosting a free online support group for performers with ADHD.

Judge Dismisses Some Claims in 'Children of Pornhub' Trafficking Suit

A United States district judge on Friday dismissed some but not all claims against Aylo in a long-running case involving CSAM allegations featured in the influential 2020 New York Times article “The Children of Pornhub.”

FSC Sets Key Dates, Qualifiers for December Board of Directors Election

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) today announced key dates and qualifiers for its upcoming Board of Directors election.

RedGIFs Launches New 'Studio' Creator Platform

RedGIFs has launched its new Studio creator platform.

Arcom to Expand AV Enforcement to Smaller Adult Sites

The president of French media regulator Arcom revealed on Thursday that the agency plans to escalate its enforcement of age verification rules to include smaller adult sites, starting in late 2025 or early 2026.

Getting the Band Together: The All-Star Team Behind 'Once Upon a TS Summer'

“I should have died on impact.” That’s Blake Lovely talking about a Nevada car accident she was in last December. We’re discussing her new feature, “Once Upon a TS Summer,” which premiered Thursday — but Lovely doesn’t just want to talk about the movie itself. She wants to explore the entire process that took her from being a relatively new, rising performer to becoming the driving force behind one of the major trans titles to drop in 2025.

Ariel Demure Stars in Final Installment of GenderX Feature 'Transpirella'

Reigning XMAs Trans Performer of the Year Ariel Demure stars in the final installment of GenderX's "Vampirella” parody "Transpirella,” directed by Jim Powers.

Blake Lovely Makes Her Directorial Debut for Grooby

Blake Lovely has made her directorial debut with "Once Upon a TS Summer," the latest release from Grooby.

Show More