Yahoo! Profits From Porn, Again

SUNNYVALE, Calif. – After nearly two years of going without porn, Yahoo! has tossed its name back into the blue ring and will once again feature adult entertainment advertising.

After yielding to pressure from conservative groups for carrying porn ads on its paid search service, Yahoo! removed all traces of blue content from its sites in 2001, including banner ads and porn-related products, as part of an anti-Internet-porn stance. Yahoo! also eliminated adult entertainment listings from its directory service.

Around the same time Yahoo! nixed its involvement with porn advertorial content, the popular portal attempted to launch an adult shopping category on its network, but eventually pulled that too, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

But just a few months after its $1.8 billion purchase of paid search service Overture, Yahoo! has changed its mind and officially opened the floodgates to the adult world and the bounty of advertiser dollars adult companies bring to the table.

XBiz spoke with several representatives for Yahoo! and none were able to comment on Yahoo!'s decision to re-introduce porn advertisers into its network.

In keeping with statistics that point to the fact that the three most frequently used search word entries are "porn," "XXX," "and "sex," both Google and Overture have known for years now that porn advertising equals big dollars. And now, despite its prior leanings toward keeping its network family-friendly, Yahoo! is getting smart and following the money trail back to the porn industry.

Under Yahoo!'s new advertiser policy, porn ads will only be featured on search engines AltaVista and AlltheWeb.com. Both sites were included in the Overture purchase.

Prior to being acquired by Yahoo!, Overture, much like staunch competitor Google, brought in significant revenue from its advertorial dalliances with the porn industry. In October of this year, Google took a slam from several gun sellers over its company policy to feature porn ad content but not ads for the legal sale of guns.

A Google search for words related to "porn" typically yields 95 pages of adult sites that are accompanied by paid porn-related advertisements in the right hand column. A search for guns yields many pages of search results, but none of those pages have paid advertisements.

At the time, Google would not talk to XBiz about its advertising policy and stood by its original decision.

"As noted in our advertising terms and conditions, we reserve the right to exercise editorial discretion when it comes to the advertising we accept on our site," Google said in a statement. Google further stated that it does not edit the content on its search engine, but that it reserves the right as a privately held company to determine who its advertisers are.

Even America's favorite auction site eBay has acquiesced to America's craving for porn and now features an adult products category and various listings regarding pornography when typed into its search category. Although the eBay adult site requires credit card information before the site can be accessed.

In another major decision this week, Yahoo! announced plans to ad a pop-up blocker to the latest version of its browser toolbar.

According to reports, Yahoo!'s decision is an attempt to more closely align itself with search engine competitor Google and could contribute to the extinction of the pop-up ad as one of the Internet's highly favored modes of online advertising, but also one of Internet users most dreaded online annoyances.

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

2024 XBIZ Europa Awards Categories Announced, Pre-Noms Now Open

XBIZ is pleased to announce the categories for the 2024 XBIZ Europa Awards, the capstone event of XBIZ Amsterdam.

Canadian Officials, Experts Lambast Anti-Porn Senator's Age Verification Bill

Canada’s privacy commissioner warned a parliamentary committee on Tuesday that the expansive age verification bill promoted by vocal anti-porn and anti-sex-work Senator Julie Miville-Dechênel has broad censorship implications and could end up applying to mainstream services such as Netflix.

FSC Director: New Tennessee Age Verification Law is 'Attack on 1st Amendment'

Free Speech Coalition (FSC) Executive Director Alison Boden called Tennessee’s new age verification bill, signed into law by Republican Governor Bill Lee on Tuesday, “an attack not only on the adult industry but on the First Amendment rights of millions of people who engage with adult content online.”

South Carolina Governor Links Age Verification Law, Trans Youth Care Ban

South Carolina’s Republican Governor Henry McMaster held a ceremony on Wednesday combining the signings of the state’s new age verification law for adult content and a controversial ban on gender affirming care for trans youth.

BBW VR Studio BEVR.io Rebrands As 'Blush Erotica VR'

Blush Erotica’s VR studio for BBW performers, BEVR.io, has officially rebranded as BlushEroticaVR.com.

XBIZ Amsterdam to Take Over Park Centraal Hotel Sept 3-5

XBIZ is pleased to announce the return of Europe’s biggest gathering of creators, studio stars and digital media pros: XBIZ Amsterdam, set to take place Sept. 3-5.

Judge in Performers' Blacklisting Lawsuit Says Meta Policy Sounds 'Nefarious'

A California federal judge, overseeing a lawsuit claiming that Meta conspired with OnlyFans to blacklist rival premium fan platforms’ talent, said during a hearing Wednesday that the tech giant’s lack of archiving of its “Dangerous Organizations and Individuals” (DOI) list sounded “nefarious.”

Blush, QueerCrush Partner for Pride Month

Blush has teamed up with QueerCrush to celebrate Pride Month.

SWR Data to Publish 'AI and Adult Industry' Report

Adult industry market research firm SWR Data is publishing a report on artificial intelligence on July 30.

PassionPOV Launches Through YourPaysitePartner

PassionPOV.com has launched through YourPaysitePartner (YPP), joining its sister sites BJRaw.com and GotFilled.com.

Show More