Category Archives: Child Abuse

How much does the global pornography industry profit each year?

The global pornography industry is comprised of many sex-related businesses, including both legal and illegal physical and digital video sales, cable, pay-per-view, phone sex, exotic magazines, and novelty products. Altogether, the industry is estimated to profit around $97 billion annually. Of this total, approximately $13 billion comes from the United States, $3 billion of which is from internet pornography alone.

Put another way, every second, $3,075.64 is spent on the pornography industry.

One of the fastest growing global markets is child pornography. The UN estimates that the global child pornography industry alone profits upwards of $20 billion every year, $3 billion of which is related to the purchasing of pornographic photos. The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children estimates that 20% of all internet pornography is child pornography.

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Do many of the women in pornography have a history of childhood sexual abuse?

Yes. It is estimated that the women in pornography are three times likelier to have been sexually abused as children than in the general population. Based on one survey of performers in the pornography industry, 37% of the women were raped as children.

Additionally, it is worth noting that women in the pornography industry are twice as likely to have grown up poor than in the general population. As research has proven that financial destitution significantly increases the likelihood of being subjected to sexual exploitation, it is no surprise that perpetrators of sexual violence, including pornographers and pimps, frequently target economically vulnerable women and children (and sometimes men).

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What is the average age of first exposure to pornography?

The average age of first exposure to pornography (male and female) is lowering each year.

As of 2005, one study found that the average age of exposure was between 13 and 17 years old. As of 2011, the average age was 12. Today, the average age is 11.

Boys are exposed to pornography at higher rates than girls. One study in the United States found that by the age of 12, 53% of all boys had exposed to pornography compared to 28% of girls. In Australia, however, approximately 70% of boys and 53.5% of girls were exposed by the age of 12, and 100% of boys and 97% of girls by the age of fifteen.

Two out of three children are first exposed to pornography involuntarily (meaning, one in three seeks it out the first time). Typically, children are exposed via misleading websites, friends, and adults.

(Any analysis of the harms of childhood exposure to pornography [or, for that matter, the harms of a society that cultivates and rewards the ideologies of pornography and unwanted sexualization] demands exhaustive consideration and care, and thus won’t be covered here but in a separate page or series of pages. Though the effects are clear to those with a basic understanding of socialization, trauma, and childhood development, the rate by which the age of first unwanted exposure to pornography continues to decrease unabated. The effects on exposure of pornography on children, in addition to the real world harms pornography and a pornified culture perpetrates against women, must be studied, recognized, and acknowledged on a massive scale in order for anything to be done. Before we can take care of our young, we must be able to look in the mirror and recognize ourselves and what we have done.)

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