<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, pornography]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, pornography]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/pornography http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/pornography <![CDATA['Citizen Journalism' = Porn]]> Dadgummit, porn ruins corporate strategy! CBS is learning the hard way that if you give people a "branded mobile platform" to "upload" their "user-generated content," the "content" they will "generate" is "nekkid womens." The Tiffany Network started a site called CBSeyemobile.com where you, the idiotic consumer, can upload photos. And now they're shocked, shocked to find out that it's full of filth, loose women, and inappropriate public demonstrations of lesbianism! Ad Age broke the story in a Pulitzer-worthy feat of journalism, causing them to (modestly) publish this rather NSFW picture, which we are prepared to say is the most newsworthy photo that has ever graced that august publication's pages:




But you can't say it didn't generate any user dialogue:




Citizen journalism, ladies and gentlemen. [Ad Age]

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<![CDATA[Google indexing "child porn" so the feds don't have to]]> Manually indexing 5 million child porn images a year is hard work, says the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. So Google has stepped in to customize image-search software originally developed for YouTube to the task. The Wall Street Journal has disputed NCMEC's stats on the huge badness of the so-called child porn industry, and Salon.com pulled Debbie Nathan's article defending the public's right to know how much child porn is really online. With Google coming in to assist, accurate data may even emerge. Not that anyone there will be using their 20 percent time to look at the results.

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