Yesterday, Bauer announced that softcore mags People and Picture will join Loaded, FHM and Nuts under the big teenager’s bed in the sky by the end of the year.
The axing of these softcore porn titles marks the end of an era: Picture turned 30 last year, while People has been publishing since the 1950s. The decision of service stations and 7-Elevens to cease stocking the mags, after pressure from various places, proved the final death knell. People‘s readership has dropped to 41,000 and Picture to 31,000.
In the digital age, adult material faces the same commercial issues as movies, music and news: you can get it very easily online without paying a cent. As the BBC points out, appetite for anonymous access to pornography was one of the driving forces of many innovations such as video file compression and user-friendly payment systems — and in business models, such as affiliate marketing programs.
According to internet analytics firm Alexa, Pornhub — which got 28.5 billion visits in 2017 alone — is the 27th-most popular website in the world, and the 18th-most popular within Australia. If you are willing to pay, websites exist that will customise their content to you; you can get glamorous young women to destroy your stamp collection on film, if that’s what you’re into.
In the face of all that, what’s surprising here is not that these magazines have closed down, but that tens of thousands of Australian adults, in the year of our lord 2019, are still so devoted to two physical softcore porn mags.
Associate Professor Paul Maginn, who has studied online porn consumption in Australia, told Crikey one reason these mags survived so long may be because there is a small population of consumers — usually older men — who collect hard copy porn because they don’t want to leave any kind of digital footprint regarding their habits.
Might be time someone told them about incognito mode.
Incognito mode does nothing to shield your reading/viewing history from ANYONE who has access to your Internet network infrastructure.
Your ISP can very easily generate a list of your viewing history.
“But I use a VPN,” you say? If you use a VPN, your VPN provider can generate the list … and a VPN provider easily links your history to a credit card. (Also, a VPN is a honeypot. Want to find people who enjoy bestiality porn? Run a large VPN provider.)
“But I use a prepaid credit card.” How did you top-up that card? What ID did you provide when you purchased it initially?
On the other hand, pay cash for a magazine in a service station? You only leave a record on a video feed, and most of this footage is not subject to facial recognition. Well … not yet, at least …
Add to this that anytime the government wants to destroy your public reputation by outing your browsing history because, say, you’ve embarrassed them by whistleblowing, then courtesy of our data retention laws, they can. In many cases, without even needing a warrant.
I reckon the only reason that’s not commonplace already, is because so many of our pollies while away the lonely Canberra nights huddled in front of a screen and they don’t want to let the genie out of the bottle, so to speak. (Ew. There’s a few dozen mental images I could have done without.)
There are still lots of people who don’t own an internet phone or have home internet. Probably more than the 72000 buying those two mags.
What sort of people complain about mags (with suitably restricted covers) being sold at petrol stations ? Pornhub apparently rates much higher on another analytics site and more readily accessible than donning the raincoat and schlepping down the street.
Sorry guys, its about the cryptic crosswords. My nana used to buy them.
The magazines also have a (perhaps dubious) comic approach served up in an Australian vernacular: which may not be so easily found online.