damn
how am i going to get a date now? i guess I'll have to start crusing bars off of Metropolitan Avenue again.
Google has removed a sex trade app from its Google Play marketplace – but only after pressure from Members of the US Congress. The Udoopi app bills itself as ‘the first Escorts 2.0 app’ and promises ‘All the paid sex of your city geolocated and always available on your mobile, iPad and computer. JOIN THE SEX CLUB.’ The …
Prostitution and human trafficking are two different things. Stopping trafficking has nothing to do with it being removed, it's the 'moral guardians' who wanted it gone.
The most effective way of stopping trafficking would be to legalise and regulate prostitution. All of the issues with prostitution, exploitation, danger, etc, are caused by it being illegal!
Wrote :-
" The most effective way of stopping trafficking would be to legalise and regulate prostitution"
Why on earth would legalising it stop trafficking? Trafficking is moving people around the world under false pretences, like promising a well paid "respectable" job, but their ending up in something different . Making the end activity legal is hardly going to reduce that traffic, more like increase it as there is one less obstacle for the crook.
Oh I see! Your definition of "trafficking" is moving people under false pretenses to do something illegal at the destination. So if you make that thing legal it ceases to be trafficking! Brilliant.
As for "regulating" it, that's hopeless. The UK has been cutting down on government regulators in all areas in recent years, eg Factory Inspectors, and the few that remain cannot begin to cope with the workload. I know the owner of a small engineering company who runs rings around the Factory Inspector.
But how on earth could a brothel owner bribe an inspector I wonder?
No, Ken, if you actually read the article you will see they carefully avoid actually saying that, because it isn't true. It's the old murder-and-jaywalking argument. They lump prostitution together with slavery and call it "trafficking" in an attempt to make it look like the two are somehow interchangeable, when of course they're not. If you press them, they won't be able to come up with even a single example of slaves being sold (or rented) through Google apps.
Er, no. The article absolutely *does* state that the motive for the complaint is that Google is being used (however unwittingly) to traffic women.
"The National Association of Attorneys General (pdf) says sites that use Google’s ad network “show the tell-tale signs of trafficked victims” and are not mere ‘online dating’ sites which are permitted by current Google Adwords policies."
As you say, if you press them, they may or may not be able to prove this case, but it *is* their case.
In the UK, prostitution is legal. (And this applies for men as well as women). You can sell sex to someone. The legal restrictions come in two areas. One area is to do with "decency". So you can't necessarily solicit people walking down the street legally. You can't go into bars and start 'harrassing' the customers. Morality of the government interfering in this way is debatable, but it's about where you can conduct the business rather than whether or not you can. That can be a bad thing, but equally, you probably wouldn't want to find your street was suddenly an advertising and picking up point for prostitution. These laws allow control of that.
The second and more significant area, is that it is not legal to profit from another person's prostitution. "Living off immoral earnings" is an old-fashioned term, but if a woman is selling sex to people and you are taking a cut of that (or all of it), then you are breaking the law. This too is reasonable. There are various laws in this area, e.g. that define a brothel, etc.
The legal approach to prostitution in the UK was actually reasonable (even if implementation was variable) up until Jacqui Smith got involved in 2008. Jacqui Smith (as Home Secretary) tried to introduce a law that made men who paid for sex from those "controlled for gain" criminals. Basically, if a person was made to be a prostitute by someone else, formerly, the pimp was the criminal, the prostitute a victim (in theory) and the customer sent away without necessarily being charged (ways they could be, but it wasn't an intrinsic element). Jacqui Smith's proposed law changed that. If you (as a John) bought sex from someone and she turned out to have been "controlled for gain", then you would be charged. That's good in theory, but in practice, how can any person know that this is the case. You're naive if you think asking is feasible. Certainly a lot of times a customer ought to or will know, and such people are rapists and should be ashamed of themselves. If you know that a girl has been locked up, threatened, drugged and made to have sex with you, you share the blame for her state. But innocents get caught in the net - how can you know that this is the case in all circumstances? The legislation was watered down a year later (when the Daily Mail had lost interest) and now it's just a mess that is filled with loopholes and ambiguity.
If you ignore the Jacqui Smith fiasco and that implementation of these laws is patchy and inconsistent, the legal approach to prostitution in the UK is a good one.
The best thing that can happen for postitutes in the UK, is to take the power out of the hands of brothel landlords, pimps, "boyfriends", etc. and put it in the hands of the prostitutes themselves. The more a woman can put up her own profile on some online site, the more easily she can be paid directly and even be sure of that payment, the less others can insert themselves between her and the customer which is where the greatest harm often comes in.
I don't know about this particular app. But a popular, known, online prostitution site where women (and men) manage their own profiles and ideally can manage payment through it, e.g. by some pay in advance or escrow or credit points system, is actually a good thing, imo.
And then the police do what exactly? I'm curious. I don't approve of the trade, but the point where an actual crime is committed is subtle, and in some places in the U.S. crime doesn't arise. Thus, various television fly-on-the-wall documentaries on the subject...
Funny.. I do approve of the Trade.. As long as people involved aren't forced ( which opens a whole other can of whoop-ass..).
There's plenty of Ladies of Negotioable Affection plying their trade from home in my town. And at least they are more honest ( and affordable) compared to the rather...involved.. Rules of Dating that has been in vogue since Sex and the City and it's ilk started spreading their poison.
... I'm sure that lots of other actually exploitative ads still appear, but since they're nothing to do with sex, they're ok in the eyes of American politicians.
And of course the fact that many of the ads that are being banned are placed by women who can work independently *without* having to deal with pimps and thus are safer from exploitation etc is ignored...
I was going to upvote for catching the Asia / Thailand thing, but you have spoiled it with your ignorance of Ukrainian history, and its social and political reality.
Not an Ukrainian nationalist... or a Ukrainian at all for that matter. I was just thinking about stones and glass houses, Mr. Geography 101.
The crushing self-discust regarding sexual issues in the US never fails to amaze me.
Shame the US government can't find a way to talk openly and progressively about prostitution.
In the meantime, prostitutes will have to ply their trade in secrecy, in backstreets and advertise in the dodgy corners of the Internet and conveniently (for the authorities, that is) out of the public eye. That way, they don't have to deal with the issues in a grown-up manner.
UM...name any subject the US Government can talk openly and progressively about?
The difference between the USA and Saudi Arabia is basically that one of them is a country obsessed with backward religious ideas, repressive social practices, money and oil; and so is the other, but they exploit women a bit less.
I don't know, but it looks like we're missing part of the story in the congresspersons[*] statement
"Apart from Google’s donations to large human rights organizations,[...]"
Ok, so they're already doing something. Basically giving some of their own money to people who hopefully helps out human rights abuse victims, as opposed to giving someone else's money to various cronies and relatives. But this is beside the point.
"[...]what is your company doing internally to ensure that sexually exploitative advertisements do not appear?"
The point is this: if those ads are "sexually exploitative" [**], is that not because of the unlawful nature of sex occupations in most of the US? It is not the State marginalising those workers, is it?
I mean, "what is your company doing"? Well, what are *they* doing, apart from writing silly, grammatically dubious letters to high-profile companies. Surely not trying to score a cheap point with mindless voters there?
Just wondering.
[*] Since they appear to be a bloke and a lass, I expect this is how this two would like to be addressed. I hope this is PC enough.
[**] I take it that neither of the concerned congresssentientbeings holds a degree in English, neither are they as worried about grammar exploitation as sexual exploitation.
The 'tell-tale signs' of trafficked victims?' What exactly might those be, that they can be spotted just from advertising?
Surely it couldn't be National Association of Attorneys General, an organisation composed entirely of polticians, might be shouting 'trafficking!' at the slightest excuse in order to give its members a political boost? Their full letter provides no more of an explanation.
I've seen this expression a few places now - it makes about as much sense as saying "on your mobile, tablet and Dell" or "on your Galaxy, tablet and computer". Given it's on Android, clearly they do support other tablets - so why a special product-placement advert just for Apple?
No idea on the rights or wrongs of this case. But it's good that, unlike one platform, a single entity does not have ultimate control over software distribution - even in cases where we might disagree with it, I'm not sure a private company should have that control (and if the software is actually illegal in some way, the Governments can still deal with distribution channels in the usual way).
If prostitution is legal in the UK and Canada (now), allowing prostitutes to use Google or Craigslist will actually help to cut out the Pimps (middleman) that are usually responsible for the violence to women and "trafficking".
The girls get the best "Work from Home" scheme avaialble and they get to keep ALL the money becuase they don't have to pay off cops, lawyers or pimps. If they could band together, they could afford health care too!
When can we get rid of all laws that are based in puritanism? Should have happened with the separation of Church & State.
Although this is a small step in the right direction, Google needs to finally respond to the petition that has been asking them to STOP Advertisements of human trafficking (slavery) victims via their Google AdWords.
http://womennewsnetwork.net/2012/04/19/us-congress-microscope-google/
Over 1500 people and 40 organizations throughout the world have spent the last 15 months making this urgent request, and now Google removes only this one small app - but doesn't even mention the much larger question: Does Google profit from the Google Adwords purchased by human traffickers?
Something is wrong here. A link to the petition and other information can be accessed at http://stopslavery2012.com/google.html
- Phil Cenedella
888.206.3264
phil@stopslavery2012.com