This is too great, I had to double post here and the googles.
Expectation: Severely restrict access to porn on a national level = people will watch less porn., and we'll have a more moral nation, yay!
Reality: severely restrict access to porn on a national level = PEOPLE START MAKING THEIR OWN PORN
Expectation: Severely restrict access to porn on a national level = people will watch less porn., and we'll have a more moral nation, yay!
Reality: severely restrict access to porn on a national level = PEOPLE START MAKING THEIR OWN PORN
"In China and in Hong Kong, you do have people who upload their own videos and photographs. Sometimes on designated sites like the Pornotube, which is the Youtube for pornography. These sites are open to all people in the world. Of course, people from mainland China cannot get access to these sites and it is still much more uncommon for people to participate in DIY porn movement. But we’ve noticed that younger people have started making their sex videos in secret places or hidden places, like empty classrooms, medical rooms, elevators, or just corridors. This kind of porn is definitely being made in China right now and being uploaded, because I found lots of videos compiled or archived on various websites. For sure the movement is very scattered and people say it’s quite juvenile. But I think it is a sign of change.
First of all, I see liberation in the fact that people can have access to pornography and the second point is that, people can express their cultural and sexual identities through pornography. So in these young people’s videos, it’s powerful for them to have sex somewhere and film it and upload it and share it, despite the fact that this is totally forbidden and officially banned in China. But nevertheless it’s happening. We shouldn’t think it so seriously, in terms of political liberation because after all these people are just having fun. But they are breaking law by being naughty in two different ways, by doing sexually what they want, and by uploading it. Their excitement comes from that double kind of breaking the rule."
Katrien Jacobs (China: Sex, Censorship and the Rise of ‘People’s Porn’ · Global Voices)