Craigslist Kills Erotic Services Ads, Will Launch Adult Section 390
CWmike writes "Submitting to mounting legal pressure, Craigslist has announced that it will remove the Erotic Services category from its classified advertising Web site within seven days. The move comes just two and a half weeks after Jim Buckmaster, CEO of Craigslist, told Computerworld that the company had no intention of removing the category. While it's taking down the category, it will be launching a new category called Adult Services, for which each posting will be manually reviewed before it appears. 'Unsurprisingly, but completely contrary to some of the sensationalistic journalism we've seen these past few weeks, the record is clear that use of Craigslist classifieds is associated with far lower rates of violent crime than print classifieds, let alone rates of violent crime pertaining to American society as a whole,' said Buckmaster in a blog post today. 'We are optimistic that the new balance struck today will be an acceptable compromise from the perspective of the constituencies, and for the diverse US communities that value and rely upon Craigslist.'"
Unemployment Rates (Score:5, Funny)
Oh no, now we're sure to see a spike in the unemployment rates as all the hookers file as first-timers.
Re:Unemployment Rates (Score:5, Insightful)
From what I read of CL's lawyers earlier releases, it seemed that they could indeed have withstood and won any court battles that would have come their way. I was hoping some good precedents would have been set....
Re:Unemployment Rates (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sure lots of slashdotters were hoping CL would fight this one. Without easy access to hookers, many slashdotters would never get laid.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Unemployment Rates (Score:5, Interesting)
The practical effect of this will be nil; anyone who wants to advertise prostitution will just find another web site, probably one located outside the USA.
Don't underestimate the ability for current CL users to 'create' their own language when posting ads.
My guess; not much changes in the 'services', just what they are called.
Re:Unemployment Rates (Score:4, Insightful)
Not to mention I'm completely baffled how the AGs are up in arms about these sections, calling them 'dangerous', when the Casual Encounter sections are the real ones filled with scary people.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't it odd that we are essentially funding an entity to violate our Constitutional rights, and then further funding it to fight to defend its offense without end?
Weird to think about...
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Oh no, now we're sure to see a spike in the unemployment rates as all the hookers file as first-timers.
Sure, but just imagine the kind of stuff they will write in the "Previous Positions" section of the work history forms...
Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
I know it. there is a site where people are telling everyone they are committing a crime, and how to get in touch with them, and they want to shut it down?
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course because you're outlawing something you have no business outlawing, you drive it underground and force up prices (thus enticing more people into the act you want to ban) and make it dangerous for all involved. Instead of blasting CL for allowing the ads, they should be rethinking the law making the ads illegal in the first place. It's not like legalizing this would lead to the collapse of society... even the Church at one point allowed it.
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Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
"Male seeking... anything."
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Informative)
In the words of George Carlin: "Selling is legal, fucking is legal. Why isn't selling fucking legal?"
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Being paid to have sex IS legal... as long as you videotape it and sell the videos.
Sort THAT one out.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
Anything*
*that can fit down the staircase and through the door to my parents basement.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
As long as they tax it like any other business or income then there isn't an issue.
This is already a set precedent as the brothels in Nevada are taxed federally. The girls working there have the federal withholding.
Now just imagine, prostitution and pandering is made legal. There will be a potentially more open plying of the trade. This increases accessibility and potentially utilization, thereby potentially increasing the underlying workforce.
So, if you have legalized prostitution and pandering, some of
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
Why in the hell is the government entitled to tribute for refraining from interfering in something that's none of their business in the first place?
Does the government have a right to tax at all? Do they have a right to tax some things, but not this? Why would this be none of their business? Is anything their business to tax?
If you want things ( maybe one day recreational drugs and prostitution ) to stay safe and enjoyable , we need taxes for police, courts, FDAs, and public infrastructure like roads, electricity, and sewers, etc.
For all their self-righteousness, I never have heard of any libertarians moving to the middle of the Amazon or Somalia. Somalia has been free of the tyranny of government and taxes going on twenty years now.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not like legalizing this would lead to the collapse of society... even the Church at one point allowed it.
If by "this" you mean prostitution, rather than the posting of ads, then I venture that the collapse of society isn't the whole issue here.
Does society collapse when a hooker gets beaten up by a weirdo? Does society collapse when a bunch of Chinese girls get brought over in a shipping crate to work in a brothel? Does society collapse when a college girl's boyfriend tells her that if she wants to keep the coke coming she needs to turn a few tricks, and it will only be just once or twice? Or, when these things happen, does society just keep on humming the way it always has and nobody needs to give a damn, yet alone raise a finger?
The problem I have is not with prostitution per se, but with half-assed attempts to decriminalize prostitution that contribute to making the situation worse. There's a lot of human misery involved in the sex trade right now. Maybe legalizing prostitution will do away with all of it -- for the sake of argument, let's assume that it will. But until prostitution is really and honestly legalized, for Craigslist to allow posting of prostitution ads now is to support the sex trade as it exists right now, and I can't say I'm really for that.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Informative)
Does society collapse when a hooker gets beaten up by a weirdo? Does society collapse when a bunch of Chinese girls get brought over in a shipping crate to work in a brothel? Does society collapse when a college girl's boyfriend tells her that if she wants to keep the coke coming she needs to turn a few tricks, and it will only be just once or twice?
I'm not sure about your Chinese girls in a shipping crate example, I think that's more of a customs issue than anything else. It shouldn't be permitted to ship human beings in a crate regardless of why you're doing it.
As for the hooker getting beat up by a weirdo, if prostitution is legal she would call the cops just like anybody else who got beaten up by a weirdo during the course of their job.
As for the college girl, if her coke was available for a reasonable price at the local pharmacy then it's just her choice whether she has sex for money or gets a job in the dining hall or the student center. If her boyfriend is pressuring her into prostitution she can certainly say no. If he uses force she could just call the cops. If she knows that her prostitution and coke use are perfectly legal why wouldn't she call the cops about her abusive boyfriend. Its the wars on drugs and prostitution that keep her more afraid of the cops than of her abusive boyfriend.
Of course it wouldn't be a bad idea to spend some tax money on offering free rehab clinics for people who want to quit using drugs (or indeed cigarettes or alcohol). You could pay for a heck of a lot of rehab clinics with the money saved by not running the police departments as paramilitary organizations engaged in a permanent war with heavily armed drug dealers.
I personally have no interest in using drugs. I don't like anything stronger than ibuprofen and I'll often just put up with a headache rather than taking a tylenol. But I don't like the government prohibiting people from voluntarily taking whatever drugs they wish. It's one thing if somebody slips something in your drink, then you should be able to press charges and have them thrown in jail. But if you put the pill in your own mouth or the needle in your own arm it's none of the government's damn business.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Taking the prostitution off of craigslist harms legitimate prostitutes as well as the pimps who take advantage of women for profit. By making it harder for the legitimate prostitutes to work openly you increase the chances that they will turn to or otherwise be taken advantage of a pimp, or that they will be murdered because they are forced to service the fringes of society. Driving prostitution underground makes things worse, not better. If you want to improve life for prostitutes you should both lobby for
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure, feel free to speculate. But have you ever been to San Francisco? It's commonplace here. Most of the Chinese-operated massage parlors are semi-tolerated brothels. Law enforcement has ongoing concerns about human trafficking, [sfgate.com] but it's hard to prove when the proprietors and the sex workers all deny it. (And why wouldn't they?)
Of course nobody is going to post an ad on Craigslist that says, "Truckload of Chinese virgins! Bulk pricing! Serious buyers only!"
The fact that so many "enlightened, sex-positive people" are so willing to wish this kind of stuff into the cornfield is precisely what makes the sex trade so insidious. But if you come to my city -- or any city -- walk its streets and really get to know it, you'll understand that the realities of prostitution for most of the participants are not nearly as pretty as the "independent sex worker entrepreneur" crowd will tell you.
I'm willing to bet that the ability to post ads on Craigslist really does cut down on some of the danger and crime associated with prostitution for some women. That still doesn't make me comfortable with it.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
"Does society collapse when a hooker gets beaten up by a weirdo?"
I little. But if it's legal, the hooker as reasonable recourse, and the person beating them knows when the cops arrive, the person doing their legal trade has nothing to hide.
"Does society collapse when a bunch of Chinese girls get brought over in a shipping crate to work in a brothel?"
they shouldn't put people in crates for any reason.
If' ti's legal, then there will be people here that can fill the gap legally. If there was as demand for Chin
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but those things have existed forever, and will regardless of any laws or lack thereof. You are always going to have trafficking, weirdos, drug abusers, etc. Your entire argument is bullshit.
So because they exist, we should have ads for Chinese brothels in glossy magazines? On TV?
Legalize (safely) prostitution as is already being done in NV across the country and watch the impact.
I specifically said I was willing to make the assumption that legalized prostitution was the answer. (I don't really believe in anything so simplistic, but I'm willing to accept it for the sake of argument.) So, having missed my point completely, what's yours?
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
While I agree with you for the most part, I can't think of any time prostitution has been endorsed by the "Church", which by that I take it you mean the Christian church. Christians are supposed to abstain from sex outside of marriage.
And yet if you do your history, the Roman Catholic church did (this was before ML).
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:4, Insightful)
And yet if you do your history, the Roman Catholic church did (this was before ML).
Catholic priests participating in prostitution is far different from the Roman Catholic Church having a policy approving it. BTW, I wasn't trolling above, I was hoping that someone could supply any support for that argument.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
[Citation needed]
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
Wikipedia style.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll back that up. I grew up in fairly conservative protestant church, and went to school at a fairly conservative protestant bible college. I don't think that you can say "Protestants generally..." but a large number of the more conservative protestants differentiate between "Catholic" and "Christian". In some of those circles, Catholicism is viewed as a cult. Enough so that if you search for the words "catholic" and "cult" you'll get a large number of pages debating the subject.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:4, Insightful)
This is true. The crazier bible-belt folks (like the kind that create recordings for us plebeians to listen to after the rapture because they ARE SO RIGHTEOUS that they are sure to be taken) often do believe Catholicism to be a cult or worse. There are even stories of certain book stores in the south shelving books written by a Pope under the "occult" section.
The more sane Protestants don't teach that. As a matter of fact, IIRC from Methodist confirmation classes long ago the Pastor taught me that all the branches of Christianity had more in common than they had differences and that they were getting closer in their beliefs all the time.
Like the difference between Republicans and Democrats a certain number of blowhards like to put wedges in the differences and push as hard as they can.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
A statement as broad as yours requires more than a couple of anecdotal links to back it up. All your links prove is that *some* Protestants don't believe Catholics are Christians. You imply it's the general rule, which I'll be generous and assume means a simple majority. FYI, I've also attended well over a dozen churches across the spectrum on a regular basis over the years. I would agree that some of the fundamentalist Protestants might believe a statement as strongly worded as that. However, I suspect even in those communities that if you gave them a choice between "Catholics aren't Christian" and "Catholics have lots of wrong beliefs but are Christians if they believe Jesus is Lord" you'd get a lot of people picking the second statement. That said, it would be a mistake to assume that Protestants are "generally" fundamentalist, there are a *lot* of mainstream Protestant denominations across the world which get along just fine with Catholics.
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Because, with the exception of some of the more idiotic Protestant groups, Catholics are considered Christians. The term basically means people who follow Christ. The group you were raised with might disagree, but that doesn't make them right. Instead of saying "Christian" to only mean Protestants, why wouldn't anyone just say "Protestant"? Christ
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Protestants generally consider Catholics not to be Christians.
Given that Catholics and Eastern Orthodox still make the majority of self-declared Christians worldwide, and given that they do recognize each other as Christian (even if heretical/schismatic), who cares about what Protestants think?
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:4, Funny)
Who/what is ML? (Martin Luther?)
No, not Martin Luther.
ML is the Muggle League. It's the non-magical Quidditch league. It's not really as popular as the real one since it's just a bunch of people running around with brooms between their legs throwing balls at each other. Kind of a really sad form of LARPing, in fact.
I'm not quite sure why the OP would bring it up though. Martin Luther actually would have made more sense in context ;-)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
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there is a site where people are telling everyone they are committing a crime, and how to get in touch with them, and they want to shut it down?
Almost. If somebody was posting ads on Craigslist that said, "I will have sex with you at your home in exchange for $150", and the Craigslist admins knew about it and ignored it - There would be a problem. But if somebody advertises "girlfriend services" or "Will come over in a school-girl uniform and talk dirty to you", that's a little different since no illegal activity is actually being advertised - Even though it may be implied. That puts Craigslist in an awkward situation.
I say that they should just
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Informative)
Isn't there some sort of legal exclusion for user-generated content? I thought, while the user can be held liable, as long as Craigslist employees aren't doing the posting, they're not legally responsible for content posted by their users? Just like Slashdot wouldn't be liable if I post DeCSS or something along those lines.
Re: (Score:2)
The sticky point, as I understand it, is the 'and the Craigslist admins knew about it and ignored it' issue. If you don't know it's there, it's fine (although willful negligence I think can still get you in trouble - You know, when you're notified and still turn a blind eye.) But I think that if Craigslist was unaware of and had not been informed of illegal postings, they'd probably be OK.
IANAL.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
#include<stdlib.h>
typedef unsigned int uint;
char ctb[512]="33733b2663236b763e7e362b6e2e667bd393db0643034b96de9ed60b4e0e4\
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1f0b8f8b0a1e8a8e0f15d1d5584cd8dc5145c1c5485cc8cc415bdfdb5a4edade5f4bcfcb4a5e\
cace4f539793120692961703878302168286071b7f7bfa2e7a7eff2bafab2afeaaae2ff";
typedef unsigned char uchar;uint tb0[11]={5,0,1,2,3,4,0,1,2,3,4};uchar* F=NULL;
uint lf0,lf1,out;void ReadKey(uchar* key){int i;char hst[3]; hst[2]=0;if(F==\
NULL){F=malloc(256);for(i=0;i<256;i++){hst[0]=ctb[2*i];hst[1]=ctb[2*i+1];F[i]=\
strtol(hst,NULL,16);}}out=0;lf0=(key[1]<<9)|key[0]|0x100;lf1=(key[4]<<16)|(key\
[3]<<8)|key[2];lf1=((lf1&0xfffff8)<<1)|(lf1&0x7)|0x8;}uchar Cipher(int sw1,\
int sw2){int i,a,b,x=0,y=0;for(i=0;i<8;i++){a=((lf0>>2)^(lf0>>16))&1;b=((lf1\
>>12)^(lf1>>20)^(lf1>>21)^(lf1>>24))&1;lf0=(lf0<<1)|a;lf1=(lf1<<1)|b;x=(x>>1)\
|(a<<7);y=(y>>1)|(b<<7);}x^=sw1;y^=sw2;return out=(out>>8)+x+y;} void \
CSSdescramble(uchar *sec,uchar *key){uint i;uchar *end=sec+0x800;uchar KEY[5];
for(i=0;i<5;i++)KEY[i]=key[i]^sec[0x54+i];ReadKey(KEY);sec+=0x80;while(sec!=\
end)*sec++=F[*sec]^Cipher(255,0);}void CSStitlekey1(uchar *key,uchar *im)
{uchar k[5];int i; ReadKey(im);for(i=0;i<5;i++)k[i]=Cipher(0,0);for(i=9;i>=0;\
i--)key[tb0[i+1]]=k[tb0[i+1]]^F[key[tb0[i+1]]]^key[tb0[i]];}void CSStitlekey2\
(uchar *key,uchar *im){uchar k[5];int i;ReadKey(im);for(i=0;i<5;i++)k[i]=\
Cipher(0,255);for(i=9;i>=0;i--)key[tb0[i+1]]=k[tb0[i+1]]^F[key[tb0[i+1]]]^key\
[tb0[i]];}void CSSdecrypttitlekey(uchar *tkey,uchar *dkey){int i;uchar im1[6];
uchar im2[6]={0x51,0x67,0x67,0xc5,0xe0,0x00};for(i=0;i<6;i++)im1[i]=dkey[i];
CSStitlekey1(im1,im2);CSStitlekey2(tkey,im1);}
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
"Hey guys! There's this site where you can, like, look at pictures of hookers all day, and set up stings, all from the comfort of your desk!" "Wow, we'd better shut that one down." Srsly? Why?
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
The truth is despite all their "concern" about craigslist, law enforcement isn't really interested in any major effort to investigate and prosecute prostitutes, they just want to hide it.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I know it. there is a site where people are telling everyone they are committing a crime, and how to get in touch with them, and they want to shut it down?
What I find odd about this is that Cragislist actually serves jurisdictions (such as Australia) where prostitution is legal. Are they making these changes for all locations? Are the reviewers going to be made aware of what is legal, and thus permissible, in each region?
There are also other (perfectly legal) professional services for which it is illegal to advertise in certain areas. In my state, for instance, it is illegal for lawyers to advertise services related to personal injury claims. Is Craigslist go
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
They've been there all along, even with the availability of erotic services sections. Check ads in the personals sections for phrases like "roses required" or "seeking generous man".
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
My post was entirely serious; I wasn't talking about the cynical view of dating as an exchange of money for sex, or anything like that. "Roses required", "generous", and "donation" in this context appear to be code for "payment required". Note the #1 definition on urbandictionary for roses:
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=roses [urbandictionary.com]
There have been a number of what appear to be prostitution offers (and "sugar daddy" requests) posted in the personals sections of Craigslist, frequently using those p
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
If there's one thing the authorities should learn it's that you can't win the game of whack-a-mole.
And even if they do win it'll only get them enough tickets for two sparkle stickers or a bouncy ball.
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
you can't win the game of whack-a-mole.
Actually, I believe I read about that game in one of the "requests for erotic services"...
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not like it's going to make a difference (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, there were already quite a few services like Craigslist for escorts before Craigslist got big.
In many areas, the erotic services section isn't used. I've browsed around it for giggles.
I've known a few people in the industry (no, not by soliciting their services). Craigslist is generally considered a newbie trashy way to advertise. Good escorts already have better methods.
And no, I won't post any links. :) Go find them yourselves you pervs.
By forcing Craigslist to shut down their ads, it's really sent all of those providers off to other means of advertising, which means law enforcement will have to go hunting again. It was a stupid logistics idea. Law enforcement will never stop prostitution, but it looks good to the public to have a decent number of busts. Why kill your easy method of facilitating busts. It's a freakin' list of "we can arrest these people tonight", rather than really hunting them down.
It'd be like if there was a "Drug Services" section, that crack dealers were listing in. They could brag that they've increased their drug related arrests by 1000%. People will still buy and sell illegal drugs, all they can hope to do is encourage a few people out of the business, and keep the public believing that they're doing all they can do.
I don't like the idea of going to jail, so I don't deal with any industries that would put me there. I do know people who do though, so I can learn second hand of what happens. If you sit down and listen to some of these people, you'd be amazed at how well thought out some parts are. Then again, other parts are handled stupidly, and those are the people you hear about getting arrested. Some busts are just dumb luck.
AWESOME (Score:2, Funny)
I for one look forward to the drastic improvements this change will effect.
</sarcasm>
Mounting Legal Pressure? (Score:3, Insightful)
Last i heard you had the right to free speech in this country.
If they want to print sex ads to adults, so be it. Don't like sex ads, well don't read those sections.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Dude, it's not a First Amendment issue.
Re:Mounting Legal Pressure? (Score:5, Funny)
This is all about the First Amendment! Just last month I was arrested for offering to sell cocaine to an undercover cop - I never even sold him the drugs! And when I offered him pictures of naked underage boys and girls if he'd let me go - Things only got worse!
Blatant violation of my right to free speech. If this keeps up, I'll shoot the president.
[Special note to the Secret Service - This was an attempt at sarcasm/humor. Please don't kill me.]
Re:Mounting Legal Pressure? (Score:5, Informative)
It's no so much about difference of opinion. The key word here is 'solicitation'. Examples of things that you can (I believe) be arrested for saying:
* "You wanna buy some weed?"
* "If you'll give me $20, I'll give you head."
* "If you can come up with a porno starring a 6 year old, I'll pay you $250."
* "If you'll shoot my wife, I'll give you $500."
And, even though I disagree with the laws barring the first couple of cases, solicitation of a crime is a crime. And, in the latter two examples, I think that it's for a good reason, as grave harm could come about just because of something that somebody said. You're free to express opinions - Even unpopular ones, but not to solicit criminal activity.
Perhaps I missed the point.
Re:Mounting Legal Pressure? (Score:4, Insightful)
* "You wanna buy some weed?"
Got any dandelions?
* "If you'll give me $20, I'll give you head."
Already got the head. I just need to decide between a body or a frameset.
* "If you can come up with a porno starring a 6 year old, I'll pay you $250."
I'll see if Jennifer Lien [imdb.com] will reprise her role as Kes [imdb.com].
* "If you'll shoot my wife, I'll give you $500."
Will that be with a regular or a telephoto lens?
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The hell its not.
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You sure do (or are supposed to).
Free speech means being able to stand on the White House lawn and announce that you're about to rape the president with a C4 dildo.
Free speech stops anyone from forcing you to stop your announcements, and prevents them from arresting/convicting you based on what you said (with a lack of you actually having DONE anything).
Free speech doesn't prevent you from being stopped and checked for weapons.
If your speech itself causes demonstrable harm (libel, slander), then you can be
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Free speech means being able to stand on the White House lawn and announce that you're about to rape the president with a C4 dildo.
You are free to make such a statement; however, you can be arrested for assault (verbal) and detained pending investigation. Threatening physical harm of the president will get you tackled, shackled, and charged with SOMETHING; stupidity is punishable at least to a small degree.
Good (Score:4, Funny)
What is the best place to find a hooker online? (Score:3, Funny)
I know somebody here knows the answer to this:
What is the best place to find a hooker online?
The best place to find a hooker online (Score:5, Funny)
I am Mrs Melissa Pointy the wife of Mr Harry Pointy, my husband worked with the Chevron/Texaco in Kenya for twenty years before he lost the use of his penis due to an industrial accident in the year 2001. We have been married for ten years without a child. He is the second son of the late John Pointer, who was a Nigerian Prince. His father left him the sum of $3.5 MILLION UNITED STATES DOLLARS but he cannot collect until he has a child.
If you would be so kind as to have sex with me until I conceive I will pay you a 10% gratuity for your troubles.
To obtain tickets to Nigeria please contact me so I can have my attorney send you instructions to buy airline tickets and pay for lodging.
As soon as I receive your reply I shall give you the contact of my attorney who is in Europe as he will be the one to assist you this endeavor.
Your's Truly,
MRS.Melissa Pointer.
Re:What is the best place to find a hooker online? (Score:5, Informative)
The Erotic Review
one word... splat! (Score:4, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Government Lawsuits (Score:2)
Re:Government Lawsuits (Score:4, Interesting)
The police in various districts have done CL stings repeatedly. Seems like here in Portland it's in the news every 3 months or so...cops rent a hotel room and answer ads, girls are busted. Or vice versa. It apparently hasn't shut this down. Police have been busting streetwalkers for years and yet you still see them on the corners of major cities...
CL switched to requiring phone verification for this category of ads. Then they started charging $5 to list. And now they're dropping it altogether.
I would think this was all business-driven - an evaluation that the hassle costs more than the revenue - but CL has no revenue. In fact, I don't think CL has any actual business model....it's just free ads for whoever wants them. You're probably right that it's the lawsuit threats that are driving them out of this.
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but they do charge for some ads.
The fees are listed in the craigslist FAQ. [craigslist.org]
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Justification (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think this is going to have any serious effect on Craigslist. They are just changing the name of the service and putting reviewers in place.
We should look at why these sorts of services run into trouble with the law. The reasons run from good to terrible.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Protecting people from themselves is always a terrible reason, and that's all this boils down to no matter how many times people wanna get all "think of the children."
You'd think the whole prohibition mess would have taught the puritanical moral high-ground people how well banning things works. Guess the real whack-a-mole game is trying to hammer the lesson into the nanny-stater head.
Meanwhile, if the law manages to shut down every prostitution ad on the web, they'll just go back to the streets. Good job!
Re:Justification (Score:4, Insightful)
Rather than think of it as protecting people from themselves, think of it as protecting the weak from the powerful. Women are in some cases subjugated by men. And then there's the whole poverty, addiction, prostitution cycle.
All of that said, some of the reason we're running into this is because of problems that society isn't willing to handle. You can start with the horribly bungled handling of poverty in the U.S., which seems to have been designed to promote bad social values and create a perpetual client class.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
You can start with the horribly bungled handling of poverty in the U.S., which seems to have been designed to promote bad social values and create a perpetual client class.
Bungled? You haven't been paying attention. Our very public school system is set up to produce a perpetual client class. The system is working as designed. Or perhaps I should say, redesigned. It wasn't always so. There was a time when all we had was a constitution :)
Re:Justification (Score:5, Funny)
Like on eBay? "A++++ EXCELLENT HOOKER WOULD FUCK AGAIN"
(filterfilterfilterfuckingfilterlesscapsmycolonblahdeblah)
Re:Justification (Score:4, Funny)
Like this: JENNY GAVE ME CRAB LICE! DON'T CALL 867-5309!
I bet there's a site like that right now.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Look, I'm fully libertarian on this issue. I honestly think it would be BETTER for society to LEGALIZE prostitution. Then it could be regulated and taxed properly.
But that is not going to happen, because the religious ones don't want to legalize it at all, the sexual workers don't want to pay taxes and business licenses like the rest of us.
But none of that indicates that I want to see it.
AND there is a huge difference between an advertisement to the general public and a discreet flirting on the sly. I don't
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
That's just flat out wrong. There are all sorts of sex worker defense groups. The only people who don't want it are uptight, short-sighted, meddlesome social conservatives.
Too bad the very same erotic services ads (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't this open them up to liability and suits? (Score:4, Insightful)
Traceability is added... No thanks (Score:3, Interesting)
Not that I use this section, but you can guarantee that it will now be tracked, logged, and monitored as well as happily turned over to law enforcement if/when requested. No Thanks.
For me personally Craigslist caving in here has ended my use of the site. I can only hope enough others do as well and make their voice heard.
What am I going to do now? (Score:2)
Fun on Craigslist! (Score:3, Interesting)
Prostitutes and other advertisers have no respect for boundaries or appropriateness. Just let that settle into your mind and stop getting angry and frustrated. You will not un-corrupt humanity.
But fun on Craigslist! Yes! Go to the various "personals" and "casual encounters" areas for your area and just search through the ones with pictures. Okay, you might need a strong stomach for some of them, but you might ALSO find people you know or knew or work with! How awesome is that? Suddenly people WILL lend you money again!
A victory for all the world to celebrate! (Score:3, Insightful)
As time goes by, the parade of human folly seems more and more absurd. Maybe it's because I'm getting older. I hate to think what "for which each posting will be manually reviewed before it appears" means, though. I can only assume there were thousands of them. I suspect that the law only requires them to not print ads for flagrant exchanges of money for sex. Most Craigslist erotic ads already used a variety of vague euphemisms anyway (or so I've read).
Solution to the Solution (Score:3, Insightful)
"Erotic services" was created to solve a problem in the "personals". If the new monitored "adult section" (new name for the old link) starts to delete, not allow or delay the ads they'll just go right back to where they were to start with. The (unmonitored BTW) "personals" is where everybody advertised before the "erotic services" was created.
Sheeez. Are these prosecutors really this stupid? I suppose if I have to ask the question.....
Pointless (Score:4, Informative)
Pick two (Score:3, Funny)
Erotic, Lesbian, Gorilla: Pick 2.
With apologies to the person who first thought this [wikipedia.org] up.
Re: (Score:2)
I consider "erotic" and "gorilla" to be mutually exclusive, but whatever floats your boat.
Re:Oh man! (Score:5, Funny)
Where else can I seek out an erotic lesbian gorilla!?
http://www.state.gov/secretary/
You're doing it wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Answer to Profits (Score:2)
In fact, all of this information is listed on the Erotic Services homepage....
which.... I've heard about. From someone else. In passing. No, I don't remember his name.
Re: (Score:2)
Not all ads are free. For example, posting for jobs in San Francisco is $75 - $25 in certain other large cities. Apartment posts are $10 for NYC.
Erotic service fees cost $5 anywhere in the US.
See here: http://www.craigslist.org/about/help/posting_fees [craigslist.org]