Bing, Bang in the Boom Boom Room
FoxNews, Wikipedia and Morality in Media are engaging forces to combat online porn.
Google, Bing, Yahoo!, USA Networks and other Wikipedia Foundation corporate sponsors were approached by FoxNews to acknowledge whether they’re aware of the loads of sexually explicit material on Wikipedia. Material, incidentally, about and posted by fellow corporations, whose business just happens to be the sex industry.
Wikipedia is reportedly scrubbing its sites to cleanup the spillover from the adult sex xxx business. Further, Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger also wrote the FBI proclaiming Wikimedia distributes child porn.
The “War on Pornography” press release issued by Morality in Media‘s, Patrick Trueman, former pornography prosecutor for the Department of Justice, was released to oppose appeals to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the Internet governing agency, to create a .XXX domain.
Rather than kneel down in helpless bondage to 1st Amendment censorship by scrubbing its sites as if caught red-handed, mid-stroke, choking the chicken, Wikipedia should continue to lead and follow other public entities similarly burdened with public chaperoning.
At libraries nationwide, and in better households, internet viewing controls are installed to prevent minors and the public from viewing porn, with porn links banned in their tracks before seen by a mischievous user.
No research required, the majority of society patronize porn sites in the privacy of their own homes.
While the online sex xxx community and legions of fans are exercising 1st Amendment rights, FoxNews and MIM have diverted attention and their efforts from who’s truly responsible for policing sex, instead choosing to mind their neighbors‘ beeswax.
An .XXX domain would in fact make it easier for parents, libraries, the public, the adult entertainment industry and law enforcement to work together in directing traffic to the markets, and with full knowledge of where you’re going, sex xxx.



