Report: Almost Half of Kids Surveyed Say They Were First Exposed to Porn By Accident Article
46% of minors who said they had watched porn were first exposed to it by accident—often as a result of pop-up images or links on social media.
46% of minors who said they had watched porn were first exposed to it by accident—often as a result of pop-up images or links on social media.
A simple porn search can bring up hundreds of videos that basically portray a scripted version of the abuse the 13-year-old student was subjected to.
Experts say violent pornography is influencing hundreds of children to act out the aggressive, hardcore scenes they see online.
It’s no secret that our generation is the first to be dealing with the ability to access the most hardcore porn imaginable.
Boys as young as 12 are so obsessed with porn that they can’t make it a day without fulfilling their urge to see explicit images, teachers have warned.
Research shows that young people are as likely to see online porn accidentally as they are to actively search for it.
The United States’ Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that it had arrested over 2,000 alleged child pornographers and sex traffickers in a massive sting operation called “Operation Broken Heart.”
Jones coerced 6 underage girls to send him explicit videos to “prove” they were his “biggest fan.” He was sentenced on Friday to 10 years in prison for child porn.
As a therapist who works primarily with male survivors of sexual abuse, I am grateful for the conversations that Leaving Neverland has sparked. As a society, we have still yet to fully understand or recognize how boys and men experience sexual assault.
Porn performers are posting competitions on social media, inviting fans to purchase tickets. The winner meets up with his favorite star in person and gets to have sex with her on camera.
With concerning frequency, creators of YouTube content are sneaking explicit and disturbing scenarios and scenes into kid-targeted videos. Why is this happening?