Why New Restrictions Are Rolling Out.
Regulators around the world have been pushing for stricter age verification measures for adult websites to prevent minors from accessing explicit content. In the UK, the Online Safety Act has required platforms hosting pornographic material to implement robust systems confirming a user’s age before allowing access. Unlike simple “click‑to‑agree” checkboxes, these can include ID uploads, facial age estimation, and other digital verification methods.
Similar laws in parts of the United States — from Arizona to Texas and beyond — also require porn sites to verify that users are adults before granting access, or risk being blocked or fined.
The intention behind these laws is to enhance child safety and prevent under‑18s from consuming adult material — an objective most observers agree is important. But critics argue that the execution and side effects matter just as much as the goal.
Pornhub’s Response: Blocking Access
Rather than adopt some of the age verification systems regulators are mandating, Pornhub’s parent company Aylo has taken a striking step — blocking its adult site to new users in the UK entirely, while allowing only previously verified users to continue accessing content.
According to Aylo, the implemented age‑check system has proven ineffective, difficult to enforce, and potentially dangerous:
“We believe this framework … has diverted traffic to darker, unregulated corners of the internet, and has also jeopardized the privacy and personal data of citizens.”
This company argument is echoed by what many performers also say — that users and creators may be best protected on regulated, moderated platforms like Pornhub, and forcing people elsewhere could have consequences.
An Adult Star’s Warning: ‘It Could Put Us All in Danger’
One of the most cited voices in this debate is adult performer Ivy Maddox, who recently told media she believes blocking access could have negative and risky effects for both consumers and creators.
Maddox argued that while Pornhub new policy may be frustrating, it nonetheless provides a relatively controlled environment for both viewing and uploading videos:
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Contributors must be verified adults, with consent forms and identification — which reduces the chances of non‑consensual or exploitative content appearing.
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The platform moderates content and offers monetization structures, so performers can earn revenue for their work.
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Many alternative sites lack moderation or safety standards, may host leaked or illegal content, and often offer creators no payment or control.
If people can’t access Pornhub, they will likely go to other sites where, at best, models’ content is leaked and they don’t get paid. At worst, the person in the video is unaware they are online, Maddox said.
Strict regulations may push performers to unregulated spaces with no age verification, consent checks, revenue, or privacy protections.
Privacy and Safety: Not Just Performers’ Concerns
The debate isn’t limited to performers. Privacy groups warn that age verification systems, like credit card info or ID uploads, can expose sensitive data for millions. This could open the door for exploitation through breaches or misuse, hurting online privacy and not stopping determined kids.
Data breaches, like those involving Pornhub Premium, fuel industry skepticism about systems requiring users to share sensitive data.
The Regulatory Tightrope — Protection vs. Consequence
Governments and regulators must balance child protection and online safety with technical realities and human behavior. Analysts point out that:
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Many age verification laws are still new and unproven in effectiveness.
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Tech‑savvy users can and will find ways to circumvent certain blocks (e.g., VPN services).
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Strict regulations may shrink legal, regulated access while pushing traffic toward more hidden, unmoderated corners of the web.
What’s more, these restrictions can also hurt marginalized workers disproportionately. LGBTQ+ and queer performers fear strict ID checks harm their privacy and livelihoods.
Beyond the Headlines: What This Means for the Internet
How do we effectively balance online freedom, privacy, and child protection without creating incentives for harmful behavior or unsafe spaces?
For performers, the critical issue tends to be work visibility and economic security. Mainstream platform restrictions could harm performers’ audience, earnings, and content protection. For users, privacy risks and exposure to illegal or abusive content on less regulated platforms are real concerns.
We still don’t know if these rules will actually help or if they’ll just push people into worse situations. Industry professionals and lawmakers must engage with performers, privacy experts, and tech developers to find better solutions, not broad regulations.