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from:
http://www.routledge-ny.com/cgi-tin/framedisplay.cgi?/cgi-tin/hotdisplay.cgi?0
415920965
Click Here: <A
HREF="http://www.routledge-ny.com/cgi-tin/framedisplay.cgi?/cgi-tin/hotdisplay
.cgi?0415920965">Routledge N.Y. Online : Hot Titles</A>
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    Obscene Profits
The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age
By: Frederick S. Lane


Routledge, New York
12/1999
272 pages
6 x 9

Cloth
ISBN: 0415920965
$27.50 (US)
$39.50 (Canada)

Qty:


OBSCENE PROFITS
The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age
by Frederick S. Lane III

"[Lane] offers a fascinating and informative look at the business of
porn-ography and the boost it has gotten from technology. Telephones, VCRs,
computers, and, especially, the Internet have increased privacy and reduced
the potential for public embarrassment and prosecution . . . Lane looks back
on the history of pornography for fun and profit, from early fetishes found
in archeological digs to Ben Franklin's little-known contributions to current
video games that titillate with sex and violence."
-- Booklist
"[Lane] provides a timely case study of the business and economics of
pornography. What makes this an interesting study is that with the advent of
VCRs and the Internet, barriers to pornography's market entry were
effectively bulldozed . . . The book is written in such a way that parallels
can be made to other Internet enterprises."
-- Library Journal
In May 1997, the Wall Street Journal ran a feature article on the business
skills of Danni Ashe and her success in using a new medium-the Internet-to
sell sexually explicit images of herself and other models. A subheading
proclaimed "Lessons for the Mainstream." The Journal article concluded with
an impressive recitation of the site's yearly revenues: "The pay site boasts
17,000 members, putting Ms. Ashe on pace for more than $2 million."

Our fascination with economic success fuels the media coverage of the online
porn business. For instance: "How to Make $$$$ with XXX (Wired); "More Buck
for the Bang (Newsweek); "Sex on the Net: Small Operators Can Make Big
Killings on the Web (USA Today); and "Smut Purveyors Find Profits Online (New
York Times). Why is porn so popular? So lucrative? So legitimate?

OBSCENE PROFITS: The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age by
Frederick Lane, is a social and technological history of the porn industry.
Lane traces the developments that have made it possible for a former stripper
to be profiled in an unabashedly positive front-page article in the Wall
Street Journal.

The combination of an enormously successful sexual entrepreneur (Hugh
Hefner), a well-attended sexual revolution, government deregulation, First
Amendment politics, and a steady flow of technological innovations to
increase the privacy of pornographic consumption have significantly reduced
or eliminated much of the stigma attached to pornography. The porn industry
makes $10 billion in total annual revenue (equal to what Americans pay for
sporting events and live music performances combined). Baby boomers have made
pornography a full-blown sector of the American economy.

A series of technological advances (including "Dial-It" 900 numbers, voice
mail, Xmodem, computerized bulletin board systems, Usenet, Hypertext Markup
Language, Internet Relay Chat, and Web Cam) have revolutionized the
pornographic industry. It is now very easy for virtually anyone to become a
producer and distributor of sexually explicit materials. For less than $200,
for instance, someone can purchase a camcorder, make a videotape of him or
herself in the nude or having sex, send the video to a distributor of amateur
videos, and earn royalties on its sale. Although the initial investment is
higher, the cost of distributing sexual images across the Internet is even
lower -- and the potential return is far greater. With over 60,000 adult
websites online, it's undeniable that a lot of people -- a lot of ordinary
people -- have recently decided to become porn entrepreneurs.

About the Author
Frederick S. Lane III is an attorney and founder of Pro Se Computing, Inc., a
computer consulting firm. He is the also the publisher of the Journal of
Electronic Discovery and Internet Litigation. He lives in Burlington, VT.
-----
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