Pale Rider
05-12-2007, 03:04 AM
Since weve had so much conversation on internet porn here, I thought some figures would be in order....
Internet Pornography Statistics: 2003
Sex Industry Statistics
$57.0 billion revenue world-wide1
$12.0 billion of this is US revenue, more than all combined revenues of all professional football, baseball and basketball franchises or the combined revenues of ABC, CBS, and NBC (6.2 billion). $2.5 of the $12 billion is related to internet porn.1
Porn on the Web
25% of total search engine requests are porn-related. (Top three searches: sex, mp3 and hotmail.)2
8% of total emails are porn-related. Average daily pornographic emails are 4.5 per internet user1
12% of total websites are pornographic1
Affecting Children
100,000 websites offer illegal child pornography1
Child pornography generates $3 billion annually1
90% of 8-16 year olds have viewed porn online (most while doing homework)1
Average age of first internet exposure to pornography is 11 years old1
Largest consumer of internet pornography 12-17 age group1
Affecting Adults
20% of men admit accessing pornography at work1
13% of women admit accessing pornography at work1
53% of Promise Keeper men viewed pornography the previous week in one study1
10% of adults admit having internet sexual addiction1
Business Productivity
70 percent of all internet porn traffic occurs during the 9-to-5 workday.2
Nearly one out of three companies has terminated an employee for inappropriate web use.2 (Some of this could be for liability reasons discussed below.)
According to Internet Data Center research 30 to 40 percent of employee internet activity is non business-related, costing millions of dollars in productivity.2 This does not mean all the activity is porn related. For example, the cost to businesses in lost employee productivity from the internet broadcasts of the Starr report and the Clinton grand-jury video was in excess of $450 million, according to a study reported by ZDNet.2
Business and Legal Ramifications
Internet porn introduces the issue of a hostile work environment relative to internet use. Whereas lewd jokes, questionable bulletin board items or inappropriate comments used to put companies in hot water, employees today are accessing websites that promote hate groups, pornography and illegal activities. Viewed by an offended co-worker, any of these cyber-activities can bring lawsuits upon a company.2
Several Fortune 500 companies have created an “acceptable use policy” for internet usage, including a disclaimer about the dangers of the internet, a summary of appropriate and inappropriate uses of the internet (i.e., no personal commercial uses, no illegal copying, etc.), a statement about avoiding frivolous use (i.e., downloading large personal files, engaging in chat rooms, etc.) and a ‘no expectation of privacy’ statement that waives privacy rights over any materials sent or created using the company’s computer network.2
Sources:
1From http://www.internetfilterreview.com/internet-pornography-statistics.html - September, 2003
2From http://www.websense.com/products/resources/wp/hr_wp.pdf - September, 2003 (page no longer available on web)
http://healthymind.com/s-porn-stats.html
Internet Pornography Statistics: 2003
Sex Industry Statistics
$57.0 billion revenue world-wide1
$12.0 billion of this is US revenue, more than all combined revenues of all professional football, baseball and basketball franchises or the combined revenues of ABC, CBS, and NBC (6.2 billion). $2.5 of the $12 billion is related to internet porn.1
Porn on the Web
25% of total search engine requests are porn-related. (Top three searches: sex, mp3 and hotmail.)2
8% of total emails are porn-related. Average daily pornographic emails are 4.5 per internet user1
12% of total websites are pornographic1
Affecting Children
100,000 websites offer illegal child pornography1
Child pornography generates $3 billion annually1
90% of 8-16 year olds have viewed porn online (most while doing homework)1
Average age of first internet exposure to pornography is 11 years old1
Largest consumer of internet pornography 12-17 age group1
Affecting Adults
20% of men admit accessing pornography at work1
13% of women admit accessing pornography at work1
53% of Promise Keeper men viewed pornography the previous week in one study1
10% of adults admit having internet sexual addiction1
Business Productivity
70 percent of all internet porn traffic occurs during the 9-to-5 workday.2
Nearly one out of three companies has terminated an employee for inappropriate web use.2 (Some of this could be for liability reasons discussed below.)
According to Internet Data Center research 30 to 40 percent of employee internet activity is non business-related, costing millions of dollars in productivity.2 This does not mean all the activity is porn related. For example, the cost to businesses in lost employee productivity from the internet broadcasts of the Starr report and the Clinton grand-jury video was in excess of $450 million, according to a study reported by ZDNet.2
Business and Legal Ramifications
Internet porn introduces the issue of a hostile work environment relative to internet use. Whereas lewd jokes, questionable bulletin board items or inappropriate comments used to put companies in hot water, employees today are accessing websites that promote hate groups, pornography and illegal activities. Viewed by an offended co-worker, any of these cyber-activities can bring lawsuits upon a company.2
Several Fortune 500 companies have created an “acceptable use policy” for internet usage, including a disclaimer about the dangers of the internet, a summary of appropriate and inappropriate uses of the internet (i.e., no personal commercial uses, no illegal copying, etc.), a statement about avoiding frivolous use (i.e., downloading large personal files, engaging in chat rooms, etc.) and a ‘no expectation of privacy’ statement that waives privacy rights over any materials sent or created using the company’s computer network.2
Sources:
1From http://www.internetfilterreview.com/internet-pornography-statistics.html - September, 2003
2From http://www.websense.com/products/resources/wp/hr_wp.pdf - September, 2003 (page no longer available on web)
http://healthymind.com/s-porn-stats.html