You need 169 years to watch all videos on Pornhub
Sued by 30 women for uploading content without their consent
The content on one of the world’s most prominent porn sites will take a total of 169 years to watch, according to figures released by the company.
Put differently, it will take more than two lifetimes of doing nothing else to go through the sheer volume of sexually explicit content on the site.
In terms of figures, the site hosts a total of 6.83 million videos, with a combined viewing time that stretches into 169 years.
Pornhub received 42 billion site visits in 2019 from all corners of the globe. For context, there were 7.6 billion people in the world in 2019.
The porn site’s content is mostly uploaded by its own community, even though human moderators see it before it goes for public consumption.
These facts are emerging as more than 30 women have sued the site for not seeking their consent before publishing explicit videos of them.
The women say the videos were uploaded to Pornhub without their consent and have lodged a civil suit in California accusing Mindgeek, the parent company of Pornhub of running a “criminal enterprise”.
Brown Rudnick LLP, the law firm representing the plaintiffs, says the lawsuit alleges claims under the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000.
One of the women in the suit told CBS she was only 17 when her boyfriend coerced her into making a nude video. The woman, who used the pseudonym Isabella, said the video was later posted on Pornhub without her consent and she only found out about it from a friend.
In a statement, Pornhub called the allegations “utterly absurd, completely reckless and categorically false”.
Pornhub told the BBC: “Pornhub has zero tolerance for illegal content and investigates any complaint or allegation made about content on our platforms.”
“We have the most comprehensive safeguards in user-generated platform history, which include the banning of uploads from unverified users”.
Pornhub said it “takes every complaint regarding the abuse of its platform seriously, including those of the plaintiffs in this case”.
It added that it did not intend to let the “hyperbolic language in the lawsuit distract from the fact that Pornhub has in place a safety and security policy that surpasses that of any other major platform on the internet”.
Pornhub does not require its users to verify the identity or age of those featured in its videos – nor does it seek to confirm the consent of people who appear in videos posted to the site.
The new allegations comes after a New York Times investigation in April accused Pornhub of being “infested” with child-abuse and rape-related videos claims the site denied.