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San Fran city attorney sues sites that ‘undress’ women with AI

Dek: AI-powered websites allowing users to create nonconsensual nude photos of women and girls were visited 200 million times in the first half of the year.

San Francisco’s City Attorney has filed a lawsuit against the owners of 16 websites that have allowed users to “nudify” women and young girls using AI.

The office of San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu on Aug. 15 said he was suing the owners of 16 of the “most-visited websites” that allow users to “undress” people in a photo to make “nonconsensual nude images of women and girls.”

A redacted version of the suit filed in the city’s Superior Court alleges the site owners include individuals and companies from Los Angeles, New Mexico, the United Kingdom and Estonia who have violated California and United States laws on deepfake porn, revenge porn and child sexual abuse material.

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Vaneck Analysts Forecast Bitcoin’s Path to $180,000 Amid Regulatory Shift

Bitcoin Ordinals creator looks for fix after first instance of shock porn

A rather unsavory image made it to the front page of the Ordinals website for 30 minutes before it was hidden, however, the image itself is immutable.

Only days after the launch of the Bitcoin (BTC)-based Ordinals protocol, its creator had to deal with their first shock pornographic image, which has been inscribed into the blockchain.

On Feb. 2 at around 12:15 am UTC, an unsavory image known as “goatse” was inscribed onto the Bitcoin blockchain via the Ordinals protocol.

It featured on inscription 668 and was live on the Ordinals’ front page for roughly half an hour before the image was removed. It still exists on the blockchain but is not able to be viewed using the Ordinals website.

Ordinals creator Casey Rodarmor told Cointelegraph he acted quickly to remove the image from the Ordinals website but admitted there isn’t much that can be done to stop future instances given the nature of the protocol.

He is at least working on a solution to stop the images appearing on the Ordinals website.

The image, known as “goatse,” depicts a man manipulating his anus. Due to its shock value, it’s often used to trick internet users.

Rodamor said for the moment, that there was no way to hide certain inscriptions on the Ordinals’ website without manual input.

“The explorer has a config file that can be used to hide certain inscriptions, so we decided that was not very pleasant to look at,” he said. “We added it to that config file and now the server does not return that inscription and will not return that content.”

Ordinals has a simplistic website with every new inscription appearing on its home page.

While Rodarmor plans to have a “very liberal content policy” where people will “certainly” be able to inscribe pornographic images, he would like to censor them until he finds a way to automatically keep them off the first page, such as creating a separate space for them on the website.

Recent inscriptions on the Ordinals site show users are inscribing images of Pepe the Frog, a cartoon internet meme. Sou: Ordinals

Critics of blockchain technology have concerns that its immutable nature could be used to forever host illegal or grotesque media, while others argue its censorship resistance should be viewed as a key feature.

Asked if he was concerned about the criticism Ordinals may receive for censoring certain images, Rodarmor responded:

“The inscription is still on the chain and if you run your own copy of Ordinal — which everybody is free to do — it will not have that config file and you will see the gaping butthole if that is what you so desire.”

He added his site is just one instance of the block explorer and hopes others create more where they can “implement their own moderation policies according to their tastes.”

Related: ‘WTH did I just witness?' Magic Eden turns porno after hosting service hacked

Rodarmor said it’s only the second time he’s censored a pornographic image. He believes the technical difficulty and cost of inscribing an image onto the BTC network have reduced the instances of such trolling attempts.

Ordinals launched on Jan. 21 and immediately divided the crypto community with arguments on whether it was good for the Bitcoin ecosystem.

The protocol works by inscribing satoshis — the native currency of the Bitcoin network — with content such as images to make NFT-like structures that can be transferred.

The cost of inscribing a satoshi can cost tens of dollars in comparison to a regular network transaction that ranges from a few cents to a few dollars.

Vaneck Analysts Forecast Bitcoin’s Path to $180,000 Amid Regulatory Shift

OnlyFans reverses decision to ban porn after assurances from ‘banking partners’

At least one bank appears to have changed course after OnlyFans went public about banks blocking payments.

OnlyFans has made a sharp u-turn on its decision to ban sexually explicit content after it received a  backlash from creators and some new assurances from at least one bank suffering bad PR.

The platform became wildly popular by connecting online sex workers to subscribers, but this has not gone down well with a number of major banks.

The firm was forced to change its policy on Aug. 19 to prohibit “sexually explicit conduct” following pressure from the Bank of New York Mellon, Metro Bank, and JPMorgan Chase, who refused to provide services to users of the platform.

In a tweet on Aug. 25, OnlyFans stated that it has now reversed this decision and it “will continue to provide a home for all creators.”

An OnlyFans spokesperson told TechCrunch:

“The proposed October 1, 2021 changes are no longer required due to banking partners’ assurances that OnlyFans can support all genres of creators.”

However, the official statement merely says it “suspended” the policy which suggests the policy may be reintroduced at a later date if the assurances aren't backed up in reality.

The decision to ban sexually explicit content had frustrated sex workers who rely on the platform to support themselves financially, especially during pandemic-induced lockdowns. Following the decision, some creators had already deleted their OnlyFans accounts and moved to alternate services.

At the time of the initial announcement, founder and CEO of OnlyFans, Tim Stokely, stated that the firm pays over one million creators more than $300 million every month, adding “making sure that these funds get to creators involves using the banking sector.”

Speaking to the Financial Times this week, Stokely named JPMorgan in particular as being “aggressive in closing accounts of sex workers”, or any business that supports them. It appears that OnlyFans was able to find a resolution to the issue with at least one bank after widespread publicity about the matter.

OnlyFans was founded in 2016 and claims to have more than 130 million registered users and 2 million creators.

Related: Bitcoin Fixes This: PayPal Cuts Payouts to Over 100,000 Pornhub Models

In 2019, Pornhub faced similar problems when PayPal withdrew services from the platform, preventing it from paying models. At the time, Pornhub turned to privacy-focused cryptocurrency Verge (XVG). Visa and MasterCard followed suit in 2020 in shunning the world’s biggest porn site forcing further reliance on crypto.

Vaneck Analysts Forecast Bitcoin’s Path to $180,000 Amid Regulatory Shift

Playboy Partners With Nifty Gateway NFT Platform

Playboy announced the partnership along with multiple artist collaborations and curations earlier today.

Playboy Bunnies on the Blockchain

Nifty Gateway is an NFT platform owned by the Gemini exchange, focusing on the sale of digital art. Playboy Enterprises, a media company most known for its branded erotic art, tweeted to 1.5 million followers on Apr. 06 with partnership details.

Playboy’s entrance to the NFT space will see the company curate art collections from over 70 years of archived art and photography, likely stemming largely from Playboy Magazine. TIME Magazine also entered the NFT space recently to auction off iconic covers from the 60s to th present day.

As well as curating its own art, the media company is collaborating with Slime Sunday, an artist that makes collages with Playboy artwork and imagery. Playboy is also partnering with Blake Kathryn, a multidisciplinary artist releasing a pride-themed NFT art curation this June.

Playboy stated that the NFT industry allows the company to build on its “long history of providing a platform for artists and creative self-expression.”

“We are thrilled by all of the innovation and access the blockchain can bring, and a big piece of our work will be supporting artists as a collector and via upcoming grants. We’re here to learn, support the community and innovate together.”

Platinum-selling R&B artist The Weeknd recently sold an NFT collection on Nifty Gateway for $2.29 million, and the total NFT market volume is now approaching $193 billion according to Non Fungible.

The erotic media company partnership represents one of the many ways the blockchain industry has made ties with sex workers in recent years.

Disclosure: The author held BTC and ETH at the time of writing.

Vaneck Analysts Forecast Bitcoin’s Path to $180,000 Amid Regulatory Shift