Mastercard said in a statement it would no longer let its products be used with the site after “[an] investigation over the past several days has confirmed violations of our standards prohibiting unlawful content on their site.” It said it will “continue to investigate potential illegal content on other websites.” Visa also announced it was suspending its service to Pornhub “pending the completion of [its] ongoing investigation.” (The Logic)
Talking point: MindGeek, the Montreal-founded corporate entity behind Pornhub and some of the internet’s other biggest pornography sites, has faced renewed scrutiny this week after The New York Times reported its sites hosted videos of abused children and other illegal material, spurring Mastercard and Visa to review their work with the company. The company has repeatedly denied its site hosts such material, but earlier this week said it would take new steps to improve trust and safety. The Logic reported in October on the problems with some of the content hosted on MindGeek’s sites, and last month revealed that the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, a government-backed charity, had withdrawn from a global anti-child-exploitation network over MindGeek’s involvement. Federal Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault told The Logic last week the government would introduce new regulations early next year to ensure “platforms are respecting our laws and regulations” around harmful online content. “Fines could be imposed in the millions of dollars. We’re not talking about a slap on the wrist.”