Apparently responding to criticism that it was facilitating prostitution, online classified ads giant Craigslist is making some changes. It “will replace its ‘erotic services’ section with a new adult category that will be more closely monitored, the Washington Post reports. Craigslist, which gets “an estimated 20 billion page views worldwide a month” for a huge variety of ads, says every ad in the new category will be reviewed by a person, and there will be no sex-for-money ads or pornographic images. On the one hand, that doesn’t stop people from placing inappropriate ads in other categories; on the other hand that would make such ads harder to find in a medium where there are many sites dedicated to adult content and services. Police cited in a separate article in the Post caution against (anyone) using the Web to arrange in-person meetings and going alone without notifying anyone. Later this week Craigslist sued South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster, “asking a judge to stop him from threatening to prosecute [the company’s] executives … on prostitution or obscenity charges,” the Boston Herald reports. CEO Jim Buckmaster wrote in the Craigslist blog that “many prominent companies, including AT&T, Microsoft, and Village Voice Media, not to mention major newspapers and other upstanding South Carolina businesses feature more ‘adult services’ ads than does Craigslist, some of a very graphic nature,” according to a report in the San Jose Mercury News.
Leave a Reply