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Webcam Venus Porn invented the Internet. Fee-based subscriptions, credit card verification, internet billing systems, streaming video, Flash-embedded websites–these now-ubiquitous technologies were all pioneered by pornographers hoping to X-rate our dial-up. As soon as photography was invented, it was being used to produce pornographic images, after all, and smut has had a hand in the development of everything from the printing press to satellite television. Pornography has always exploited new technologies for profit, paving the path for mainstream adoption. The Internet, however, is its greatest work. It might be a question of intent. The Venus De Milo isn't pornographic because it wasn't meant to titillate; Girls Gone Wild is pornographic because it means precisely that. Never mind that the Venus bears more flesh than a drunken sorority girl flashing a video camera; never mind that the girls are hardly the architects of the fantasies they're enacting. The standards we use to delineate differences between high and lowbrow sexuality are archaic, couched in the aesthetic ideals of canonical Western art. There are nudes, and then there are n00dz. But what's the difference, really? - 'Webcam Venus' Turned Sexcam Performers into High-Art n00dz Vice, April 2013 In Webcam Venus, online sexcam performers were asked to replicate iconic works of art. Sexcams use webcams and chat interfaces to connect amateur adult performers with an audience. Users log on to see men, women, transsexuals, couples and groups broadcast their bodies and sexuality live for the public, often performing for money. To create this experiment, Addie and Pablo spent a few hours each day for a month asking performers: “Would you like to pose for me?”

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