Backpage.com and the prostitution law that could take down Twitter, YouTube, and Wikipedia
By Matt Stroud on June 18, 2012
If you want to pay for sex in the United States — or offer sex services for a fee — and you’d rather not troll derelict city street corners late at night, chances are you’re going to use backpage.com.
About 70 percent of the revenue generated from online sex transactions in the U.S. goes to Backpage.
And with Craigslist no longer offering sex services on any of its 700 sites around the world (Craigslist dropped its "adult classifieds" section in 2010), Backpage’s adult market share has nowhere to go but up.
But there’s a hitch. And that hitch not only threatens to put Backpage out of business. It also threatens to completely change the way websites handle third-party content.
Read on...
http://www.theverge.com/2012/6/18/30...tter-wikipedia
.