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AZ Terri See my TER Reviews 1540 reads
posted

all aspects of media either print or tv, it happens all the time a different spin sells and money is made. It doesn't just have to be about sex it's about every major issue.

This and any other media form it aint going to change....like some who are trying to change TER,
and the way or who post....just not going to happen!

Here's another link for you Donna.....as if us posting links draws attention! Please give me a break!

anyway here an interesting article!


Johns Help Each Other Find the Right 'Internet Sex Provider'

By Alexis Madrigal  03.13.08 | 5:00 PM

As the Eliot Spitzer scandal has highlighted, prostitutes and their salespeople have embraced the internet in large numbers.

One economist argues that the ease and anonymity of the online world have created a virtual red-light district in which customers face little fear of prosecution. Like the file sharing of copyrighted music, soliciting tricks online may be illegal, but it's difficult to prosecute because of the number of people doing it and because of the difficulty of tracking down the individuals who visit prostitution websites.

"Today, the internet has caused a semi-legalization of this product," said Todd Kendall, a Clemson University economist trained at the University of Chicago.

Sites like The Erotic Review (NSFW), which has been called the Yelp of prostitution, help customers find, rate and review sex workers. Similar services abound, including My Red Book (NSFW) and Big Doggie (NSFW). Kendall says the sites allow prostitutes and their clients to cut out most of the risky, police-attracting behaviors associated with the sex trade -- like streetwalking.

At the same time, these sites allow prostitutes to solicit large numbers of potential johns at once. Compete.com estimates that the largest site, The Erotic Review, had 323,000 unique users last month.

Good reviews drive sex sales, prostitutes report. "I get a lot of calls when I have a new TER review," wrote a "provider," Bobbi, on her blog late last year. "It always amazes me how many men chose to see me based on these new reviews. They tell me that they will only see a well-reviewed provider."

Kendall predicts that similar applications could be built for other types of vice, making it increasingly difficult to enforce the nation's laws.

"I've got a student working on an application where you enter a city and it will tell you what grades and types of marijuana are available," he said.

The open-secret nature of the information on escorts and their clientele is also helping researchers like Kendall understand the economic underpinnings of the oldest profession. Drawing on data from The Erotic Review, Kendall has been able to compute the mean rate for sex workers who have an internet presence: $250-300 per hour. Those who work the streets make much less, he says.

He's also been able to engage in more sophisticated analysis of how the legalization of prostitution in some parts of Nevada and Rhode Island impacts the market for sexual services.

"In places where prostitution is legal, prices are a little bit higher," he said.

The professor theorizes that the higher prices charged by legal prostitutes are actually due to "higher quality" prostitutes, in large part because of the standards that regulated brothels need to uphold.

Dennis Hof, owner of the Moonlite BunnyRanch, which has been the subject of an HBO special, echoed those sentiments, stating that the sex workers at his establishment are tested weekly for sexually transmitted diseases.

"You are less likely to get a disease so men are willing to pay a premium for that," Kendall said.

Hof also noted another connection between the internet and prostitution: the prevalence of Silicon Valley dotcom money at the legal sex venues of Nevada.

"What I get is a whole lot of Silicon Valley guys," Hof said. "The heads of the big, big companies. They'll head into Carson City, Nevada, so they can land their Gulfstreams and Falcons and Leers."

He claimed that two to three Valley VIPs visit the BunnyRanch each week, although he said high-profile clients usually found the ranch via word-of-mouth, not web resources like My Red Book.

"These Silicon Valley guys have a lot of money. They are risk takers and get out there on the edge and have some fun. And a lot of them, truthfully, are not playboy type guys," he said. "They are hardworking geeks who have made a fortune."

But chances are that your average CEO or governor hasn't visited a prostitute. University of Portland sociology professor Martin Monto told NPR that only between one-fifth and one-sixth of American men had ever visited a prostitute.

neversoft521197 reads

Nice to see someone else also reads Wired! I appreciate postings that are more on the helpful side. So please take my next statement from a "trying to help" point of view, because I'm not bashing anyone!

Even though this article is a re-hash of a similar article I read several years ago, it shows that if one electronic media source breaks a story about prostitution involving high-level execs or public officials... another media source is going to hack together an article to publish the same story with a different twist. One media source (Wired) telling you the same story you've already heard somewhere else... just published in different words. How do I know? Because I use to work with a major TV station in Silicon Valley and we decided what to cover based on what the paper and the paper decided what to cover based on what the TV stations covered. It was messy, cyclical way of covering news.

Wired is no different. They need to recapture their lost audience and if sex sells... put a high price on it and call it news. The upside of this article is to put TER, BigDoggie and Redbook out there with exposure to the novice hobbyist as a place to start looking. Just my two cents.

all aspects of media either print or tv, it happens all the time a different spin sells and money is made. It doesn't just have to be about sex it's about every major issue.

This and any other media form it aint going to change....like some who are trying to change TER,
and the way or who post....just not going to happen!

TER1920 reads

total of 539,114 unique clicks from 03/01/08 till today.

tyvm3466 reads

More hits means more publicity, and there is an old adage that all publicity is good publicity (or something like that).  In this case, would you rather have the publicity and the hits, or would you rather had skipped this kind of limelight?  Has the increase in hits resulted in an increase in new sign-ups (beyond reporters and LE)?

Just curious.

Staff1807 reads

They were a little off on the unique visitors for TER.

The concept of “unique visitors” can be a little difficult to understand.  For example if we had:

 300,000 unique visitors on Monday
+ 200,000 unique visitors on Tuesday  =
------------------
= 500,000 unique visitors??

 NO IT DOES NOT!!

 In this case it 450,000 unique visitors

No, this is not that new math. Many of the visitors on Tuesday may also have visited on Monday (and Sunday Saturday, etc) but can only be counted once in a particular range.  In this example of the 200,000 visitors on Tuesday, 50,000 of them also visited on Monday that is how we get 450,000 UNIQUE visitors during those 2 days.

In February we actually had 821,294 unique visitors. Each day had somewhere between 244,312 to 367,816 unique visitors.  

I am guessing the “under the radar” concept isn’t working.

-- Staff

it was mentioned on about 3 posts for us to stop using links, so as not to draw attention....as I stated that's not going to even come close.
xoxoxo
Terri

I've been seeing the TER ad on Backpage, saying that there's "almost a million members" but I was wondering, is that all paid members or is that everyone who's registered, paid or not?  Either way, that is ALOTTA people!!

Register Now!