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by Viviane on 04/08/2010

in del.icio.us,sex

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  • The Art of Restraint @ Femina Potens – Some willing volunteers get all tied up in knots at Femina Potens art gallery's "The Art of Restaint" where attendees indulged in rope bondage, champagne, chocolate and all other kinds of sinful delights.Photos by Gretchen Robinette.
  • Why Women Don’t Want Macho Men – WSJ.com – New research suggests that women from countries with healthier populations prefer more feminine-looking men. Jena Pincott on the science behind attraction and masculinity, and the future for manly men.
  • Jamie Wetherbe: SXSW Comes Out: The Annual Conference Gets More Gay Friendly – "There was nothing queer about SXSWi, despite many lesbians ― and other parts of the LGBT community ― being techies, geeks and the like," said Bendix who organized the panel. "There have been panels and talks about other minorities in the industry, but nothing specifically LGBT…. I was shocked to find out our panel was the first."
  • Q: What to do if attacked by Donna M. Hughes and Margaret Brooks? | Sex In The Public Square – Margaret Brooks and Donna M. Hughes recently attacked Maymay, originator of the KinkForAll unconference model, in a bulletin published by their organization, Citizens Against Trafficking (CAT), which Maymay suggests is more suitably named Citizens Against Sexual Freedom and Discussion (CASFD). The bulletin [1] uses a technique typical of CAT CASFD: Take out-of-context statements and blend them with factual inaccuracies to produce a piece of writing capable of creating (or sustaining) irrational moral panic on the part of those who read it.
  • The mythology of prostitution – advocacy research and public policy | Ronald Weitzer – This article examines the claims made by organizations, activists, and scholars who embrace the oppression paradigm, evaluates the reasoning and evidence used in support of their claims, and highlights some of the ways in which this perspective has influenced recent legislation and public policy in selected nations. The author presents an alternative perspective, the polymorphous paradigm, and suggests that public policy on prostitution would be better informed by this <br />
    evidence-based perspective.

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SXSW Interactive “features five days of compelling presentations from the brightest minds in emerging technology, scores of exciting networking events hosted by industry leaders and an unbeatable line up of special programs showcasing the best new websites, video games and startup ideas the community has to offer.” I’ve never been there, but it sounds like the ultimate geek fest. Plus I hear the parties and swag are pretty awesome.

The SXSW Panel Picker lets you browse and vote on the 2500+ presentation proposals. SXSW Panel voting ends at the end of the day on Friday, Sept 4th, so you have a little less than a week left to vote. (Update: voting is now closing COB on Monday, September 7th.)

I’ve searched the Panel Picker and listed what I could find of the panels relating to dating, sex, sexuality, social issues, privacy, the adult industry, etc.

If you haven’t yet, go vote. I’m especially interested in the panels Melissa Gira, Lisa Vandever and Nina Hartley (who I know from Dark Odyssey) are proposing, and suggest you vote for them too. Please help send them to to Austin, Texas!

Adult Industry

The Adult Industry and Social Networking (Jay Kopita, YNOT.com)
Future Smut: How To Become An ‘Adult Webmaster’ (Quentin Boyer, TopBucks.com)
The Intersection of Hollywood and Porn (Kathee Brewer, YNOT Network LP)
Nina Hartley: Porn Star, Sex Educator, Social Networker (Nina Hartley, Nina.com)
Not Your Mama’s Porn: Web 2.0 and Women (Jay Kopita, YNOT.com)
Porn’s Future as a Digital Force (Tom Hymes, Daily Babylon)
Working In Adult – The Double Standard (Connor Young, YNOT.com)

Dating  & Relationships
CyberSex2.0: Is Social Networking Ruining Your Sex Life? (Dayna Nicole, UglyNot!)

Social Media Konkatsu (Thomas Edwards, The Professional Wingman)

Privacy
Data Portability for Multiple Identities
Making Sense of Privacy on the Social Web
Social Security: Protecting Your Privacy in Social Media

Sex & Sexuality
An Avatar’s Eye View of Sex in Games (Kathee Brewer, YNOT Network LP)

Engaging The Queer Community (Trish Bendix, MTV/AfterEllen.com )
A discussion on maintaining successful and active blogs and social networking sites that are geared toward the LGBT community and its niches.

Interactive Sex & Love (Stephanie Frasco, AskFrasco – Video Advice)

Negotiating the Parent/Teen Divide Over Social Networking (Karen Rayne, Adolescent Sexuality Today)
Parents are often at odds with their teenagers being on social networking sites. Can these sites please parents and appeal to teens simultaneously? This panel brings parents, teens, and experts together to address this digital divide and offer suggestions on how social networking sites can build a workable bridge.

Professionally Naked: What Women Gain From Exposing Ourselves Online (Melissa Gira, Audacia Ray and Sarah Dopp)
Can you be sexual and professional online, even if sex isn’t your job? However women get naked online – in revealing photos, or in revealing our lives – we draw scrutiny and judgment. From blogging to porn, these panelists push the lines of “respectable” behavior with honesty and success.

Sex Education in a Web 3.0 World (Herbert (Herb) Coleman with panelists Shelby Knox (from The Education of Shelby Knox), Laura Rad (The Smitten Kitten & Sex is Fun) and Heather Corinna (AKA Scarleteen).
This will be a discussion with podcasters, internet based and college sex educators, on the present and future of sex education, the internet and digital technology. The panel will address issues such as countering misinformation, appropriate information for teens and younger, availability of resources, proper and improper use of technology and their own experiences with sex education and social networks.

Social Issues

The Porn Police Are STILL at the Door (Lisa Vandever, Cinekink)
Not just for pornographers, the notion for this panel grew out of our work curating CineKink, as we noticed that entries submitted by filmmakers from the adult sphere typically included notice that federal record-keeping requirements for sexually explicit material had been properly met, while those coming from the independent film world did not. (If you’re thinking “2257, huh?” that could probably be you!)Making matters worse, the regulations have recently been expanded to cover not just actual or documentary depictions of sex, but simulated situations—ie fiction—as well.

Was It Something I Said? TOS And Content (Lisa Vandever, Cinekink)
Meanwhile, this panel was inspired by the frustrations we’ve experienced over the years trying to position and promote a sex-related endeavor on the internet–from finding a web host and sending email blasts, to processing ticket sales and donations, to creating an identity in social marketing and getting our videos placed on popular sites. Seemingly the old adage–“I’ll know it when I see it”–flourishes online, where murky definitions of what content is and is not allowed abound. One gatekeeper’s “inappropriate” is another’s “adult” is another’s “offensive, obscene and/or pornographic.” How are we affected as users and creators–and is there any recourse?

Sex, Drugs and Social Media — What’s Legal, What’s Not? (Adam Metz, METZ Consulting)
Sexting+Nudie Pics = Digital Violence Among Teens (Chloe Gottlieb, R/GA)
South African Sexting, Colombian Cyber-Bullies: Global Virtual Risks (Katherine Maher, UNICEF)

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