A study by
Philip
B. Stark, a professor of statistics at the
University
of California, Berkeley, has found that pornography accounts for just one
per cent of all web pages.
The study was carried out after the
American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) took the US government to court over the
Children's
Online Privacy Protection Act.
The
US
Department of Justice commissioned the study as part of its attempt to get
the Supreme Court to accept restrictions on internet use.
"One of the things we think came out of the government's study is that the
chance of running into graphic content on the web when filters are on is
extremely low,'' Catherine Crump, staff attorney at the ACLU, told the
San
José Mercury News, which obtained a copy of the report.
Stark found that around six per cent of searches referred to sites with
sexual content, but suggested that this was mainly due to the high number of
searches on sex-related topics.
Where blocking technology was used it tended to block such sites fairly
effectively, but at the cost of blocking a lot of sites that had no sexual
content at all.
In order to help with the study the US Department of Justice attempted to get
search providers to hand over search histories of their users.
When
Google ref
used it was taken to court and
forced
to hand over 50,000 random web page contents from its index.
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