BoodiGo Wants Your Links
BOSTON – When BoodiGo co-founder Colin Rowntree looks out over the horizon of the online adult entertainment industry, he sees a fundamental contradiction in play. On the one hand, the public appears to be more accepting of pornography than ever before, but on the other, many mainstream web outlets seem to be going out of their way to marginalize online porn, censor links to it from their platforms, or otherwise hold online porn at arm’s length.
“We’re seeing more and more proactive removal of explicit materials from social media platforms, even if the material isn’t visible directly on the platform itself,” Rowntree said. “You can be a porn star and be on Facebook, sure, but effectively, you can be a porn star on Facebook only if you don’t really discuss the fact that you’re a porn star.”
In light of the less porn-tolerant atmosphere growing among traditional mainstream and social media outlets, Rowntree said it’s all the more important for adult websites and companies of all kinds to submit their URLs and domains to a search engine where they will be given proper emphasis—like Boodigo, which is devoted to adult sites and only adult sites.
“In some ways, the initial focus on BoodiGo has been on the things we don’t want people finding in our search responses,” Rowntree said, referring to BoodiGo’s efforts to block and redirect searches commonly used to find child porn, pirated content and other illicit material. “But as an adult search engine, naturally our goal is to help people find what they’re looking for from the world of adult entertainment. People can really help us help them, and help the consumer, by proactively submitting their URLs to us.”
It’s not just porn websites Rowntree hopes to draw submissions from, either. He hopes to receive submissions from all sectors of the industry, covering a wide variety of site types and approaches to the market.
“We want to hear from adult blogs, toy stores, people with adult tumblrs, porn star home pages, porn review sites, video-on-demand sites, authors and publishers of erotic ebooks, adult twitter feeds, adult tradeshows, adult industry media outlets—you name it,” Rowntree said. “Naturally, our anti-piracy policy and other content policies will apply, but if it’s legal and legitimate porn, it has a home—and an ally—in BoodiGo.com.”
To use the BoodiGo “add URL” tool, click here and follow the simple instructions.