1. Tumblr has a lot of Porn
—22,775 contain NSFW material
—Which is 11.4 percent of all blogs on Tumblr
2. Everyone’s Wondering Whether Yahoo Will Get Rid of It
3. Yahoo Doesn’t Really Care Though
But Marissa Mayer yesterday at an event in New York City, where Yahoo announced a massive NYC based headquarters in the middle of Times Square and a major Flickr redesign, that the Yahoo CEO doesn’t really care about NSFW material.
Mayer: “We don’t intend to” remove Tumblr’s NSFW content.
— Kevin Roose (@kevinroose) May 20, 2013
So, clearly Yahoo has no issue with Tumblr’s porn and it really shouldn’t. Porn on Tumblr drives a ton of traffic — considering the large percentage of blogs on Tumblr have NSFW material — and, in the end, that matters the most. The potential risk of losing out on millions of customers outweighs any benefit Yahoo may see in getting rid of the lewd images from Tumblr.
4. Many Are Worried It’ll Hurt Advertising and Revenue
5. But It Won’t
Unflagged NSFW Blogs. Tumblr is home to millions of readers and bloggers from a variety of locations, cultures, and backgrounds with different points of view concerning adult-oriented content. If you regularly post sexual or adult-oriented content, respect the choices of people in our community who would rather not see such content by flagging your blog (which you can do from the Settings page of each blog) as Not Suitable for Work (“NSFW”). This action does not prevent you and your readers from using any of Tumblr’s social features, but rather allows Tumblr users who don’t want to see NSFW content to avoid seeing it.
So, the NSFW tag must be applied to any content remotely adult-oriented, or else Tumblr will take them off. So, with advertisers who don’t want their brand associated with Tumblrs like We Want Porn (yes, it’s a Tumblr blog of porn…click at your own risk), Yahoo and Tumblr could offer an “opt-in” service for advertisers: if you’re ok with being associated with adult content on Tumblr, you select an option that says so. Otherwise, your ads will be run on blogs that have no adult-content. Problem solved right? This way, Yahoo can monetize Tumblr without having to worry about how advertisers would feel about adult content and can keep users happy by not restricting their content. Win-win!
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