The Legal Fallout of Girls Do Porn: Reclaiming Control Over Non-Consensual Media For over a decade, the San Diego-based website Girls Do Porn (GDP)
marketed itself as a platform for "amateur" content featuring college-aged women. However, a landmark civil trial and subsequent federal criminal investigation revealed that the site’s entire business model was built on a foundation of force, fraud, and coercion The Scheme: How Victims Were Deceived The company, led by owner Michael J. Pratt , videographer Matthew Wolfe , and recruiter/actor Ruben Andre Garcia Girls Do Porn Episode 211 Fixed
The term "fixed" in relation to specific GDP episodes often refers to the legal effort to have this non-consensual content removed from the internet. In January 2020, a San Diego judge awarded $13 million in damages to 22 plaintiffs. Crucially, the court: Invalidated Contracts: The Legal Fallout of Girls Do Porn: Reclaiming
In a landmark legal move, a California judge awarded the copyrights of all GDP videos back to the victims (the "Jane Does") in 2020 . In January 2020, a San Diego judge awarded
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