wenchie said:
Wenchie, you're absolutely right. Here are Nielson Stats. NOT all of the below site are child




...but usually




sites always have children in them too! Sad but TRUE!
xxxooo
mama
INTERNET 


Two in five Internet users visited an adult site in August of 2005, according to tracking by comScore Media Metrix.
87% of university students polled have virtual sex mainly using Instant Messenger, webcam, and telephone (CampusKiss and Tell University and College Sex Survey. Released on February 14, 2006. CampusKiss.com. February 17, 2006 <http://www.campuskiss.com/default.aspx?survey=show&homepage=true>).
According to comScore Media Metrix, there were 63.4 million unique visitors to adult websites in December of 2005, reaching 37.2% of the Internet audience.
According to the Florida Family Association, PornCrawler, their specialized software program, identified 20 U.S. companies that accounted for more than 70 percent of 297 million




links on the Internet.
By the end of 2004, there were 420 million pages of











, and it is believed that the majority of these websites are owned by less than 50 companies (LaRue, Jan. Obscenity and the First Amendment. Summit on











. Rayburn House Office Building. Room 2322. May 19, 2005).
The Internet











industry generates $12 billion dollars in annual revenue larger than the combined annual revenues of ABC, NBC, and CBS (Family Safe Media, January 10, 2006, <http://www.familysafemedia.com/pornography_statistics.html>).
The largest group of viewers of Internet




is children between ages 12 and 17 (Family Safe Media, December 15, 2005, <http://www.familysafemedia.com/pornography_statistics.html>).
According to comScore Media Metrix, 71.9 million people visited adult sites in August 2005, reaching 42.7 percent of the Internet audience.
According to comScore Media Metrix, Internet users viewed over 15 billion pages of adult content in August 2005.
According to comScore Media Metrix, Internet users spent an average of 14.6 minutes per day viewing adult content online.
More than 32 million unique individuals visited a




site in Sept. of 2003. Nearly 22.8 million of them were male (71 percent), while 9.4 million adult site visitors were female (29 percent)
(Nielsen/Net Ratings, Sept. 2003).
N2H2's database contained 14 million identified p