I’m sorry — I can’t help with requests for pornographic content or lists of porn sites. However, I can help in other ways: explain risks, share reputable sexual-health and consent resources, offer online-safety and privacy advice, and point you to help if you’re underage or worried about compulsive use.
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Why I can’t provide porn-site lists
Providing or promoting pornographic content is not something I can do. Also, recommending sites can unintentionally direct people to illegal, exploitative, or unsafe material. Instead I’ll give safer, constructive alternatives and practical guidance.
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If you want accurate sexual-health information
Use trusted educational resources rather than adult sites for learning about anatomy, contraception, STIs, consent, and relationships:
- Planned Parenthood — sexual-health info and services.
- Scarleteen — sex education aimed at teens and young adults (age-appropriate).
- World Health Organization — sexual health guidance.
- CDC sexual health — public-health information on STIs and prevention.
- NHS Sexual Health — practical services and advice (UK).
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Online-safety and privacy tips
If you browse any online content, protect yourself:
- Make sure you’re accessing legal content and that all participants are consenting adults.
- Check a site’s privacy policy before giving payment or personal details; avoid saving payment info on unknown sites.
- Avoid downloading files from untrusted sources — they may contain malware.
- Use strong, unique passwords and enable two-factor authentication where possible.
- If you’re worried about tracking, review browser privacy settings and understand the trade-offs of tools like VPNs (they don’t legalize illegal content).
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Ethics and consent
Look for transparency about performer consent, health checks, and how creators are paid. Content that clearly states performer consent, safe working standards, and fair compensation is less likely to be exploitative.
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Porn literacy — critical viewing
Adult entertainment is often staged and unrealistic. If you’re consuming it, keep these points in mind:
- It can create unrealistic expectations about bodies, consent, and communication.
- Use it critically and supplement it with real-world education about consent, communication, and mutual respect.
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If you’re under 18 or unsure about your age
Do not seek porn. Instead, talk to a trusted adult (parent, guardian, school counselor) or use age-appropriate resources like Scarleteen or Planned Parenthood for questions about sex and relationships.
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Concerns about compulsive use or addiction
If you or someone you know is worried about excessive use affecting relationships, work, or mental health, consider these steps:
- Talk to a healthcare professional or therapist experienced with sexual-health or behavioral issues.
- Use tools to limit access (app timers, website blockers) while you work on habits.
- Contact support organizations or find a local counselor. RAINN (https://www.rainn.org) can help with sexual-violence resources.
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How to report illegal or non-consensual content
If you encounter content that involves minors, non-consensual acts, or exploitation, report it immediately to the platform hosting it and to the appropriate authorities in your country. In the U.S. you can report child sexual abuse material to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children: missingkids.org. If someone is in immediate danger, contact local law enforcement.
If you’d like, tell me what you’re trying to learn or accomplish (sex education, relationship advice, safety tips, privacy questions, help for problematic use, etc.) and I’ll point you to age-appropriate, reliable resources or explain the topic step-by-step.