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Sweden bans custom OnlyFans and cam content, opening new front in anti-porn wars

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Purchasing custom-made OnlyFans videos could soon land you in prison in Sweden.

The Swedish parliament just passed a new law that updates the country's existing sex purchase legislation and criminalizes the purchase of custom-made pornographic content.

Basically, consuming pre-made pornographic material is still legal in Sweden. However, the purchase of custom-made content on platforms like OnlyFans or paying for live cam shows is now illegal in Sweden and punishable as a crime akin to prostitution.

The new law takes effect on July 1 and carries a sentence of up to one year in prison.

The law is only applicable for the buyer, as Sweden's prostitution laws only ban buying sexual acts, not selling them. Online sex workers charge a premium for custom-made content on platforms like OnlyFans, making it a lucrative revenue stream for some performers.

The New York Post reports that the new Swiss law received "cross-party backing" in the Swedish parliament, including from the country's left-wing Social Democrats party.

Just this month, two U.S. Senators introduced a bill that would redefine obscenity in a way that would effectively ban pornography. Attempts to broadly ban pornography outright haven't yet been successful in the U.S., but the Swiss law could represent a new line of attack for American anti-porn activists.

In recent years, some Republican-led states have limited access to online porn through onerous age-verification requirements laws. These laws, which require adult websites to collect a user's ID in order to access their content, have resulted in major platforms like PornHub blocking users from those states altogether.

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Buy the Samsung Galaxy Watch8 at Best Buy and get a free $50 e-gift card

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SAVE $50: As of Aug. 6, buy the Samsung Galaxy Watch8 for $349.99 at Best Buy and get a free $50 e-gift card.



Samsung Galaxy Watch8 on white background

Credit: Amazon


Samsung Galaxy Watch8

$349.99
at Samsung

Get a free $50 e-gift card with purchase



A good smartwatch can be your constant companion when it comes to handling your day. It can track your fitness, handle notifications and texts, and even help you make calls, all while giving you a full spectrum of body-centric metrics. If you're already using an Android phone or want a reliable brand for your purchase, you should consider heading to Best Buy to grab a Samsung smartwatch and get a little extra.

As of Aug. 6, buy the Samsung Galaxy Watch8 for $349.99 at Best Buy and get a free $50 e-gift card.

The 2025 Galaxy Watch8 has a slew of features, including Google Gemini integration, something Samsung managed to get before Google could implement in its Pixel Watch lineup. It also has a wide variety of health and fitness options, including preset workout data, sleep tracking, heart rate monitoring, and much more to help you make sure you can face the day at your best.

Beyond those things, the Galaxy Watch8 also lets you handle comms straight from your wrist so you can make calls, text, use some of your favorite apps, and organize your life. Your personal AI assistant is voice-activated as well, so it can help you get things done even when your hands are busy.

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A key YouTube feature broke for Android users

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You'd think Android and YouTube would work together flawlessly, but early this week, that wasn't the case.

As reported and confirmed by 9to5Google, YouTube users on Android devices couldn't change the playback speed on videos. Changing the speed to anything other than 1x would simply not work, as the setting change wouldn't save, acting as if you hadn't done it at all. Obviously, that's not a great user experience, considering that Android and YouTube are both Google's responsibility. It seems a bit strange for Android users specifically to lose access to a core YouTube feature, but that's what happened.

Thankfully, it seems that as of Wednesday morning, the issue has been fixed, per a YouTube community note. The note states that any users still experiencing the issue should simply close and reopen the app. Hopefully, by doing that, you can fix the problem and get back to frame-by-frame analysis of movie trailers at 0.25x speed.

For once, it paid off to use a Google app on iOS instead.

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Him trailer: Producer Jordan Peele turns football practice into a bloodbath

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On top of directing horror hits Get Out, Us, and Nope, Jordan Peele has produced several exciting genre projects, from Dev Patel's Monkey Man to Nia DaCosta's Candyman, which he also co-wrote. Next up on his production slate is the football horror film Him, directed by Justin Tipping.

Co-written by Skip Bronkie, Zack Akers, and Tipping, Him introduces promising young football star Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers). Not only does Withers have acting experience from projects like I Know What You Did Last Summer and Atlanta, he was also part of Florida State University's 2017 football team as a wide receiver. Hopefully his experience playing was nothing like Cameron's in Him, though, because the trailer makes it out to be a full-on nightmare.

After suffering a traumatic brain injury at the hands of an unhinged fan, Cameron thinks his football dream is dead. But when his hero, legendary quarterback Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans), offers to train him at his personal compound, he's excited to accept.

However, Isaiah's training methods are far more violent than Cameron realized. (And football is already pretty violent!) We're talking smashing footballs into players' faces until they bleed as punishment.

But that's just the start of the horrors that await in Him, which demands that Cameron sacrifice everything to be the GOAT he so badly wants to be. Check out the unsettling trailer above.

Him also stars Julia Fox, Tim Heidecker, Jim Jefferies, and MMA fighter Maurice Greene, as well as hip-hop artists Guapdad 4000 and Tierra Whack.

Him hits theaters Sept. 19.

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