Hilton has announced that pay-per-view pornography will no longer be available in any of its 715,000 hotel rooms around the world.
Hilton Worldwide is eliminating one of the company’s most profitable in-room amenities, and at least
one advocacy group couldn’t be happier with the decision. The hospitality company that operates more than 4,300 hotels and resorts in 94 countries announced Monday that “adult” films will no longer be available for on-demand purchase.
“We believe in offering our guests a high degree of choice and control during their stays with us, including Wi-Fi on personal devices,” Hilton Worldwide said in a brief statement. “However, we have listened carefully to our customers and have determined that adult video-on-demand entertainment is not in keeping with our company’s vision and goals moving forward.”
Hilton’s move earned instant praise from the National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE). The advocacy group took much of the credit for forcing Hilton’s hand after placing the company on its
Dirty Dozen List, which singles out mainstream entities “contributing to sexual exploitation.” The NCOSE cited studies that link pornography to sex trafficking, a problem that hotels have been struggling to avoid enabling, as justification for singling out Hilton.
While Hilton will be removed from the Dirty Dozen, a number of high-profile “contributors to sexual exploitation” remain on the list, including the American Library Association, YouTube,
Fifty Shades of Grey and Cosmopolitan Magazine.
The NCOSE takes credit for recently
convincing Walmart to place issues of Cosmo behind blinders, so as not to expose children to the suggestive magazine covers.
Hilton joins a growing number of hotels no longer offering guests the option of purchasing in-room pornography. Marriott, Omni, Drury, Nordic Choice and Ritz-Carlton already have similar policies against the practice.
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