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  • Greg Collier 8:00 am on April 13, 2026 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Adult Services, , , ,   

    Craig Newmark Wants to Give It All Away, But What About How It Was Made? 

    Craig Newmark Wants to Give It All Away, But What About How It Was Made?

    By Greg Collier

    In 2026, Craig Newmark is getting praised again, this time as a billionaire who’s giving it all away. He’s already donated hundreds of millions and signed onto the Giving Pledge, encouraging other wealthy people to do the same. The story being told is simple. He made his money, learned some moral lessons growing up, and now he’s trying to give back and fix the world.

    That’s the version everyone likes to talk about, but it’s also not the whole story.

    Before the philanthropy, before the pledges and talk about doing good, Craigslist made a lot of its money off sections of the site that were under fire for years. The erotic services and similar categories weren’t some small, overlooked corner. They were a major part of the platform, and they drew criticism from just about every direction you can think of, including law enforcement, journalists, and anti-trafficking groups.

    Back in 2010, a CNN investigation found more than 7,000 adult service ads running in major cities in a single day and cited research saying those ads made up about a third of Craigslist’s revenue. The same reporting included cases involving minors and people being trafficked through ads on the site. Around the same time, the Washington Post reported on victims who said they were sold through Craigslist listings, while politicians and attorneys general across the country were calling for the whole section to be shut down.

    Faced with this pressure, Craigslist leadership consistently struck a defensive tone. Jim Buckmaster emphasized that criminal misuse of the platform was rare relative to its massive user base, framing criticism as misplaced and suggesting that broader societal failures were being unfairly pinned on a single website. Newmark echoed similar themes, often stressing that the company was doing more than its peers to combat abuse while also urging critics to provide hard evidence and police reports rather than what he characterized as unsupported allegations. The company pointed to measures such as user flagging systems, manual review of ads, and cooperation with law enforcement as proof that it was part of the solution rather than the problem.

    Critics saw something different. Advocacy groups argued that the scale of the ads, the ease with which traffickers could adapt language to evade detection, and the platform’s reliance on reactive reporting created an environment where exploitation could flourish. Law enforcement officials questioned whether they were receiving sufficient cooperation or actionable information. Journalists documented the gap between the company’s assurances and the realities uncovered in investigations. Even as reforms were introduced, the underlying tension remained unresolved. A platform built on openness and minimal intervention was being used in ways that caused real-world harm, and the response often appeared to lag behind the problem.

    The issue did not end with debate; it escalated. By the late 2000s and into 2010, dozens of state attorneys general were pressing for stronger action. Public pressure intensified, and legal scrutiny increased. Ultimately, the most controversial sections of Craigslist were shut down, not in a vacuum, but in the shadow of mounting threats that the platform could face consequences similar to those imposed on other sites tied to the online sex trade. The changes that critics had demanded for years were, in the end, implemented under pressure.

    That history sits uneasily alongside the present-day image of Newmark as a philanthropic leader. The wealth now being redistributed did not emerge in isolation. It was built during a period when a significant portion of the company’s revenue was tied to sections of the platform that were widely criticized and repeatedly linked to exploitation. The company’s leadership, for its part, has long maintained that it acted in good faith, that it cared deeply about users, and that it worked diligently to address abuse within the limits of what was technically and legally feasible. Newmark himself has often portrayed his role as limited in day-to-day operations, describing himself more as a customer service figure than a manager, and has emphasized that neither he nor his colleagues were motivated by wealth or excess.

    But intention and impact are not the same thing, and that is where the narrative becomes harder to reconcile. For years, critics, victims, and investigators described a system that was being used to facilitate harm, even as leadership emphasized scale, safeguards, and the difficulty of perfect enforcement. The platform remained in operation as those arguments played out in public, in courtrooms, and in the media. Only after sustained pressure did the most controversial elements disappear.

    Now, with hundreds of millions of dollars already donated and more pledged, Newmark speaks about values learned in childhood, including lessons from Sunday school about treating others as one would like to be treated and helping to repair the world. It is a compelling story, and one that invites a difficult question. Did that same moral framework justify allowing a platform he created to carry ads that were repeatedly linked to the trafficking and exploitation of women and children, or is the philanthropy that followed a response to a legacy that cannot be so easily rewritten?

    Because this is where the polished narrative begins to strain. It is one thing to give money away. It is another to shape the story around that giving in a way that elevates the donor while leaving the past largely unexamined. When a billionaire steps forward to encourage others to follow his example, to take the moral high ground and speak about responsibility, it invites scrutiny not just of what he is doing now, but of how that wealth was accumulated and what was known along the way.

    The public version of this story asks for admiration. The historical record asks for context. And when those two collide, the result is not a simple tale of generosity. It is a more complicated picture of a platform that changed an industry, generated enormous wealth, faced years of serious allegations and documented cases of misuse, resisted fundamental changes until pressure made them unavoidable, and is now being used as the foundation for a new identity centered on doing good.

    “Hey, look at me. I’m telling other rich people what to do with their money. I’m a good guy. Really, I am.”

     
  • Greg Collier 10:38 am on December 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Adult Services, , , , , Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, PGA, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, The Salahi’s, Tiger Woods, Virginia socialites, White House Secretary Desiree Rogers   

    Does life happen in 3’s? 

    big-phony

    The most masterfully crafted images are only that, an image, and nothing more. In recent weeks three public images have broken down, proving that they are mere facades, and capable of hurting many when they fall apart. 

    It turns out that Tiger Woods is not a saint, but rather a mere mortal. With an image backed by multiple million dollar endorsement deals, Tiger can no longer hold up his end of the bargain. I am confident, however, that there are golfers and other athletes out there that could use those now available endorsement dollars by providing a genuine image brand that the public demands.   

    Tareq and Michaele Salahi, Virginia socialites, who crashed the recent White House dinner, have also portrayed themselves to be people they are not. The Salahi’s were able to convince many people that there was substance behind their image—how else do you get White House Secretary Desiree Rogers to consider adding your names to “the list”. Is this a victimless crime that is being transformed into a bigger issue than it should be? I don’t think so. How much of our tax dollars will be spent investigating this breach of White House security? How much time will be wasted on news networks dissecting every move that was made that night instead of covering issues and events that genuinely impact our world? How about those who lost their jobs for letting the masquerading couple make it through the gates? Or, most importantly, how did the dinner honoree-Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh-feel about an uninvited couple stealing the night’s spotlight?  Unfortunately, a night both Indian’s and American’s will never forget hinges upon the false images portrayed by their fellow citizens. 

    To top the list, though less public and less glitzy, is Craig Newmark, the founder and president of Craigslist.  Last week, a trial between eBay and Craigslist shined new light on Newmark’s ‘aw-shucks, power to the people, do-gooder’ image.  It turns out that he may be in it for the money after all – shocking!  Who is hurt by Newmark’s faulty façade? Those loyal followers who fiercely defend Craig Newmark’s image, while he is the backroom counting his $9.5 million!  Perhaps the anarchy of the “Adult Services” section is not about autonomy and non-governance after all, but rather about the insane amounts of user traffic that area attracts. Once free, this morally bankrupt section even charges users a listing fee! What a brilliant business model he has created…Newmark is no different than the rest of corporate America that care more about their personal bottom line than the personalities who make their business possible.  

    We have been given 3 masterfully crafted images… and 3 facades that crumbled in the midst of their self-serving objectives. They say life comes in 3’s…I wonder who will be next?

     
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