Seeking Privacy as Much as Porn, Web Surfers are Flocking to New Search Engine BoodiGo.com

BOSTON – When BoodiGo.com co-founder Colin Rowntree first conceived of launching an adult entertainment-specific search engine that emphasizes user privacy, he certainly expected it to find an audience – just not quite such an enormous audience, perhaps.

“Within hours of making our first announcement, we realized we were going to have to devote additional servers to BoodiGo in order to support the amount of traffic and searches we were seeing,” Rowntree said. “The consumer response was just amazing and outpaced even our most enthusiastic projections.”

Spurred on largely by positive media coverage – BoodiGo hasn’t spent a dime on traffic or advertising to date – the new search engine took off quickly. BetaBeat.com termed it “a new search engine just for porn, for when Google just isn’t sexy enough.” BoodiGo’s proactive efforts to offer surf-safe and legitimate search results led Cosmo.com to note the search engine “let’s you find porn without giving you a computer virus.”

While it’s no secret that porn has long been a consistent draw for web users, the primary driving force behind consumer interest in BoodiGo is the privacy factor, with surfers in droves jumping on the opportunity to use a search engine that doesn’t track their every online move in furtherance of profile-building and ad-targeting. As Salon.com put it, BoodiGo “might be the best new way to find porn without selling users’ fantasies to advertisers.”

In the days immediately following its launch, BoodiGo received over 2.5 million unique visitors, a surprising percentage of which accessed and read the site’s privacy policy, in addition to trying out the search function.

“I’ve been running adult websites since 1994, and I’ve never seen anything like this sort of interest in a privacy policy,” Rowntree said. “I think it says a lot about what really appeals to people about BoodiGo; it’s not just a good way to find online porn, it’s a good way to find online porn without having to look over your digital shoulder, so to speak.”

 

For Rowntree, that appeal comes as no surprise, as it fits into a larger cultural concern about privacy, both online and offline.

 

“One of the things that inspired the creation of BoodiGo was an explosion of news stories that revealed just how frequently and intensely we are monitored as Internet users,” Rowntree said. “The NSA and other federal government surveillance gets the headlines, but if you think about it, private sector tracking of users is the thing that’s truly ubiquitous. I think there’s a new level of awareness among the public that Big Brother might not be the government; Big Brother just might be a bunch of suit-wearing VPs sitting in a boardroom.”

ABOUT BOODIGO

Boodigo is the very first adult-oriented search engine that takes the user directly to explicit 21+ sites without the clutter of mainstream search services, in a completely anonymous and secure online environment. Boodigo was developed over a one-year period by site developers and content creators in the adult entertainment industry that set out to create a superior search service without the security and privacy issues found on mainstream sites.  Visit Boodigo Here….

BoodiGo Partners with IAFD.com to Promote and Support Adult Performers

BOSTON, Mass. – In order to help support the livelihoods of adult entertainment performers, new adult-specific search engine BoodiGo.com has partnered with the Internet Adult Film Database, which provides performer images, biographical info and links to performer profiles on IAFD.com, where surfers can learn more about them, and find links to performers’ official websites, blogs, social media accounts and outlets where their films can be purchased.

“The basic idea behind BoodiGo is to be a search engine that supports the adult industry, not just another search engine that can be used to find porn,” said BoodiGo co-founder Colin Rowntree. “I’ve always found IAFD.com to be an excellent resource, and I’m delighted to have them working with us to ensure that when surfers search for their favorite porn stars, the search responses encourage them to support the performers by going to their official websites and purchasing their work, instead of just watching it for free on a site that may or may not have the rights to the content in the first place.”

IAFD.com LOGOThe Internet Adult Film Database has been tracking bibliographic information on adult movies at its current home since 1999. With information on over 171,000 movies from 1959 through present, the IAFD is the most comprehensive database of its kind. Maintenance is provided by a dozen volunteer editors doing their own research assisted by a variety of sources – industry professionals, fellow researchers and everyday porn fans.  Along with movie listings, IAFD has a price search engine and links to over 113,000 movie reviews from some of the leading review sites on the net.

“We were excited to work with Colin on this project,” said Jeff Vanzetti, webmaster and co-founder of iafd.com. “We knew him by reputation as an AVN Hall of Famer, and we were quite flattered to be asked to be a part of BoodiGo. Now, when folks search for their favorite stars, our biographical info will be right there on the results page along with a way for the fan to find out all the movies that star has been in, and how and where to procure legal copies.”

In addition to the new partnership with IAFD.com, BoodiGo has also announced a collaboration with the Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection (ASACP) to block search terms used to seek out child pornography, and a joint effort with PornGuardian to prevent the listing of known piracy sites.

ABOUT BOODIGO

Boodigo is the very first adult-oriented search engine that takes the user directly to explicit 21+ sites without the clutter of mainstream search services, in a completely anonymous and secure online environment. Boodigo was developed over a one-year period by site developers and content creators in the adult entertainment industry that set out to create a superior search service without the security and privacy issues found on mainstream sites.


MEDIA CONTACT:  BSG PR / 818.340.4422 / brian@bsgpr.com  / @bsgpr

AskMen.com Coverage, pt.2: BoodiGo Prevents Piracy With PornGuardian

[ed: The author didn’t do her homework well, and get a lot of it all wrong, but we appreciate the coverage!! – Boodigo Blog Staff]

by Kelly Hurcomb at Askmen.com
October 17, 2014

Do you remember our story about BoodiGo, the anonymous, sex-specific search engine that launched earlier this fall? Do you remember how it all seemed a little too good to be true, what with its privacy protection policy and promise to (essentially) change the online porn game forever? Well, I’m happy to inform you that despite all of our suspicions pertaining to whether or not things would work out for the startup, they seem to be doing pretty well for themselves.

This week, the company announced a new partnership with PornGuardian — the aim of the team-up is to eliminate all pirated pornographic material from BoodiGo’s search results.

Read The Rest Of The Story Here….

Want to hookup now?





Recent News





Friends Of Boodigo…









Contact us!

We are opening this site up to PR submissions to everyone in the adult industry for fast publication that we also promote on our social media.  All categories welcome – Performers, film releases, new site launches, new pleasure product, podcast promos, etc.

A few basic rules:

1. All PR must be well-written with a suggested word count of 500 words.
2. Up to three outgoing links is allowed to what you are promoting along with your social media channel.
3. Please take it easy on the use of hype, big huge adjectives and exclamation points at the end of sentences!!!!! ( 😉 ) We simply remove them anyway and it slows down publication.
4. Send along one feature image that is landscape orientation.  We are also happy to include embedded videos if you send the embed iframe.  Sex, nudity, etc is fine and actually encouraged as this site supplements the existing news sites that do not allow such.

Send PR via email as an attached .doc or link to a google doc to
singer.coleen@gmail.com

Recent Posts

Categories