Backpage
Backpage.com was an online classified advertising website launched in 2004 as a digital extension of alternative newspapers, which evolved into a primary platform for adult services listings that generated over $500 million in revenue primarily from prostitution-related ads, including those depicting child exploitation, before its seizure by U.S. federal authorities in April 2018.[1][2]
The site's executives, including CEO Carl Ferrer—who pleaded guilty to conspiracy and money laundering charges—and co-founders Michael Lacey and James Larkin, were prosecuted for knowingly facilitating prostitution promotion through practices such as editing ads to obscure indicators of underage involvement and ignoring law enforcement warnings.[3][2]
Backpage's dominance in the online sex ad market, accounting for a reported 75% of tips received by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children regarding child sex trafficking, fueled congressional scrutiny and contributed to the passage of the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA-SESTA), which narrowed Section 230 immunities for platforms aiding trafficking.[4][5]
While the platform's shutdown displaced activity to less regulated offshore alternatives without reducing overall commercial sex ads, some econometric analyses indicate its operations correlated with lower homicide rates among female sex workers, possibly by shifting transactions indoors and enabling buyer screening.[6][7]