Forum Moderators: martinibuster
But what if something, for example, is not a #*$! site but mentions the word "sex"? For example, say a scientific article that says "widgets of this sex..."
Or, say a dating site with an article on dating/relationships and sex, orgasm, etc.? Is this considered "adult"? Even if it is not in a #*$!ographic sense?
I think of #*$! when they say "adult" but I don't know how loose their definition is.
But what if something, for example, is not a #*$! site but mentions the word "sex"? For example, say a scientific article that says "widgets of this sex..."
I've got several pages that are specifically about sex (hanky-panky, not gender), and they do display AdSense ads. The ads aren't always perfectly matched, though: When I looked at one of the pages just a moment ago, the #1 ad pitched a Yahoo Shopping page for "girls." ("Quickly check merchant prices. 1000s of stores.") The #5 ad was for a "Sex-crimes defense lawyer." The other three ads were a better fit for the page and the site.
On the other hand I got a shop feed to another site of mine, and some adult toys or dvds were included. Although there was nothing like explicit material displayed, google acted pretty quickly, setting a 3 day deadline in order to remove the adsense blog or the content.
So google can see the difference between adult and adult wording. But it may also happen, that adsense will display public service ads automatically on not 100% sober pages.