Pornhub is acquired by Canadian private equity firm Ethical Capital Partners ... trends now Pornhub's owners are set to cash in with the sale of parent company MindGeek to Canadian private equity firm Ethical Capital Partners for an undisclosed amount. The firm, which claims to specialize in tech opportunities that 'require ethical leadership', announced the acquisition on its website yesterday. ECP say they plan to use their experience to build MindGeek while fighting illegal online content and ensuring ethical practices online. The sales comes a day after the release of a hard-hitting Netflix documentary Money Shot: The Pornhub Story, which focuses on trafficking and exploitation in the industry. MindGeek, who own a large portfolio of porn websites, said that with ECP's support it will 'further its research and adoption of the latest and best available online safety protocols to ensure that it remains a world-class leader in trust and safety and its platforms are inclusive, sex positive spaces for adults.' Performers, journalists and alleged victims spoke candidly on the new Netflix documentary Former Chief Executive Officer Feras Antoon (left) and former Chief Operating Officer David Tassillo (right), who resigned from MindGeek, the company best known for operating Pornhub Attention focused on Pornhub's practices after journalist Nicholas Kristof published a column in the New York Times entitled "The Children on Pornhub", detailing some of the survivor stories of young people whose sexual abuse had been uploaded to the website. '[The] site is infested with rape videos. It monetizes child rapes, revenge pornography, spy cam videos of women showering, racist and misogynist content, and footage of women being asphyxiated in plastic bags,' Kristof wrote. Pornhub subsequently banned uploads from unverified users. Mastercard and Visa cut their services to Pornhub in light of the report. Its top executives also resigned in 2022 after MindGeek was accused of hosting videos showing nonconsensual and underage sex. CEO Feras Antoon and COO David Tassillo remained shareholders of the company, having ran it for over a decade. Antoon co-founded Brazzers in 2005, joining Tassilo to purchase MindGeek (then called Manwin) in 2012 from German businessman Fabian Thylmann. Antoon and Tassillo denied claims their company allowed explicit videos of minors and unconsenting individuals to stay up on their sites. The company said at the time that MindGeek's executive leadership team would continue to run the company on an interim basis while looking for replacements. It is not clear whether Antoon and Tassillo were still shareholders when MindGeek decided to sell to Ethical Capital Partners, announced the day after the release of Netflix's documentary. Documentary maker Suzanne Hillinger worked with Kristof the one-and-a-half hour exposé Money Shot, released 15 March, which looked into allegations of sex trafficking and rape videos shared on the website. The film features interviews with performers, activists and past employees and claims to offer 'a deep dive into the successes and scandals of Pornhub'. Journalists, whistleblowers and victims of the site's alleged mismanagement of content speak candidly in the documentary. Money Shot follows the website from its inception in 2007 to the present, focusing on the difficulty the site has had protecting its creators. New owners Ethical Capital Partners will hope to ensure high standards, ensuring MindGeek's platforms 'are at the forefront of innovation, and trust and safety on the internet, and remain home to an inclusive global community of adult creators, performers, artists and users celebrating creative and sexual expression.' A press release said ECP would invest in MindGeek as an internet leader in fighting illegal content online, stressing 'child protection, intimate image security and digital self-determination'. The documentary was released on 15 March, a day before ECP announced the acquisition PayPal also cut services to Pornhub in 2019, claiming 'certain business payments' had been made through the site without PayPal's permission. Outlets claimed the payment platform had 'long been discriminating against performers' and claimed thousands would be hurt by it In response to Kristof's article, Pornhub said it is 'irresponsible and flagrantly untrue' to suggest that it allows images of the sexual abuse of children on its site. Pornhub added that it employs moderators to screen every upload and that it removes illegal material. MailOnline approached Ethical Capital Partners for comment. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility