"We demand Starbucks do the right thing by keeping its promise of two and half years ago," she said. "We applaud Starbucks' commitment to protect children in its UK stores, but what about America's children? …There's no reason why Starbucks can't offer that same level of commitment of WiFi safety to its loyal customer base here in the United States."
Hughes said that because Starbucks did not follow through with its 2016 commitment, the company has kept open an for child pornography to be accessed under the radar, and for teens to bypass parental controls.
Enough is Enough ran a thank-you campaign for Starbucks after it promised to block porn in 2016. Hughes told NBC News that, this time, the group will withhold applause and continue to apply pressure until the changes are seen.
"They won't get an applause until they've actually implemented safe Wi-Fi filtering," Hughes said. "This time we're going to wait and see, and we're going to keep the pressure on."
Major porn websites have issued statements in response to the decision. The pornographic video-sharing site YouPorn, released a memo which banned the Starbucks' products from the organization's offices, beginning in January 2019.
A similar site, Pornhub, also issued a statement, noting it would be rolling out "Safe for Work" content – nudity-free videos. The category contains topics like video game reviews and advice from porn stars.
However, sexual and obscene advertisements may still be encountered in the "SFW" webpages. It is unclear if the new ban will block entire domains containing pornography, or allow access to parts of the websites which do not have sexually explicit material.
Perry West is a staff writer for Catholic News Agency. He graduated from Franciscan University with his bachelor's in English. Prior to his job at CNA, he worked in construction staffing and coffee.