Just an open question since we keep getting situations like this where the industry effectively admits it is incapable and unwilling to act to stop the worst elements of the industry (child exploitation, human trafficking, forced involvement, rape etc) that it's probably best to just ban the industry together.
Notice though I said using real people, with AI slowly getting better and CGI improving, why do we need real people to make porn? Just have something animated to be realistic enough as I don't give a fuck about pixels or a drawing. Have whatever kink you want, have entire porn snuff films whatever as no REAL people are getting harmed in the making if it. The worst that can happen is stressed artists trying to meet deadlines.
This might also affect adult streamers which is just a bonus as it'll be like a re-run of Projekt Melody when she became more popular since she did more than just strip and stare blankly at the camera till donations came in. A lot of porn or porn in all but name streaming (which I include Twitch on that) get money off just simply being pretty and that's it, denying that as an easy route will probably cause a shift in a lot of media.
I wouldn't advocate a FULL ban as no matter your feeling on it generally, it is a release so going full puritan invites a backlash and probably just forces more men to deal with insufferable feminist women. But just making that release fully fictional based than support an industry that sweeps horrific practices under the rug for money is probably for the best.
They killed one woman who refused to do it. She performed under the name August Ames, and when she pointed out that guys who'd done gay scenes were more likely to have STDs, the mob descended upon her and tormented her until she killed herself.
Now, she was a porn star, so not the most stable to begin with, but the mob didn't care that she had personal preferences about who'd she'd let fuck her. She wasn't permitted to choose her partners. If she wasn't going to take dick from men who took dick, she'd never be allowed to work again.
It was one of the more intense social justice struggle sessions I remember seeing in full public view.