Earlier this summer, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump signed a pledge that he would fight internet porn and work to prevent the sexual exploitation of children online if elected president.

The pledge he signed was authored by Enough is Enough, a bipartisan group that says it's been fighting internet porn since 1994.

The organization says it has worked to combat "internet pornography, child pornography, sexual

predation and cyber-bullying."

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Trump signed the pledge July 16, according to the New York Post, promising to "give serious consideration to appointing a Presidential Commission to examine the harmful public health impact of Internet pornography on youth, families and the American culture and the prevention of the sexual exploitation of children in the digital age."

The New York Post reported on the pledge just a day after potential First Lady of the United States Melania Trump was featured on the cover of that paper in 1995 photos of then-Melania Knauss stripped down to her birthday suit for a now-defunct French men's magazine.

How this will sit with his base remains to be seen. The pledge's full text can be seen here.

No one will dispute that child pornography is an insidious crime, but some might be concerned with the pledge's language to crack down on porn that is created by adults and consumed by adults. Many bristle at legal pornography being lumped in with illegal acts, like child porn.

The group accuses internet porn of "deforming the sexual development of younger viewers."

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It appears that Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has not signed the pledge, stating that she doesn't sign pledges.

According to the Washington Examiner, Enough is Enough President Donna Rice Hughes says that Clinton didn't sign the pledge due to a policy of the campaign to not sign pledges.

"Clinton agrees with the goals of the pledge. It's a good step," Hughes said.