OnlyFans reverses explicit content ban after outcry
OnlyFans says it has suspended a plan to ban sexually explicit content following an outcry from its creators and advocates for sex workers.
The subscription site said in a prepared statement on Wednesday that the planned ban was âno longer required due to banking partnersâ assurances that OnlyFans can support all genres of creatorsâ and declined to answer further questions.
OnlyFans says it is reversing a ban on the use of sexually explicit content.Credit:Getty Images
OnlyFans had said last week that it would ban explicit content starting October 1, blaming policies of banks and payment processors for the policy change. âThe new rules are necessary to comply with the requirements of these financial institutions and are the only way to help ensure the long-term sustainability of OnlyFans,â the company said in a message to users last week.
OnlyFans has become famous as a place where sex workers can get paid in a safer way as well as a space for celebrities to interact with fans.
Last weekâs abrupt change upset the siteâs creators, many of whom threatened to move to another website. A lot of sex workers joined OnlyFans during the pandemic when in-person venues shut down or became more dangerous because of COVID-19. The site has been tremendously lucrative for some people, allowing them to earn thousands every month. OnlyFans says it has 130 million users and 2 million creators who have collectively earned $US5 billion ($6.88 billion).
Lacy Lennon, who says she makes tens of thousands of dollars a month from OnlyFans charging $US100 a minute for custom videos, remains sceptical on the ban reversal. âWhatâs scary is whatâs the safety on this? How do we know it wonât happen again?â
There are other sites where people can pay for porn, and a crop of new ones started trying to lure upset OnlyFans creators. Rapper Tyga was promoting his plans for a new platform called myystar in media interviews after OnlyFans announced their ban, saying, âWeâre not putting a limit to any content that you do.â
âWeâve been in the adult industry for 20 years and weâre tired of seeing sex workers get bullied and exploited by the platforms that make the money off them,â said Mattie McCoy, whose Nevada company is also developing a site that could offer an alternative to OnlyFans for sex workers, called Naughty Popcorn.
Advocates had criticised OnlyFansâ planned ban, saying they were concerned it would push people into more dangerous street-based sex work. They say taking away a safer virtual space and cutting peopleâs income makes them more vulnerable to the risk of being trafficked.
âNot having the online outlet is going to hinder and harm a lot of people. Online is much safer, particularly for trans and gender-nonconforming folks,â said LaLa Zannell, the ACLUâs trans justice campaign manager who leads the rights groupâs effort to decriminalise sex work.
The online porn industry is changing amid concerns about sex trafficking and the exploitation of minors. Two 2018 laws, the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act and the Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act, were meant to stop sex trafficking online, and led some spaces to shut down. But many sex workers say these changes have also made their jobs more dangerous.
Elected officials had also raised concerns about OnlyFans. A bipartisan group of over 100 members of the US Congress called on the Justice Department to investigate OnlyFans earlier in August, saying the site was a âmajor marketplaceâ for sexual videos with children in them. The letter cited anti-porn group National Centre on Sexual Exploitation, which has its origins in the faith-based group Morality in Media, as a source, as well as the National Centre for Missing and Exploited Children.
Sex workers and their advocates say conservative and religious groups are trying to erase sex from the internet under the guise of combating sex trafficking and child pornography.
âThe only reason theyâre going after porn sites is because theyâre ideologically opposed to sexual content,â said Cathy Reisenwitz, a writer and OnlyFans creator who makes between $US1600 and $US3500 a month on the site. âTrafficking and porn are totally different.â
OnlyFans CEO Tim Stokely blamed banks such as Bank of New York Mellon for the planned ban in an interview with the Financial Times on Tuesday, saying they refuse the siteâs business.
Adult-content companies have to navigate higher fees and requirements from financial companies beyond what most retailers encounter; others wonât touch it. Both Mastercard and Visa last year began blocking customers from using credit cards on Pornhub after accusations that the site had videos of rape and underage sex. American Express cards, meanwhile, canât be used on online pornography. Stripe wonât process adult content.
AP
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