There are a lot of reasons that OnlyFans, the social networking site that’s become a favorite with adult content providers, is getting out of the porn business. None of them are good — not for the company itself, not for what it says about the country’s financial system, and certainly not for the sex workers who have built the site into the juggernaut that it is.
The site was not created exclusively to host adult content, but its ability to monetize photos and videos became an attractive way for amateur sex workers to make some above-board cash. In March 2020, soon after the first wave of Covid-related shutdowns hit, the site reported that 60,000 new creators had signed up that month, a 75 percent jump.
Since then, OnlyFan’s clout has only grown, up to and including getting a namedrop from Beyoncé in the remix of Megan Thee Stallion’s “Savage.” Which is why it was such a surprise on Thursday when Bloomberg News first reported that the site will prohibit users from posting any sexually explicit conduct, starting in October.
In its full statement, the company explained that creators will still “be allowed to post content containing nudity as long is it’s consistent with our Acceptable Use Policy.” While that means we’re not looking at a total ban on adult content, the back half of that sentence is doing a lot of work. There’s no guarantee that those terms won’t change in the near future. In the meantime, it reads as a de facto ban on “hardcore” content that sellers can charge premium prices for from subscribers.
So, why the shift? Days before the announcement, Axios reported that OnlyFans is having trouble raising funds from venture capitalists, who see the site as a risky investment. This despite, according to a pitch deck leaked to Axios, the company having facilitated $2.2 billion in sales from users to customers and gaining $375 million in net revenue. (It’s unclear how much of that was actually either profit for the company. It’s also unclear how much came from subscriptions to, and sales of, adult content specifically.)
At first, it seems like it may be a simple story of greedy capitalists killing the goose that’s laying their golden eggs
At first, then, it seems like it may be a simple story of greedy capitalists killing the goose that’s laying their golden eggs. If investors are uncomfortable partnering with a company that provides access to porn, simply ditch the sex workers that actually made the company what it is. But OnlyFans’ statement added another potential reason for the shift: “These changes are to comply with the requests of our banking partners and payout providers.”
That’s likely a reference to an April decision from Mastercard. Starting Oct. 15, if a bank wants to connect a seller to Mastercard’s network, they will need to “certify that the seller of adult content has effective controls in place to monitor, block, and, where necessary, take down all illegal content.”
That sounds like a good thing — but the controls that Mastercard is demanding include the kind of layers of moderation that require a lot of time, effort and resources, including reviewing all content before publishing and a “complaint resolution process that addresses illegal or nonconsensual content within seven business days.” And sex workers worry that the steps may be the beginning of a total ban on transactions related to porn using Mastercard’s systems.
It’s not an unfounded fear. Mastercard and Visa both announced last year that they’d no longer allow purchases on Pornhub. That decision followed a targeted outrage campaign from the evangelical, anti-pornography groups Exodus Cry and the National Center on Sexual Exploitation that want to abolish the porn industry entirely. Those same groups have had their sights on OnlyFans for years now; the Center on Sexual Exploitation even took credit for OnlyFans’ policy change.
In actuality, the pending changes are likely a combination of all of those factors — clout chasing, financial threats and moral outrage — which together are most likely to lead to entry into the bag fumble hall of fame.









