Through direct messaging, she chatted with fans daily, learning their habits, their sexual predilections and their insecurities, becoming what she likes to call an “online girlfriend.” Harwood noted that many of OnlyFans’ most successful performers are not the ones who post sexually explicit content but the ones who master the art of “teasing and titillation.” Stokely blamed the change entirely on the banks, saying that if the situation with them changed, the new prohibitions around sexual content would be lifted. Stokely did not respond to a request for comment, but in an interview on Tuesday with The Financial Times, Mr. Credit card companies also do not want to unwittingly process payments for material around which issues of consent later arise.Ī representative for Mr. Those credit card companies simply are too powerful, and although their growing hesitancy to process payments for pornography arguably plays into the hands of religious conservatives, there are other legitimate concerns: Consumers of porn are among the most likely to dispute transactions. Harwood, Tim Stokely - the site’s founder - and his partners “didn’t have much choice” but to change the rules initially. She has since parlayed her on-camera work into running a management company with more than 200 OnlyFans creators as clients.Īccording to Ms. An OnlyFans spokeswoman told The New York Times, in an emailed statement: “The proposed Octochanges are no longer required due to banking partners’ assurances that OnlyFans can support all genres of creators.” ‘Less Is More?’ĭannii Harwood became OnlyFans’ first content creator in 2016. “You see article after article about how successful it is, and for some reason the outside world doesn’t want it recognized.”īut on Wednesday, the company said it had reached an agreement with its payment processors. “You have really successful hard working content creators who put in a lot of time effort and work and have a consumer at the other end who wants to purchase it,” Mr. The change was, in part, because of the backlash of creators, who were beginning to leave the platform in numbers.
“Thank you to everyone for making your voices heard,” it said. Then, in a matter of days, the company reversed its decision, announcing in a tweet on Wednesday: “We have secured assurances necessary to support our diverse creator community and have suspended the planned October 1 policy change.”
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