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OnlyFans accused of using terror list to derail rivals
A lawsuit filed in Florida alleges a conspiracy to torpedo traffic to rival FanCentro
OnlyFans has been wildly successful, so when the site said that it would drop the thing that made it famous — explicit content, a.k.a. porn — the backlash was strong enough to make the company rethink that decision. While attempting to get rid of adult content certainly made it seem like OnlyFans was ready for a big change, a lawsuit filed in Florida says that before it considered rebranding with a lot less skin, the company was up to some shady business to protect its place in the market, including putting content from some performers on... a terrorism blacklist?
Last week the creator platform OnlyFans announced that it would be getting rid of explicit content on its site as of October of this year. The announcement was akin to the ocean announcing that it was totally over this whole "water" thing. After instant backlash from both its own creators and the wider internet, the company has reversed its plans, saying that it's suspended the change.
After launching a SFW app, OnlyFans is booting all sexually explicit content off the site
It looks like the site wants its future to be a lot less exciting
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OnlyFans has an Android app. On the Play Store. If you're familiar with the platform and its rather infamous "Patreon for porn" reputation, that might be confusing — doesn't the Play Store forbid outright porn? (It does!) This OnlyFans app only shows its safe for work content, both from more conventional creators and adult entertainers whose content is merely titillating instead of explicit.