On April 28, just before noon, Win White logged onto X and posted a series of messages to his 65,000 followers who, until that moment, were mostly unaware of his past as an OnlyFans creator.
“I’m asking humbly that we all refrain from sharing content from before. If you see it, save it … cool,” he wrote. “I know where I’ve been and I think I’m entitled to a life after that at least.”
That morning White, 29, had received several DMs about an old clip of him making rounds. Though he has done his best to separate his old life from his new one—last year he deleted his OnlyFans account and the separate X account where he posted content—it often has a habit of catching up with him. “All that work that I did for OnlyFans, I did out in California. I don’t really talk about it on this page. So I panicked,” White tells WIRED.
Still, he had a hunch how his request might be received, and how nasty the responses could get. “From the moment that I sent the tweet I knew that this isn’t something that everybody is going to adhere to. I don’t expect any type of respect.”
The reactions, which ranged from empathetic to mostly mocking, maligned White for his past choices. “You were desperate then so deal with the now,” one X user commented. As more people piled on, the ordeal ignited an intense discussion around the boundaries of consent and the ethics of consumption.
OnlyFans underwent massive growth between 2020 and 2023. A gay Navy veteran, White signed up for the platform in September 2022 because he wanted to establish independence from a toxic relationship he was trying to get out of. By August 2023, the year he quit, OnlyFans had more than 3 million creators. White says he shot maybe 40 videos in total, and mostly filmed solo scenes, with the exception of a few he did with a former partner.
The experience had started to feel inauthentic to who he was, on top of the reputational consequences not being worth the scant payout. “I only did it when I needed money to do something extra curricular. It was never my day job. I didn’t get rich off of it.” There’s another thing, White says, “I really sucked at it,” which is why he was so caught off guard by the responses to his posts asking people to stop sharing his content.
Many people argued that White’s plea was unreasonable. This is the internet and, well, the internet is forever. “You can’t ask millions of strangers to collectively agree to a ‘hush’ policy on content that you personally put out and kept live. That’s just not how this works,” posted one X user, with another piling on: “Digital footprint lives here and doesn’t leave here.” Others called the request hypocritical given that they had paid for the work. Added @stuntqween: “I’m all for respect—but it’s quite comical when retired OF gays finally accumulate the funds that they’ve dreamed of (from making porn) then all of a sudden it’s ‘take that down!’ Babe we paid for that OF content, shared your content to SUPPORT you & funded your lifestyle.” Those in support of White contended that it came down to one issue—consent—saying the inability to start over constitutes an unfair social punishment. Asked @MrFlyyyGuyyy, “Why are y’all so comfortable disregarding a person’s consent?”
Over the last several years, there has been a notable exodus of high-profile creators from OnlyFans, including influencer Blac Chyna and Great British Bakeoff winner John Whaite, and some are having to navigate tough questions as they quit the business.
What happens when someone who makes porn no longer wants to be associated with their past? What obligation do consumers have to creators who want to move on? The moral friction, it seems, lies in how consent is defined.
“We teach young people that consent is an ongoing negotiation and that anyone can withdraw consent, at any time, during a sexual encounter, for any reason. What does that mean when it comes to the afterlife of someone’s porn work when they’re now out of the business? I don’t think there’s an easy answer to this question,” says Lynn Comella, who researches sexual politics and consumer capitalism at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. “But it is a conversation worth having.”
Last December, Camilla Araujo, who claims to have earned over $20 million in her five years on OnlyFans, announced on TikTok that she was quitting in 2026, saying, “I want to do something that caters to all of you guys, and makes me happy.” She has since launched a somewhat controversial mentorship program. Nala Ray, who joined OnlyFans in 2020 as it was taking off, pivoted to faith-based content and podcasting. Autumn Renea, who has been on the platform since 2022, is planning to quit the platform after making $10 million dollars, she announced on X, writing, “I’m retiring and becoming a full time Christian.” And when Fitness Papi, a popular gay porn star with over 1 million followers, also announced last December that he would stop making content come the new year, he acknowledged the toll of the job. “Porn was fun in the beginning. Then it solely became a job,” he posted.
But the exit strategy is different for every creator. Some would rather not be associated with their old work, and have done their best to scrub traces of it completely from the internet. Brandon Karson nuked his X and OnlyFans accounts in January, writing in a now deleted X post, “after a loooooooooong thought process … I will no longer be making adult content.” Last week, Julius, a creator known for making solo butt videos, posted “Onlyfans and X content is officially done!!!!” to his 125,000 X followers, after deleting all the NSFW videos from his page (though, for now, you can still subscribe to his OnlyFans for $11.99 and view old posts).
White, who relocated to Washington, DC, in 2025 and is currently studying to become an EMT, is now focused on creating as much distance as possible from his old life. In Europe, the right to be forgotten allows individuals to request the deletion of personal data from search engines, a process that has helped former sex workers move into new careers and escape the stigma still associated with the profession. Currently, US courts and laws do not permit the same widespread deletion, though certain states, California included, have limited, state-specific laws that enable scrubbing certain personal information from the internet.
Asked if he considered the consequences of online sex work—aware that people might not be willing to ever let him forget what he’d done—before getting into it, White hesitates before responding. “I always knew it was a possibility. I just didn’t consider that there’s no boundaries. Pretty much what you naysayers are telling me is that my body isn’t mine once it goes on the internet. And I believe the contrary.”
White googled what legal action he could take on the images he owned, “and AI could have been lying to me, but you can revoke consent on things like that. I didn’t sign any contracts. That was my material. That was my property.” OnlyFans creators retain copyright in their photos and videos, and reposting them without permission can amount to copyright infringement. Creators can also revoke consent on the distribution of their videos at any time, but legally forcing removal hinges on whether a contract was signed and what the contract stipulated.
When a creator does revoke their consent, continuing to share or profit on their content becomes non-consensual distribution—what’s known as revenge porn—and creators can take legal action against people who do so. Creators can also issue takedowns via the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to get content removed from sites and social media pages. “If I really wanted to take it there and make an example out of somebody, I believe I could,” White says.
Over the years, Comella says, there has been far more attention on the ethics of porn production versus consumption, which includes “paying for, and not pirating or stealing, the porn you watch and, at a bare minimum, respecting performers’ boundaries if you are DMing or engaging with them online.” Yet even as porn has become increasingly prevalent in the age of social media, she says some of the negative responses still speak to a specific, if unfortunate, “worldview in which sex work stigma is so all-encompassing a person is seemingly stripped of their humanity, forever, if they do sex work even once.”
White hasn’t taken any legal action against people who continue to repost his videos, nor is he naive about how the internet works. Though he doesn’t regret his time as a sex worker, he fully understands that what he’s requesting is somewhat of an impossible ask. He blames social media and what he calls the evolution of access to performers.
“To respond with such vitriol, to try to tear me down. It made me worry about how many people are wolves in sheep’s clothing in real life. The consumers are actually dangerous,” he says. “The response said a lot about how the goalpost can move on something as simple as consent. I wouldn’t imagine a nut being this important to anybody.”
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: wired.com






