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    You are at:Home»Technology»OnlyFans Turbocharged Sex Work. Now Its Founder Is Targeting the Whole Influencer Economy
    Technology

    OnlyFans Turbocharged Sex Work. Now Its Founder Is Targeting the Whole Influencer Economy

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseMay 29, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read2 Views
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    OnlyFans Turbocharged Sex Work. Now Its Founder Is Targeting the Whole Influencer Economy
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    OnlyFans Turbocharged Sex Work. Now Its Founder Is Targeting the Whole Influencer Economy

    All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.

    When Tim Stokely officially stepped down as CEO of OnlyFans in 2021, three years after selling the company that he founded to billionaire computer programmer Leo Radvinsky, he took time off to figure out his next move, but “conversations with creators never really stopped,” he says.

    By then, the creator-driven platform had become famous for mainstreaming influencer porn, transforming the sex worker economy into a robust business. As the pandemic forced everyone inside, rewiring our relationship to work and self-pleasure, OnlyFans took off.

    Even though Stokely was no longer affiliated with the company, he still wanted to hear from creators. Some expressed frustrations that OnlyFans felt “limited” in what it offered—creators who sell sex are especially dependent on X to boost subscriptions on their OF pages—while others shared desires of wanting a new platform that was more “brand-friendly.”

    Those discussions led to Subs, Stokely’s new everything-in-one creator platform that, to the untrained eye, looks like a repackaged version of OnlyFans, swapping its bland white-and-blue layout for a bolder interface and polished design.

    Philosophically, Stokely says the two platforms are worlds apart. Subs, which launched in May, was built on core principles—“freedom,” “visibility,” and “more ways to earn”—grounded in a belief that creators should have “true ownership over their audience and growth.”

    “Subs is about building real careers, not chasing trends,” Stokely says.

    And I want to believe him, it’s just that everything Subs offers already exists in one format or another. I’m told they designed it to help creators who want to move from free to paid content build audiences more easily by simplifying the platform experience. I’m told there are all sorts of “original” elements—only “Shows,” its longform video feature for “deep storytelling,” is basically YouTube, and the “Explore” feed, a mix of photos and video, is familiar to anyone hooked on the visual narcotic of Instagram’s grid. Subs, which Stokely says is all about providing “multiple, reliable income streams,” also provides one-on-one video calls—but so does Cameo.

    Subs declined to share the number of current users on the platform.

    I wouldn’t bet against Stokely just yet though—he’s got a canny foresight for this sort of thing; before OnlyFans he ran Customs4U and GlamWorship, modestly successful softcore-cam sites. But it’s hard not to wonder if the era of Peak Influencer has already passed. It’s hard not to wonder if the market has gotten so crowded to the point that it’s near impossible for creators to gain genuine influence anymore. Fifty-seven percent of Gen Z say they want to be an influencer but the profession has already seen a surplus of creators, with more than 50 million influencers globally. Can Subs cut through the noise and the increasing burnout felt by creators?

    Stokely doesn’t seem phased by that risk. It’s about “sustainable growth rather than fleeting fame,” he says, noting that the creator economy is expected to double in size over the next handful of years. That much he is right about—globally, it’s projected to hit half a trillion dollars by 2027.

    Like OnlyFans, Subs features both safe-for-work and adult content, of which creators take an 80 percent earnings cut. (To better create “a balanced ecosystem,” but also to keep users safe and comply with global regulations, Stokely makes clear that adult content is paywalled behind subscriptions and DMs). New personalized features, including collaborator revenue splits and referral earnings, do seem like a necessary improvement, however, in addition to its future AI offerings: auto-captioning, growth insights to help creators scale faster, and personalized content recommendations.

    “We’re committed to using AI ethically,” he says, where AI tools help creators “enhance their creativity, not replace it.”

    For as long as I have covered Stokely—since 2019, before OnlyFans became a cultural talking point—I got the sense that he wasn’t fully OK with OnlyFans being primarily viewed as an adult platform. It seemed like he wanted it to be more than that but it never shook the stigma, and probably never will. It makes his gamble on Subs all the more compelling.

    “Subs isn’t about one type of content, it’s about every creator’s potential,” he says when I ask if he wants the platform to be associated with adult content. I don’t completely buy his answer but his use of descriptors during our correspondence—“brand-friendly,” “balanced ecosystem”—tell me everything I need to know.

    What I don’t know is if any of this will work. The creator ecosystem today, which Stokely helped mold, is not the same one he entered in 2016, when OnlyFans launched and well before TikTok became the next frontier of cultural production for young creators. The ecosystem has grown into a monster with infinite heads. It’s saturated in creator apps that promote some version of what Subs is offering. Instagram has a tip jar. X users can subscribe to their favorite follows. Patreon remains a crowdfunding leader. Writers have Substack. Pornfluencers—the genre of content creators OnlyFans, and Stokely, gave rise to—are flocking to new portals of desire everyday: Fansly, FanBase, Fanvue, FanCentro, basically anything with the word Fan attached to it.

    That’s the game now. The internet reengineered everything into a commodity, and the rise of social media supercharged that reality. Platforms are built on what economist Jeremy Rifkin calls “access relationships,” where “virtually all of our time is commodified” and “communications, communion, and commerce [are] indistinguishable,” he wrote in his 2001 book Age of Access. Subs is just one option among a million others in this era of the subscription ouroboros.

    In April, another creator platform Stokely cofounded called Zoop, along with a crypto foundation HBAR, put in a bid to buy TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese owner, ByteDance, but Stokely tells me he is now fully focused on Subs.

    He declined to offer any additional details about the proposed deal.

    Where Subs has a genuine chance of scale, of perhaps shifting the landscape like OnlyFans did in 2020, is by reintroducing a fabric of authenticity to online connection. Social media, for all its good, has also contributed to a swift rise in loneliness, creating all sorts of sticky parasocial relationships and anxieties. Brain rot is everywhere. The different ways we connect and show up online are infused with the foul smell of artificiality, as AI ushers in a volatile new world. According to a report by Typeform, there is now a credibility epidemic among influencers; 33 percent have admitted to buying followers or engagement.

    But it doesn’t have to be that way. If OnlyFans was about the illusion of access, Subs has the opportunity to help make the promises of our social media contract real again—whether it works or not has yet to be seen.

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