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Topic: Bitcoin has become a lifeline for sex workers (Read 331 times)

member
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Pawsome
October 30, 2022, 11:09:39 PM
#34
Well, we can't deny that cryptocurrencies especially Bitcoin is a perfect currency for that industries. With Bitcoin, a person has transactions that are more private, and difficult to track, especially if they use a Bitcoin mixer, and this is quite possible. Sometimes, one has problems when it comes to currency as well as banking because of the money made in the sex industries, right? Meanwhile, this industry is currently undeniable and can't be stopped, it's even getting bigger. And indeed many sex and gambling sites use Bitcoin as the safest means of transaction,
Bitcoin or crypto did really touch up certain industries which doesnt only limit out on sex/porn industry but also in other industries as well just like on gambling and other stuffs.
Decentralized feature and easy accessibility is one of its main things on why it do really fits out as a payment system which it is anonymous and totally decentralize and
that what make other people been preferred into specially if they do touch up porn industry.We've seen several popular porn sites had adopted
crypto payments and its been a while since its been integrated and its a huge plus for those crypto users who do always watch porn.  Cheesy
We can't say these are anonymous, because different services are offered. Maybe the transaction is anonymous, but with cam girls they're exposed. There identity too need to be kept hidden, in such a way the industry needs to turn out the development.

When someone can transact without being known or anonymous especially for things like sex transactions, of course they will be liked, privacy is very important because if people transact with bank transfers it will be easy to use to be detrimental, but this is not the goal of bitcoin made.
sr. member
Activity: 1358
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It is natural that Bitcoin is increasingly popular, there will be many users and can receive bitcoin payments, sex workers who receive bitcoin of course also know bitcoin and bitcoin potential, especially customers feel more comfortable when transactions with sex workers are unknown because of anonymous so that the volume of transactions continues increase.
legendary
Activity: 3234
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Vave.com - Crypto Casino
Well, we can't deny that cryptocurrencies especially Bitcoin is a perfect currency for that industries. With Bitcoin, a person has transactions that are more private, and difficult to track, especially if they use a Bitcoin mixer, and this is quite possible. Sometimes, one has problems when it comes to currency as well as banking because of the money made in the sex industries, right? Meanwhile, this industry is currently undeniable and can't be stopped, it's even getting bigger. And indeed many sex and gambling sites use Bitcoin as the safest means of transaction,
Bitcoin or crypto did really touch up certain industries which doesnt only limit out on sex/porn industry but also in other industries as well just like on gambling and other stuffs.
Decentralized feature and easy accessibility is one of its main things on why it do really fits out as a payment system which it is anonymous and totally decentralize and
that what make other people been preferred into specially if they do touch up porn industry.We've seen several popular porn sites had adopted
crypto payments and its been a while since its been integrated and its a huge plus for those crypto users who do always watch porn.  Cheesy
We can't say these are anonymous, because different services are offered. Maybe the transaction is anonymous, but with cam girls they're exposed. There identity too need to be kept hidden, in such a way the industry needs to turn out the development.
hero member
Activity: 2730
Merit: 632
Well, we can't deny that cryptocurrencies especially Bitcoin is a perfect currency for that industries. With Bitcoin, a person has transactions that are more private, and difficult to track, especially if they use a Bitcoin mixer, and this is quite possible. Sometimes, one has problems when it comes to currency as well as banking because of the money made in the sex industries, right? Meanwhile, this industry is currently undeniable and can't be stopped, it's even getting bigger. And indeed many sex and gambling sites use Bitcoin as the safest means of transaction,
Bitcoin or crypto did really touch up certain industries which doesnt only limit out on sex/porn industry but also in other industries as well just like on gambling and other stuffs.
Decentralized feature and easy accessibility is one of its main things on why it do really fits out as a payment system which it is anonymous and totally decentralize and
that what make other people been preferred into specially if they do touch up porn industry.We've seen several popular porn sites had adopted
crypto payments and its been a while since its been integrated and its a huge plus for those crypto users who do always watch porn.  Cheesy
full member
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BK8 - Most Trusted Gambling Platform
Well, we can't deny that cryptocurrencies especially Bitcoin is a perfect currency for that industries. With Bitcoin, a person has transactions that are more private, and difficult to track, especially if they use a Bitcoin mixer, and this is quite possible. Sometimes, one has problems when it comes to currency as well as banking because of the money made in the sex industries, right? Meanwhile, this industry is currently undeniable and can't be stopped, it's even getting bigger. And indeed many sex and gambling sites use Bitcoin as the safest means of transaction,
legendary
Activity: 2310
Merit: 1848
Are banks so afraid to be associated with sex, they'd rather lose the business completely? Porn made VHS big, porn made the internet big, and now porn is "contributing" to making crypto big. And if it works for sex, eventually it will work for anything else too. Don't banks realize that business lost to crypto is lost to them forever?
I can make a comment for Germany: Yes, banks do not want it. It is not easy to open a bank account, even if all business documents are complete and the business system is positive. Very difficult, you should know someone in the system, then it becomes easier.

The restriction of middlemen forces these sex workers to find another way to get their payment effectively.  It's the same experience with some people online where the transactions had been reversed. As a result, they turn to BTC to avoid such problems.

One problem left for this adoption to really make its way for BTC to be used as currency is finding stores that will actually accept BTC directly without having to cash out and turn BTC into USD. So far there are few stores still.
From my point of view, bitcoin and sexwork are not yet ready for it. It's the cash that everyone wants, the smallest bills are not paid digital and I see it every day and I understand it too.



Digital transmissions are normal for live cams, but if someone wants an escort or goes in a club, cash is king. I can report from Germany and we can talk about ideas here. I would like to see a way for sexworkers to use their hard earned money legally without any problems. But it's a really difficult, because the women also don't want to pay taxes and run to Western Union and pay a lot of fees for their money to be transferred.
legendary
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Well, to affirm that BTC is like a lifesaver is to ensure that it is not only for one type of worker, that btc represents money does not mean that FIAT money is not the same, sometimes there is a type of campaign like this and others that affirm that the biggest crimes are done with BTC or cryptocurrencies to do bad publicity or maybe fud, but we know very well that gold, btc, represent money, and that the entire economy is mostly due to fiat money, that BTC represents a The way of looking at money is something else, that it is of a deflationary nature is something else and that it is an alternative economy superior to the traditional economy, that is something that each person in the world will discover whenever they want.
legendary
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Use cases is one way in which bitcoin can get its needed popularity and for it to be known for the currency that it is and not a scam or some ponzi scheme.  Unfortunately, this is what most persons still regard bitcoin and a lot of other cryptocurrencies out there to be and has been a major reason why they shy away from the development. Not until, the effect of a centralise system like the fiat begins to tell on them and push them to an edge where they've got no choice other than, go for what isn't traditional and works or stick yo the traditional and have a bad business. That's when cryptos becomes real to them, they make a first trier and should they understand the principles of hodl and value, they won't let loose.
hero member
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We quite understand that cryptocurrency does not have any form of segregation or discrimination in placing embargo to individuals freedom especially when it comes to finances, banks and government are are trusted with handling of individual private life and this is the major reason why Satoshi Nakamoto created an independent decentralized digital currency called bitcoin.
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There are two types of sec workers and the first type is the cybersex workers who gave live streams and upload adult content on related websites to get money from viewers in this case with the growing internet in the world this type of workers can work much easier and safer bitcoin could make it even easier for them because since last years they had to use other methods such as Paypal and in this case, they had to share their personal information with the government also there were sex workers from countries where they could use Paypal and here they had many problems but nowadays they usually use bitcoin and the other cryptocurrencies for their business. 
legendary
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Do not die for Putin
This does not surprise anyone really, however, if you think of the future, you can probably figure out that these restrictions will eventually be implemented for bitcoin. KYC and other will eventually be made even stronger than they are now and the gaps and loopholes may be closed. Being honest, it is true that I am in favour of financial sovereignty for each individual, but I do see a problem on using bitcoin for human trafficking.
hero member
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Not really surprising, bitcoin has a lot of utilities so I wasn't surprised, in my opinion, this is inevitable as sex work is getting more mainstream than usual. Pretty sure that these people have been familiar with online payments for awhile now but it's a good thing, much better if all the industry is reached by bitcoin.
Nothing surprises me and its true that bitcoin has a lot of utilities and it isnt only limited on a few applications and as a payment system then it wouldnt really be surprising that it could really reach into

this point which it would really be that beneficial into those people who had been using it on that particular purpose or motive which it still considerable.

It is really just there are people who do have bad impressions about this industry but lets take up some consideration that it is just a payment system.
legendary
Activity: 3332
Merit: 1191
Well, I wouldn't say just Bitcoin... For years we are reading about some porn sites accepting different crypto payments, most of them started with some privacy coins! I guess now that rules are tightened about adult content publishers are turning to decentralized markets, which is not a surprise! I just wish to point out that this is something that started years ago, and includes various cryptocurrencies!
We people are like that, we will always find a way to survive! And I guess adult content publishers are doing just that, they are trying to survive and to continue to do what they are doing! With crypto that is possible for them, so why not?! I am not against it, as long as it's someone's free will to do that!
sr. member
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It is indeed a great help for sex workers who have problems dealing with their payments. How could they stop when it is the only way they know how to feed themselves. It helps adoption of Bitcoin and other crypto currencies, they will experience how it works and later on maybe tell their coworkers and friends. Adoption is on the move and little did we know it would be known to all and also use this as a form of payment for their work.
It is not a secret anymore. Many industries are now switching or considering bitcoin as a medium because it does not have a restrictions or it is simply cool to use because of its features but about the people that work in the adult industry I do not believe that they do not have any other options other than choosing that industry.

Lots of bars have been closed by the authorities and workers of it have now changed and have a better life now but I think online type of this job are not that harmful as long as they do not do physical meetups. It can help them earn something. Bitcoin helps not just a way to get their payments but they can also use it as an investment to increase their profit.
full member
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Regardless of the profession of sex workers or any form of work, when using Bitcoin as an alternative payment, it has indirectly made Bitcoin a payment that can enter any area. Even illegal transactions though. But in fact, because it depends on the subject who uses it,

This whole aspect of bitcoin used for illegal transactions will depend on different things and one of it is how the people are seeing bitcoin and another is the law concerning sex workers in a particular country, the prostitution law will determine the way bitcoin used for alternative payment for the particular sector. I think here if the prostitution business is not a problem, using bitcoin to pay their service will not consider as illegal transaction business.
sr. member
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But it doesn't really worked as how the sex content related platforms expected and it only happened due to the regulations so bitcoin will work for p2p level but to go mainstream it still needs the regulations then only the platforms can implement it.

However money os actually made for transaction with person to person which is very good with bitcoins and no one actually can ask anything.
hero member
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The restriction of middlemen forces these sex workers to find another way to get their payment effectively.  It's the same experience with some people online where the transactions had been reversed. As a result, they turn to BTC to avoid such problems.

One problem left for this adoption to really make its way for BTC to be used as currency is finding stores that will actually accept BTC directly without having to cash out and turn BTC into USD. So far there are few stores still.

full member
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Not really surprising, bitcoin has a lot of utilities so I wasn't surprised, in my opinion, this is inevitable as sex work is getting more mainstream than usual. Pretty sure that these people have been familiar with online payments for awhile now but it's a good thing, much better if all the industry is reached by bitcoin.

Yes, because since the beginning of its appearance, bitcoin has only been used for private transactions, the community does not want to be controlled by anyone, so with news like this by sex workers using it as a transaction tool is a bridge to continue to enjoy personal benefits too, and regardless of technological advances this time but I only see this as taking advantage of the moment of advancement of knowledge.
sr. member
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Blue0x.com
     Wow, this sure is innovative, most people would surely be surprised. The me right now isn't though it obviously was just a matter of time before it happens since it is quite convenient for most of the people who loves to indulge in this type of thing. While it may seem hard at first, it really won't matter since if you really want it, there are always ways and if not, there will be dozens of reason why it isn't possible.

     A thing I can share right now is that here in my country hookers are already accepting crypto currencies! Talk about innovative, lol. But they only accept common crypto currencies like btc, eth or xrp. Some even create telegram groups to sell videos of themselves "doing it" in exchange for some crypto or just cash. Their advertisements are more commonly seen on twitter nowadays.

     Crypto being used in such an industry will be good for mass adoption. At least way better than being labelled as a currency for criminals just like a few years ago. Either way regardless of being a good or bad publicity, it is still publicity. I can only expect great times ahead for the crypto industry.
legendary
Activity: 2702
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This is not considered a real reason to use Bitcoin, but rather how people found alternatives to the cash system. The majority would prefer to use credit card payments instead of paying with Bitcoin, but they have no choice.

Thus, it is an ideal choice for those who cannot accept traditional financial methods and the difficulty of conducting cash for such transactions.
Real adoption will be when you have many options and you choose bitcoin because you believe it is the future or at least keep bitcoin for several years.
sr. member
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Bitcoindata.science
The fiat system governed by banking institution is now switching people attention to crypto currency adoption as the day goes by making individuals see the need to go use crypto as the keep making their services unbearable and making even more tighter laws. Going by the story if there was no issues of restrictions on sex workers account there might not have seen the need for crypto currency and since fiat is more stable the would love to stick to it but their frustrations made them see the reason the should switch to crypto currency since there is no middle man to freeze or ban their accounts and they can actually keep any amount the choose to as long as the wish without anyone asking for their source of income.
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he sent it through the camera.
First time I've seen a Bitcoin transaction described this way Cheesy

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the biggest attraction was having total and irreversible ownership over the money she had earned.
She may call herself a crypto advocate, but what she's saying is not true as long as she's using Coinbase (or any other exchange for that matter).

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$11,000 for a full 24 hours
How are they going to explain this to taxes? Whether it's cash or crypto, these rates seem like a great way to launder money.

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PayPal booted her because of a payment for her used socks that was large enough to get red-flagged.
Are banks so afraid to be associated with sex, they'd rather lose the business completely? Porn made VHS big, porn made the internet big, and now porn is "contributing" to making crypto big. And if it works for sex, eventually it will work for anything else too. Don't banks realize that business lost to crypto is lost to them forever?
legendary
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This is the perfect example. The mass majority of people will only realize the importance of bitcoin and cryptocurrencies only when they actually get deplatformed and when they're already out of choices. I could guarantee that most sex workers have been ignoring bitcoin back then, until recently.
This is true for bitcoin adoption. Many people that are using bitcoin today did not just willingly start to use it. It is when there is a problem that bitcoin will solve that you will see them using bitcoin. With this style many people will start using bitcoin. Necessity they say is the mother of discovery. Bitcoin is giving people liberty to do what they like and that is why government always foghr bitcoin.

They just think about bitcoin in different way since bitcoin is somehow introduce to others as a form of investment where they can make their money grow by simply buying it that's why many other didn't even think how valuable it is and doesn't have any confidence upon using it or by holding it. If bitcoin will just recognize by all of the country as legal currency for sure all of the conclusion towards it will be change and it will get positive approach to every users.
sr. member
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Duelbits.com
Regardless of the profession of sex workers or any form of work, when using Bitcoin as an alternative payment, it has indirectly made Bitcoin a payment that can enter any area. Even illegal transactions though. But in fact, because it depends on the subject who uses it, it doesn't matter what makes Bitcoin an option. Because at this time sex workers are unlikely to receive fiat that goes into their accounts and will be investigated by the bank. So to avoid this, there are cryptocurrencies that can be used freely without the need to provide an identity. So it's legal as a transaction tool, but do sex workers just use payment as an escape? not the adoption we hope to hold.
hero member
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I think this is one of the consequences of transacting using cryptocurrencies. It provided an alternative for sex workers to receive funds without being tracked and regulated. Since banks have been closing their accounts due to such practice, these workers are compelled to look for an alternative; in which BTC was the perfect platform for them.

To be honest, this is not that surprising considering that lots of altcoins have been focused on creating porn/sex coins on the market. If you were to visit the ANN threads under the altcoin section, you would find like at least 1-3 threads containing new porn altcoins specifically catering to this kind of market.
legendary
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February 12, 2022, 04:24:00 AM
#9
She's using Coinbase to receive his payment and of course she have submitted her KYC, of course Coinbase already know she is and they might shared this information to banks... banks could froze her money since it's from unknown sources isn't? Just like mastercard or visacard. She made $1.3 million last year, I don't think banks or Coinbase doesn't recognized such large amount came from and how popular her as sex worker.
hero member
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February 12, 2022, 03:57:44 AM
#8
And there's nothing unexpected really. Most people who would actually use Bitcoins are those that have had enough of banks, or their professions are restricted by banks and the like since Bitcoin is the one that would exactly help them. Well, it wouldn't come to that point if laws were to legalize jobs like that (which I see nothing wrong), but well that's another story. It's another area as well where crypto adoption thrives, and possibly spread to their users as well since it is made as an alternative method. You can also consider gambling being in the same case as them tbf, but gambling is at more ease when it comes to restrictions.
legendary
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February 12, 2022, 03:07:23 AM
#7
....

Interesting stories and narrative emerging here. I feel like sex workers who use crypto have lived through the fustrations some have had with traditional finance. There is a massive unbanked and discontent demographic, which creates a vacuum necessary for bitcoin and cryptocurrencies to thrive. Banks closing the accounts of sex workers has likely provided some of the most powerful incentive driving cryptocurrency mass adoption. Mastercard and visacard disavowing pornhub payments likewise must have had a powerful effect to push cryptocurrency adoption on those seeking alternative options.

The article mentions backpage which became one of the go to sites for personal ads after craigslist personals were shut down. What it neglects to mention however is the massive "this site was seized by the FBI" graphic that pops up if someone visits the backpage website today. It is possible that even the seizure of sites like backpage have been fuel to crypto mass adoption.

We could have a precedent emerging here, where the biggest push in favor of crypto mass adoption comes from banks and intelligence agencies. Remember all of those "how do we achieve bitcoin mass adoption" threads made on this website? I wonder if we finally have a definitive answer to them.


It's certainly a sort of grey area market (that the police like to abuse) which will get a lot of help from cryptocurrency. It should be noted that they say stablecoins are particularly useful because they're much less volatile, no point getting paid $1,000 and waking up the next morning to only find $800 in your "bank account" if you need to pay the rent. I'd say this whole situation has to do with old men, usually pretending to be religious and often practicing hypocrites, who set these rules up because it was just the done thing back when they were young but is now considered more acceptable in society. If the rules were rewritten to be more fair then any financial institution could  be geared to accept it, though traditionally I guess it has been a cash business.
hero member
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February 12, 2022, 02:39:30 AM
#6
This is the perfect example. The mass majority of people will only realize the importance of bitcoin and cryptocurrencies only when they actually get deplatformed and when they're already out of choices. I could guarantee that most sex workers have been ignoring bitcoin back then, until recently.
This is true for bitcoin adoption. Many people that are using bitcoin today did not just willingly start to use it. It is when there is a problem that bitcoin will solve that you will see them using bitcoin. With this style many people will start using bitcoin. Necessity they say is the mother of discovery. Bitcoin is giving people liberty to do what they like and that is why government always foghr bitcoin.
mk4
legendary
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Paldo.io 🤖
February 12, 2022, 01:08:04 AM
#5
This is the perfect example. The mass majority of people will only realize the importance of bitcoin and cryptocurrencies only when they actually get deplatformed and when they're already out of choices. I could guarantee that most sex workers have been ignoring bitcoin back then, until recently.
legendary
Activity: 1372
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February 12, 2022, 12:01:42 AM
#4
We could have a precedent emerging here, where the biggest push in favor of crypto mass adoption comes from banks and intelligence agencies. Remember all of those "how do we achieve bitcoin mass adoption" threads made on this website? I wonder if we finally have a definitive answer to them.

Although it may not seem directly related, this reminds me of the attempt to leave Russia out of the SWIFT system, to which Russia looks set to respond by legalizing Bitcoin on the 18th (after proposing a ban on crypto use and mining).

In this case as well as in the case of sex workers, Bitcoin opens a window of opportunity to escape restrictions.
sr. member
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February 11, 2022, 11:58:45 PM
#3
One of the boosters of bitcoin and crypto adoption is indeed in that field.
The emergence of Bitcoin is a breath of fresh air for sex workers, flexibility, anonymous although not completely anonymous, is a fitting design to support sex workers.
In addition, NFT may also have a big impact on sex model photos, which will unknowingly enliven the market. Of course I hope that Bitcoin technology can bring changes in a positive direction and the need for regulation so that negative exploitation does not occur.
sr. member
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February 11, 2022, 08:29:17 PM
#2
Not really surprising, bitcoin has a lot of utilities so I wasn't surprised, in my opinion, this is inevitable as sex work is getting more mainstream than usual. Pretty sure that these people have been familiar with online payments for awhile now but it's a good thing, much better if all the industry is reached by bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 2562
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February 11, 2022, 06:07:13 PM
#1
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  • Regulations and bank policies designed to combat sex trafficking have made it harder for sex workers and adult entertainers to practice their trade, especially online.
  • Many have increasingly turned to bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as a way to accept payment for products and services and protect their funds.
  • CNBC spoke with half a dozen sex workers who explain the role cryptocurrency is playing in the industry.

Allie Eve Knox creates adult content.

She makes sexually provocative videos, sells subscription services on platforms like OnlyFans, performs live via webcam, and works as a findomme – short for financial dominatrix, a fetish involving dominance-submission dynamics and cash.

The Texas native is also a major advocate of cryptocurrency.

Knox describes herself as “one of the most outspoken sex workers, particularly for crypto.” Her interest kicked off in 2014, which is when she says several vendors, including PayPal, Square Cash, and Venmo, shut down her accounts because of red flags related to sex work.

So Knox started accepting cryptocurrencies instead. Her first exchange of bitcoin for content was pretty casual.

It started on a Skype call with a client. “I had a Coinbase account at the time, and he said, ‘Hold your QR code right to this camera here,’ and he sent it through the camera. And I got it,” she explained.

It took 15 minutes, and there were no chargebacks, no website commission fees, and no bank intermediaries to turn down the transaction – all major pluses in her industry. But the biggest attraction was having total and irreversible ownership over the money she had earned.

“I could cash it out. I could hold it. I could watch it go up and down,” said Knox.

“It was mine.”

Knox is one of many adult workers who say that cryptocurrencies like bitcoin give them a sense of security and independence as banks, credit card companies, and payment processors tighten regulations around adult content. With crypto, there is no middleman making a judgment call on which transactions are acceptable.

OnlyFans and the policy whiplash

Sex work is an umbrella term that includes anyone who engages in some form of erotic labor, whether virtual or in person.

“The majority of sex work in the U.S. is legal. It’s not dealt with fairly, but it’s still legal,” explained Kristen DiAngelo, an activist and Sacramento-based sex worker who has spent over four decades in the industry. “Stripping is legal…massage is legal…escorting is legal. The only thing that’s really illegal in the U.S. is the honest exchange of sexual activity for remuneration, for money.”

Some escorts – who charge anywhere from $1,700 an hour to $11,000 for a full 24 hours – now explicitly say in their ads that they prefer to be paid in bitcoin or ethereum.

The sex work industry also includes performers on the popular subscription video site OnlyFans, many of whom work exclusively online and have never seen their subscribers or fans in person.

Allie Rae is a 37-year-old mother of three boys who says she went from making about $84,000 a year as an ICU nurse in Boston to $1.3 million, thanks to her work on OnlyFans, which has more than 130 million users.

Last August, Rae didn’t know a lot about cryptocurrency, nor did she accept it for her work, but she was convinced that bitcoin and other altcoins were “100% the future,” because they seemed like a far more secure method of payment.

At the time, OnlyFans was navigating a publicity nightmare. After banks started flagging and rejecting transactions on the site, OnlyFans announced plans to ban sexually explicit content, its core product. The decision was met with such blowback that OnlyFans reversed course within days.

The whole episode gave whiplash to OnlyFans performers, some of whom realized that they were just one company policy change away from financial ruin.

Rae, a star of the OnlyFans ecosystem, was spooked, telling CNBC that she felt “kicked to the curb,” and never wanted to be put in that position again.

So she took action.

She started with the basics, teaching herself the fundamentals of crypto, then decided to put real skin in the game by assembling a team of developers to build WetSpace, a cryptocurrency-powered adult entertainment platform, into which she has vowed to invest $1 million of her own money. As Rae describes it, WetSpace will be a place where creators don’t have to worry about “big banking restrictions and payouts.”

By December, Rae had gone from bitcoin novice and OnlyFans ingénue to an adult content entrepreneur speaking fluent crypto, with terms like “smart contracts” and “ERC-20 tokens” rolling right off her tongue.

Adult content creators have also jumped on the non-fungible token, or NFT, bandwagon. Knox tells CNBC she’s sold photos of herself as NFTs on OpenSea and through SpankChain’s custom NFT marketplace. Thus far, the most she’s gotten from a single sale is $1,200 worth of ethereum.

The disenfranchised strike back

DiAngelo tells CNBC she will never forget the first time her bank account was closed without warning.

It happened when she was on a trip to Washington, D.C. over a decade ago.

“I had just gone into the bank, made a deposit, and I went to buy lunch in Dupont Circle,” said DiAngelo. “I gave him my card, and it was declined. I gave him my card, and it was declined again. And I gave my card again, and it was declined again. And I was like, ‘No, no, no, no, that can’t be right. There’s something wrong.’”

DiAngelo called Citibank and learned that her account had been frozen and she should tear up her credit card. DiAngelo says the customer service rep told her that they weren’t “at liberty” to tell her why it had happened, and she would have to write a formal letter to request additional details.

They did, however, say that she was still responsible for any money owed.

“That put fear in my heart, like I thought my world was collapsing. My bank account was frozen. I couldn’t access my money,” she said. (Citibank did not respond to a request for comment.)

There was particular irony in her situation, as DiAngelo did a stint as a stockbroker at Citibank in the 1980′s, always pays her taxes, and has a credit score over 800.

So DiAngelo did what other sex workers do: She “platform hopped,” meaning that she brought her money to another bank. When they also flagged and closed her account, she moved on to the next. After being shut out of a third bank, DiAngelo says she turned exclusively to bitcoin for her online banking needs.

Nearly every sex worker interviewed for this story mentioned platform hopping. The government has a set of anti-trafficking guidelines drawn up by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, and the banks and big payment apps keep an eye out for activity deemed suspicious by those guidelines. Those red flags include making cash deposits frequently – a hallmark of the sex work profession.

“We will change, we will pivot, we’ll go to other platforms,” Knox said. “This is just a constant like jumping through hoops cycle.”

In 2014, for example, PayPal booted her because of a payment for her used socks that was large enough to get red-flagged. Knox says neither she nor the buyer were refunded. (PayPal tells CNBC that her account was “closed due to policy violations.”)

Later, in 2016, Coinbase closed her account and blocked her from making others. (Coinbase acknowledged to CNBC that its terms of service prohibit the use of its “commerce or retail services connected to adult content.”)

“We’re the ones being punished – not the traffickers, not those that are actually abusing workers,” said Alana Evans, who has been an adult performer since the late 90′s. Evans is currently president of the Adult Performance Artists Guild, or APAG, a federally recognized union within the adult industry that represents all workers from adult film set actors, to content creators.

“They’ve attacked our banking; our ability to operate like the rest of the world,” explained DiAngelo. “You don’t exist if you can’t use the banking system.”

Evans says that once you’ve been in the industry and labeled as an adult performer, it is virtually impossible to get a job outside the industry – even at a fast food restaurant.

“We are stigmatized. We are discriminated against,” said Evans, who is actively looking to foment change in her role as the head of APAG. She says she has met directly with Mastercard and other companies to address the issue, and she is advocating with members of Congress to add occupation to the list of protected title practices, which currently includes race, age, and religion.

Mastercard confirmed the meeting with Evans, saying that the company “welcomes dialogue and different perspectives” about its policies and programs.

For many sex workers, bitcoin is more than a way to reclaim financial independence — it’s an industry standard.

In 2018, the U.S. passed a federal law designed to eliminate online sex trafficking. The Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act and Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act, or FOSTA-SESTA, meant that owners of web sites could face criminal charges for content that promoted trafficking.

“It meant any site online, or any venue that does business online, that could possibly receive profits for prostitution in any way could be indicted and do 25 years in prison,” explained DiAngelo, who is currently a researcher and lecturer at the University of California, Davis.

FOSTA-SESTA spelled an end for Backpage – once the bastion of online advertisements for sex workers — and persuaded Craigslist to discontinue its personal ads.

But critics say the net effect of this law was to drive the trade further underground. Workers lost the ability to pre-screen clients, and many in the industry tell CNBC it led to a spike in street work and violence.

It also turned bitcoin into a necessity for many escorts. Advertising is essential to attract new business, and workers using popular escort directories like Slixa and Eros tell CNBC that these platforms encourage payment in cryptocurrencies within the U.S. One industry vet says typical ads cost $480 worth of bitcoin for two weeks.

Eros did not respond to a request for comment, while Slixa shared in a written statement that it “does not advertise or have as advertisers ‘sex workers’ as that term is traditionally defined,” and that it takes multiple forms of payment.

“I think that in some ways crypto offers a way forward,” said Mike Stabile, a spokesman for the Free Speech Coalition, which is an adult video trade group that advocates for the rights of sex workers.

“It means that you can move away from these handful of payment processors, the handful of credit cards that seem to control what content can be sold,” continued Stabile.

Mastercard disputes the assertion that it’s biased against sex workers. “Let us be clear – allegations of bias against adult content creators are demonstrably untrue. Our actions and business practices against trafficking and exploitation clearly show this.”

One hazard of the trade are chargebacks, in which a transaction is reversed when a consumer claims they have been fraudulently charged for a good or service they did not receive. It is a tool designed to protect consumers, but many sex workers say it is a tool that is abused in their industry by clients who dispute a transaction for a product or service they have already received.

Take OnlyFans. There are some customers who will dispute a transaction once they’ve already received custom video clips, or photos. OnlyFans’ official policy on its website says the creator, not the company, foots the bill for a chargeback. (OnlyFans did not respond to requests for comment.)

Many models have taken to forums like Reddit to share their experiences, in which they say these alleged scammers will sometimes put in for a chargeback six months after receiving pictures or videos.

Transactions in cryptocurrencies are final, rendering chargebacks impossible.

A wave of innovation

Online, the adult industry often leads technology shifts, and that’s certainly been the case with crypto.

UK-based escort agency VIP Passion started to accept bitcoin in 2013. Two years later, Backpage made a similar move into bitcoin, litecoin, and dogecoin after Visa and Mastercard refused to process payments for its “adult” section.

Visa said at the time that the company’s rules prohibited the network from “being used for illegal activity” and that Visa had a “long history of working with law enforcement to safeguard the integrity of the payment system.” Mastercard issued a similar statement, saying that the card company has rules prohibiting its cards from “being used for illegal or brand-damaging activities.”

Pornhub – one of the world’s most highly trafficked websites – began accepting a crypto token called verge in 2018. As litecoin creator Charlie Lee noted at the time, the porn industry is often a “leading indicator of technology adoption,” so he was “glad to see them opening up to cryptocurrency.”

When PayPal decided to stop payouts to over a hundred thousand Pornhub performers, the site added tether (a stablecoin pegged to the price of the U.S. dollar) as an alternative option. In Dec. 2020, Pornhub went full crypto in some countries after Mastercard and Visa cut ties with the platform over claims of illegal content running rampant on the porn site.

In a statement to CNBC, Mastercard said its decision was “based on an internal investigation that confirmed violations of our standards prohibiting unlawful content on their site.” Visa did not respond.

Nowadays, it’s par for the course to see adult websites accept cryptocurrency, and some deal in it exclusively.

Chaturbate and FanCentro accept digital tokens, and live-streaming webcam platform Stripchat tells CNBC that 23% of its active models are now paid in a mix of cryptocurrencies including bitcoin, ethereum, and USDC, which is a stablecoin pegged to the value of the U.S. dollar. Customers can also leave tips, and the company says its largest tip yet was $100,000 deposited in tether.

It helps that recent advancements in payment technology have made it easier than ever to transact in cryptocurrency. The Lightning Network, for example, is a payments platform built on bitcoin’s base layer that enables virtually instantaneous transactions.

“An OnlyFans that is Lightning based could easily survive the sort of censorship they faced in August,” explained Boaz Sobrado, a London-based fintech data analyst. “Political pressure and stigma can be applied to card companies, which can then make it very difficult for otherwise legal businesses like OnlyFans to operate.”

“This entire vector is removed if you have a payment system which doesn’t suffer from political pressures. And that’s the case with the Lightning Network, which has inexpensive payments, easy transactions, and is not easily censorable,” continued Sobrado.

Some adult media companies have even turned to blockchain technology to develop their own digital currencies and platforms.

SpankChain is a cam-site built on ethereum’s blockchain that, among other things, tries to make it easier for adult performers to safely get paid online. LiveStars, also built on ethereum, is an adult streaming platform and social network that promises greater privacy and security to users, plus similar payment solutions that intend to make transactions faster and more profitable for the performer – which is significant to workers who are accustomed to paying 40% to 50% commission fees on traditional platforms that run on fiat payment rails.

CumRocket – which Elon Musk appeared to back in two cryptic tweets last June – has its own NFT marketplace and token, which can be used to tip and message content creators.

Volatility and learning curve present problems

Stabile warns there are still barriers to mass crypto adoption among sex workers.

For one, there’s a steep learning curve for both workers and customers. Sex workers have written and circulated guides online on how to use crypto, but a sizable knowledge gap remains.

It is also difficult to get some customers to spend their bitcoin on adult content.

“They generally use it as a store of value,” says Stabile. “It’s a speculative currency.”

Knox says often clients choose not to pay her in crypto.

“That’s the hurdle that we’re at right now. We can take it all day long, but until people start using it and start paying us with it, it’s not going to really take off for adoption,” said Knox.

Sex workers who do accept crypto also have to contend with volatile prices, which can cut into their earnings. For instance, bitcoin is down more than 40% from its November all-time high.

Evans tells CNBC she stuck it out through the multi-year crypto winter that began in late 2017, when prices plunged.

“I literally had a paycheck that was worth one-tenth of what it was, because I held on to it,” explained Knox. “It’s just an up-and-down kind of roller coaster. That’s the beauty and the pain of crypto.”

That volatility can create upside, too.

When Knox began accepting cryptocurrency in 2014, it was mainly for convenience, rather than any sense of crypto as a long-term investment. In her early days, Knox tells CNBC she would get two bitcoin in exchange for an hour-long Skype session. A single bitcoin is now worth around $40,000, and has been as high as $69,000.

“I just kind of left it on the backburner and would collect it whenever people would pay me in it,” said Knox, who tells CNBC she still holds a good portion of her crypto stake. “I collected till about 2017 and then crypto went crazy. It was one of those things where I was like, ‘Oh, wow, this was an accidental great investment for me.’”

Beyond price volatility, trading in crypto often incurs extra fees.

“Buying the crypto to pay for [ads] was always fraught with all these hidden fees that these trading sites would be charging,” said San Francisco-based Maxine Doogan, who has been working as a prostitute for more than thirty years.

Instead of using a traditional exchange like Coinbase, Doogan instead goes through a convoluted process that involves finding an intermediary via a trading site, and then depositing cash into that person’s bank account, trusting that they will then electronically transfer bitcoin into her crypto wallet. Some of these intermediaries will accept gift cards. Others ask sex workers to buy a regular “vanilla” credit card and send them the numbers, in hopes that they’ll follow through on the trade.

DiAngelo says that in the early days of crypto, she would use bitcoin ATMs at liquor stores and gas stations to deposit cash to buy bitcoin. These machines charge commissions above and beyond the cost of the transaction.

Another major problem relates to the rules that govern cryptocurrency exchanges. Many platforms like Coinbase require know-your-customer, or KYC compliance. In practice, that means having to connect an ID and bank account to the platform – a non-starter for many working in the industry.

Because of this, some workers later find they can’t cash out the crypto they have earned for products or services rendered.

While there are tokens designed with privacy and anonymity in mind (zcash and monero, for example), the blockchain technology that underpins cryptocurrencies like bitcoin is transparent by design, leading some in the industry to worry that with the right tools and crypto know-how, friends, family, or the government technically have the ability to track their steps.

But Rae remains convinced that cryptocurrency is the future for the sex work industry.

“Cryptocurrency is our only option. I don’t feel like we’re going to survive under stricter and stricter rules from the banking industry,” said Rae.

“For people like me making millions of dollars, a thirty day notice from OnlyFans would be the end of us. Crypto really feels like it’s kinda it, otherwise we’re going to be controlled forever and who knows the kind of content they’re going to continue to ban. They can turn you off tomorrow.”

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/05/bitcoin-a-lifeline-for-sex-workers-like-ex-nurse-making-1point3-million.html


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Interesting stories and narrative emerging here. I feel like sex workers who use crypto have lived through the fustrations some have had with traditional finance. There is a massive unbanked and discontent demographic, which creates a vacuum necessary for bitcoin and cryptocurrencies to thrive. Banks closing the accounts of sex workers has likely provided some of the most powerful incentive driving cryptocurrency mass adoption. Mastercard and visacard disavowing pornhub payments likewise must have had a powerful effect to push cryptocurrency adoption on those seeking alternative options.

The article mentions backpage which became one of the go to sites for personal ads after craigslist personals were shut down. What it neglects to mention however is the massive "this site was seized by the FBI" graphic that pops up if someone visits the backpage website today. It is possible that even the seizure of sites like backpage have been fuel to crypto mass adoption.

We could have a precedent emerging here, where the biggest push in favor of crypto mass adoption comes from banks and intelligence agencies. Remember all of those "how do we achieve bitcoin mass adoption" threads made on this website? I wonder if we finally have a definitive answer to them.



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