Porn-makers challenge Patreon's crowdfunding ban By Leo Kelion

Technology desk editor Published duration 25 October 2017

image copyright Getty Images image caption The letter claims Patreon had helped prevent some porn creators from becoming homeless

Dozens of adult content creators have signed an open letter to Patreon challenging restrictions it has placed on the creation of pornography.

The crowdfunding service updated its rules last week to explicitly ban the sale of pornographic content and provision of sexual services.

It said at the time that it was clarifying an existing policy

But the firm has been accused of betraying some of its members who say their activity is not illegal.

"We know people who would be homeless if it wasn't for making porn on Patreon - and it's not a small number," the letter states.

"Your fuzzy position on 'adult content' versus 'porn' gives you the freedom to discriminate at will.

"And it makes content creators live in fear of that discrimination, itself leading to self-censorship of important viewpoints."

Patreon's chief executive has said he intends to issue a "thorough response" later this Wednesday.

'Fringe content'

Unlike most crowdfunding platforms - which focus on delivery of a single product or experience - Patreon provides its members with a way to charge a monthly subscription fee for an ongoing service, from which it takes a cut.

In many cases, this involves the delivery of podcasts, music, training videos and artistic performances.

But on 17 October, the site's legal chief said he had become concerned that "a small number of creators" were involved in the creation of what he termed fringe adult content.

image copyright Patreon image caption Patreon says more than 50,000 creators use its platform to earn money

As a result, the San Francisco-based firm's community guidelines were amended to state: "You can't use Patreon to raise funds in order to produce pornographic material such as maintaining a website, funding the production of movies, or providing a private webcam session."

Prior to this the wording was less detailed, stating instead that "Patreon is not for pornography, but some of the world's most beautiful and historically significant art depicts nudity and sexual expression". It had added that "suggestive imagery" was permitted if marked NSFW (not safe for work).

Billion dollar business

Although Patreon has indicated there has not been a major policy shift, the letter references a blogger who claims there has indeed been a "substantial change after a long period of stasis".

"Porn is a multi-billion dollar industry mostly in the hands of well-heeled men," the letter adds.

"You were helping us hold it in our own hands. We ask you to take a stand on behalf of the sex workers who use your platform, their fans, and everyone who supports freedom of expression."

One academic said that Patreon might want to avoid the risk of being associated with "exploitation" but that censorship carried its own risks.

"There's a lot of amateur work on Patreon that blurs the line, including people who draw erotic images that are likely to be affected by this," commented Dr Bernie Hogan from the University of Oxford's Internet Institute.

"And for some people, the notion that there is a strong distinction between porn that is bad and other expression that is good is not as tenable as it used to be.

"But it makes sense that [Patreon] would try to get more conservative as it tries to scale up. And I imagine there has been a particular use case... that has been trouble for it."