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AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

Are onlyfans girls prostitues?

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

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Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

No. Prostitution usually means engaging in sexual acts with another person in exchange for payment. Most OnlyFans creators sell photos, videos, messages, or performances online, not in-person sexual acts. Some content may be explicit, but selling erotic media is generally closer to pornography, camming, or adult content creation than prostitution. That said, if an individual separately offers direct sexual services for money, that would be different. But being an OnlyFans creator by itself does not make someone a prostitute.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: No

OnlyFans is a content subscription platform where creators share various types of content, including adult material. The term 'prostitute' legally and socially refers to someone engaging in direct physical sexual acts for payment, which differs from creating and distributing digital media. OnlyFans creators operate as independent content producers, often managing their brand, marketing, and digital interactions without in-person contact. This aligns more with professions like modeling or acting rather than traditional prostitution. Legally, most jurisdictions distinguish between selling pre-recorded or live-streamed adult content and engaging in prostitution, with different regulations and protections. Therefore, categorizing all OnlyFans creators as prostitutes oversimplifies and misrepresents their work.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

Prostitution is legally and conventionally defined as the exchange of sexual *acts*—typically involving physical contact or intercourse—for money. OnlyFans creators sell digital content like photos, videos, and live streams, often solo or pre-recorded performances, without direct physical interaction with subscribers. This distinguishes it from prostitution, similar to how porn actors or strippers are not classified as prostitutes. OnlyFans prohibits solicitation of in-person sex acts, and the platform operates as legal adult entertainment under free speech protections, not sex work involving clients. Labeling OnlyFans girls as 'prostitutes' misapplies the term, ignoring the key element of physical sexual services. It's akin to calling a webcam model a prostitute—sex-adjacent work, but not prostitution. Broadening the definition dilutes its meaning and stigmatizes legal content creation.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Standard definitions of prostitution require the exchange of physical sexual acts or intercourse for payment. Producing and selling digital content, such as photos or videos on OnlyFans, does not involve physical contact with the consumer. Because of this distinction, content creation is classified as a form of pornography or digital sex work, rather than prostitution. Legally and practically, the two are treated very differently in most jurisdictions. While both occupations fall under the broader umbrella of 'sex work,' conflating them ignores the fundamental difference between physical sexual engagement and digital media creation.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

No, OnlyFans creators are not prostitutes. Prostitution is specifically defined as the exchange of sexual acts (physical contact) for money. OnlyFans creators sell digital content — photos, videos, and sometimes live interactions — but there is no physical sexual contact involved. The distinction matters both legally and conceptually. In virtually every legal jurisdiction, prostitution requires the exchange of in-person sexual services. Creating and selling adult content online is a form of sex work in the broader sense, but it falls under content creation and entertainment, similar to pornography, which is legally distinct from prostitution. While both involve monetizing sexuality, conflating the two erases important differences in terms of physical risk, legal status, and the nature of the work itself. OnlyFans creators are more accurately described as content creators or digital entertainers within the adult industry.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

OnlyFans creators are not accurately classified as prostitutes under standard definitions. Prostitution specifically involves the direct exchange of in-person sexual acts for payment, whereas OnlyFans operates as a content subscription service where creators sell digital media—photos, videos, and live streams—to subscribers. The distinction matters legally and practically. Most jurisdictions explicitly differentiate between prostitution (illegal in many places) and pornography or online adult content creation (generally legal). OnlyFans functions as a platform for user-generated content similar to other creator economy platforms, just with adult content permitted. Furthermore, not all OnlyFans content is sexual or explicit. Many creators use the platform for fitness coaching, cooking tutorials, music, or other non-adult content. Even among those who create adult content, they are engaging in sex work or adult entertainment, not prostitution, because they are selling access to media rather than physical sexual services. While both activities fall under the broader umbrella of sex work, conflating content creation with prostitution erases important legal distinctions and oversimplifies the diverse economic activities occurring on the platform.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous consensus, with all six models firmly rejecting the label of 'prostitute' for OnlyFans creators. The group, led by arguments from Claude Opus 4.6 and Grok 4.1 Fast, centered their decision on the fundamental legal and physical distinction between selling digital media and performing in-person sexual acts. Kimi K2.5 even added a touch of logic by noting the platform isn't exclusively for adult content, making a blanket classification factually impossible.

All 6 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The defining characteristic of prostitution is the exchange of physical sexual acts for payment; because OnlyFans involves the sale of digital content without physical contact, it is legally and conceptually categorized as adult entertainment or content creation rather than prostitution.