U.N.Owen
1st Level Orange Feather
- Joined
- Apr 20, 2001
- Messages
- 2,119
- Points
- 63
I'm sorry, but that is beyond stupid.
I've been shooting since 2013 and even with the barest amount of research I did on the topic I knew that keeping a copy of the ID on file was 100% required. As much as I defend producers on random shit I will never sympathize with anyone who simply doesn't have the records. Before 2021? Zero. Excuse. ZE-RO. Only the laziest possible interpretation of the 2257 code would even hint that you didn't need a copy of the ID. Anyone with half a brain would do it as a matter of routine CYA.
I'm surprise to hear TickleTown had so much trouble on Patreon. I ran an adult-material page there for Sole Males for a li'l less than two years (closed in down in September of '24) and it was completely painless. Nobody so much as asked for paperwork. Now OnlyFans, on the other hand, they flat-out said "we can't be bothered to verify your entire roster. Denied."
Trust me, if I could score similar sales and traffic - such as it is - from sites other than C4S I'd expand, but I've had to shut down accounts on a handful of other sites over the years due to a total lack of income. For me, it's C4S or nothing.
That said, only problem I've ever had with compliance that was unjustified was how they started cracking down on the fact that I included a phone number in the legally-required contact information at the end of the video. It's clearly labeled as 2257 compliance information, was never a problem for twelve-some-odd years, but all of a sudden I started having videos denied for it. I was usually able to get them to re-approve, but eventually I just said fuck it and removed the number. The address is still there, and they don't seem to care about that.
Generally speaking I'm all for improved enforcement of compliance as long as it's consistent. Problem is, it's not (re: phone numbers).
Oh well. Less competition after the purge I guess.
I can't dispute that it was careless not to keep copies of IDs. But C4S should have made it an explicit requirement from the start, not only in 2021. They, too, should have been paying more attention to the legal requirements. Some producers certainly did pay attention from the beginning - and there wouldn't a problem now if C4S had done its own job of following the law all along.
It's completely unclear why Patreon singled out Tickle Town for trouble - especially when their videos are so obviously girl-next-door, innocent and in good fun. But Oblesklk was clearly only half-joking when he said the whole process left him with PTSD.
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