Safety & Privacy

What Creators Can See About You

3 min read

What Creators Can See About You

Creators get a limited view of their fans. Here's exactly what they can and can't see.

What they can see

  • Your username (e.g., @yourhandle).
  • Your display name (whatever you've set).
  • Your avatar if you've added one.
  • Your bio if you've written one.
  • Any messages, comments, tips, or PPV unlocks you've sent them.
  • Whether you're currently subscribed and whether your sub auto-renews.
  • The date you subscribed (and the date you cancelled, if you did).
  • Your lifetime spending with that specific creator (only that creator's earnings show up — not your spend across the platform).
  • Whether you're online right now (if you've enabled the online-status indicator).

What they cannot see

  • Your real name.
  • Your email address.
  • Your phone number.
  • Your physical address or geographic location.
  • Your IP address.
  • Your device information.
  • Your payment method or any card details.
  • Your spending with other creators — they only see what you've spent with them.
  • Your age beyond the fact that you're 18+.
  • Whether you've age-verified.

What other fans can see

Other fans see the same public profile info — username, display name, avatar, bio. They cannot see your subscriptions, your spending, your tips, or your DMs.

Mass message reach

When a creator sends a mass message to all their subscribers, you receive it but you don't see who else got it. Each fan sees it as a personal DM in their inbox.

What you've consented to

By using Fansit, you've consented to the creator seeing your username, display name, avatar, bio, and any messages or transactions you initiate with them. You haven't consented to anything else.

If a creator pressures you to share personal information beyond what's required to use the platform — real name, address, phone, off-platform contact — that's optional, not required. Sharing or refusing to share is your choice and you don't lose access to anything by refusing.

If a creator threatens to expose private info you previously shared with them, that's grounds for an immediate report to abuse@fansit.com. Doxxing is a zero-tolerance violation under the Acceptable Use Policy.

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