OnlyFans, the platform where creators can share erotic photos and videos for a fee, has announced a reversal of its decision to prohibit sexually explicit content.
"We have secured assurances necessary to support our diverse creator community and have suspended the planned October 1 policy change," the UK-based company posted on Twitter.
"OnlyFans stands for inclusion and we will continue to provide a home for all creators."
Founded in 2016, OnlyFans says it has 150 million users worldwide and has been adding around half a million users a day.
It hosts content posted by some two million creators, including celebrities, porn stars and ordinary people looking to supplement their income.
In the year to November 2020 its platform handled payments worth more than $2.3 billion, from which it took revenue of $375m.
That saw it post a pre-tax profit of nearly $74m in the 12 month period.
The announcement last week that OnlyFans was planning to ban explicit content was met with widespread surprise, as pornography has been the driving factor in the site's explosion of popularity during the pandemic.
Scarlett Woodford, an analyst at Juniper Research who published a study this week on the future of digital adult entertainment, had described the porn ban as "a bold move from OnlyFans, considering the revenue generated by adult content performers".
The company's founder and CEO Tim Stokely initially tied the decision to threats from major banks to cut ties with OnlyFans, lest they damage their reputation.
"Credit card companies and financial institutions consider adult entertainment to be a high-risk sector," he said.
One of the reasons for that was the high rate of transactions that people dispute, claiming they were accidental.
Payment processing firms and investors are also increasingly worried that they could be accused of funding illegal material that makes its way onto sites that allow adult content.
The announcement of the explicit content ban had been met with widespread anger from sex workers' groups, who said OnlyFans had built its success on the work of adult performers - taking 20% of the earnings through the site - only to betray them.
Critics also said the website had provided financial security and a safe working environment for tens of thousands of sex workers who would otherwise be working in more dangerous situations, including on the street.
The policy reversal has been welcomed by the Sex Workers Alliance Ireland.