I’m MaTitie from Top10Fans. If you’re a Fansly creator using Wix (or thinking about it) to look “more legit,” I want you to slow down for five minutes—because the exact thing that makes Wix feel brand-safe (a clean website) is also what scammers copy to trap your fans.

And if your niche includes lesbian content, the stakes are even higher: your audience often values privacy, trust, and community boundaries more than flashy funnels. One convincing fake page isn’t just lost income—it can trigger chargebacks, leaks, doxx attempts, and that awful feeling of being judged or mislabeled by strangers who don’t get you.

You’re building this while juggling real life—maybe you’re running a food cart, telling behind-the-cart stories, trying to look confident on camera even when your brain is screaming “I look weird.” That’s exactly why you need systems that work when you’re tired, busy, and fired up to post, not perfect.

This article is a practical playbook for the “Fansly + Wix scam” problem—how it happens, how to prevent it, and how to protect lesbian fans without turning your brand into a paranoid bunker.


What creators mean by a “Fansly Wix scam”

Most “Fansly Wix scams” fall into a few patterns:

  1. Fake “yourname” Wix sites impersonating you
    A scammer builds a Wix page that looks like your brand. They copy your photos, bio tone, and even your menu prices. Then they add a big button like:

    • “Subscribe on Fansly”
    • “VIP Access”
    • “Claim your free trial” But the button goes to a phishing page, a fake payment form, or a different creator’s referral/clone.
  2. “Website setup” DMs that hijack your real links
    Someone messages you offering “free Wix setup” or “SEO help.” Their goal is to get:

    • your Wix login
    • your domain access
    • your link-in-bio credentials
    • your Fansly promo access
      Once they have control, they quietly swap your outbound links.
  3. Redirect chains that look normal on mobile
    On a phone, fans tap once and don’t inspect URLs. Scammers exploit that with “link shorteners” or multi-step redirects so the final destination is hidden.

  4. “Support” or “verification” pages
    They pretend they’re platform staff and say your account needs verification, then ask for credentials or banking details.

If you take only one thing from me: the scam is rarely “Wix is unsafe.” The scam is that Wix makes it easy to publish a convincing fake quickly.


Why lesbian creators get hit harder (and why it’s not your fault)

In lesbian-focused content spaces, a lot of fans want:

  • discreet browsing
  • no surprises on billing descriptors
  • clear consent boundaries
  • authenticity and emotional safety

Scammers know that if they can trigger urgency (“your access will be removed,” “claim your girlfriend experience slot,” “verification needed”), many people will click fast and ask questions later.

Also—there’s a real emotional layer here that scammers exploit: the fear of being judged for what you like, who you are, or how you show up. That theme shows up constantly in relationship stories online: people aren’t just hurt by secrecy—they’re hurt by the message that they were “not enough,” “not adventurous,” or “not the right kind” of partner. A scammer weaponizes that same insecurity: “prove you’re a real fan,” “prove you’re not boring,” “unlock the spicy tier.”

Your brand job is not to “be more adventurous to keep attention.” Your brand job is to create a safe, consistent experience—and to make it hard for anyone to imitate.


The most common trap: “My fans found a Wix page that looks like me”

Here’s what usually happens:

  • A fan googles your name + “Fansly”
  • Google shows a Wix site (because Wix pages can index quickly)
  • The fan clicks, sees your photos, and assumes it’s official
  • They enter email/payment or get pushed to Telegram/WhatsApp/“support”
  • You get the angry message later: “Why did you charge me?” / “I got scammed”

Even when you did nothing wrong, you pay the trust tax.

So the goal is not only stopping scams—it’s training your audience to recognize the real you in 2 seconds.


Your “2-second authenticity” system (the anti-impersonation stack)

If you use Wix (or any website), set it up so fans can instantly verify it’s you.

1) One canonical hub link—everywhere

Pick one “official” link destination and use it consistently:

  • your Fansly profile link (often best as the source of truth)
  • or your own domain that you fully control

Then:

  • Put it in your Fansly bio
  • Pin it on your social profiles
  • Use the exact same wording: “My only official links are here.”

If your audience is anxious about privacy, make it simple, not salesy:

  • “One official link hub. Anything else is fake.”

2) Use a custom domain you own (even if Wix hosts it)

A custom domain (yourbrand.com) does two things:

  • It’s harder to convincingly impersonate than a random Wix subdomain
  • It gives you portable brand equity if you ever leave Wix

Important: own the domain at a registrar under your control and use strong security (see checklist below). Don’t let a “helper” register it for you.

3) Add a “verification phrase” that only you use

This is simple and weirdly effective.

Pick a short phrase that fits your vibe and life—something like:

  • “Behind the cart, always.”
  • “Hot food, hotter stories.”
  • “If it’s not linked from Fansly, it’s not me.”

Place it:

  • on your Wix home page header
  • in your Fansly bio
  • in your pinned post

Scammers can copy text, sure—but most won’t copy consistently across every platform, and fans will learn the pattern.

4) Lock down your brand assets

Use the same:

  • display name
  • handle spelling
  • profile photo crop
  • banner style across platforms.

Consistency is not just aesthetics—it’s fraud prevention.


The “Wix hardening” checklist (do this once, then sleep better)

If you’re running your site on Wix, here’s the practical security baseline:

Account security

  • Use a unique password for Wix (not reused anywhere)
  • Turn on two-step verification / 2FA
  • Review site roles/permissions: only you (or a trusted, paid pro) should be Admin
  • Remove old collaborators immediately

Domain & DNS security (the sneaky one)

  • Enable 2FA with your domain registrar too
  • Lock your domain (registrar lock) where available
  • Use a dedicated email for domain recovery that you protect heavily

Site integrity

  • Avoid “free plugin/script” embeds from strangers
  • If you use a link-in-bio tool, treat it like a bank login: 2FA, unique password
  • Add a simple “Report impersonation” email on your site (a business inbox, not personal)

If you embed previews or “spicy” samples:

  • watermark lightly (your handle, not your full legal name)
  • avoid posting anything that would be devastating if scraped

The payment/billing reality: set expectations so fans don’t panic

Fans get spooked when a charge shows up with a name they don’t recognize. Billing descriptors can vary across platforms and payment processors, and that confusion is exactly where scammers hide.

So be proactive:

  • Put a short note in your FAQ: “Billing names can look different depending on the processor.”
  • Encourage fans: “If anything looks off, message me before disputing.”

That one sentence can reduce chargebacks and prevent scammers from impersonating “support.”

Keep it calm and non-technical. Your audience doesn’t need a lecture—they need reassurance and a simple next step.


A safety-first approach for lesbian content: trust is the product

For lesbian creators, “trust” isn’t a soft concept—it’s a conversion lever.

Here’s how to turn safety into brand strength without killing the mood:

1) Make boundaries part of the brand, not a punishment

Instead of “DO NOT,” try:

  • “I keep everything in one place to protect the community.”
  • “No off-platform payments—too many scams.”

2) Keep off-platform chat rules crystal clear

A lot of scams start with:

  • “Text me here”
  • “Pay me here”
  • “Send ID” If you do any off-platform presence, define it:
  • what it’s for (announcements only, no payment)
  • what you’ll never ask for (passwords, codes, ID)

There’s been public discussion and reporting in the broader creator world about intimate content being shared without consent and about financial misuse between ex-partners. Those stories hit because they’re believable—and because they show how quickly private life can become “content” without permission.

Your move as a brand:

  • Repeat your consent standard publicly
  • Keep records of releases/permissions where relevant
  • Don’t let anyone pressure you into “edgier” choices to prove something

If you ever felt that gut-punch of being told you’re “not adventurous enough,” I want you to hear this clearly: coercion is not creativity. Your best work comes from control, not desperation.


The “scam signal” list: what your fans should watch for

Teach your audience these red flags in one pinned post or story highlight:

  • Links that don’t start from your official hub
  • Pages asking for:
    • “verification”
    • “identity confirmation”
    • “login to view”
  • Requests to pay via:
    • gift cards
    • crypto “only”
    • random payment links that aren’t your known workflow
  • “Support” accounts that DM first
  • Pressure language: “only today,” “your access expires in 10 minutes”

Make it friendly, not fear-based:

  • “If you’re unsure, DM me a screenshot before you click.”

That’s community protection—and it builds loyalty.


If someone already made a fake Wix page of you: what to do next

Move fast, but don’t spiral.

  1. Document everything

    • screenshots
    • URL
    • where it appears (Google result, social post)
    • any messages fans received
  2. Warn your audience with one clean statement

    • “That page is not me.”
    • “My only official links are [your official hub].”
    • “If you entered info, contact your card provider and change passwords.”
  3. Report it

    • Report to Wix (impersonation/copyright)
    • Report the social accounts sharing it
    • If it’s ranking on search, submit a removal request where applicable
  4. Tighten your systems

    • rotate passwords
    • enable/confirm 2FA everywhere
    • audit your link destinations
  5. Turn the moment into trust This is key: don’t overexplain. A short, confident response makes you look in control.


Camera anxiety + scam anxiety: build a workflow that doesn’t burn you out

You’ve got enough going on—maybe you’re filming between customers, fighting bad lighting, and trying to keep your energy high even when you feel shaky on screen.

So here’s a creator-friendly workflow:

Weekly (10 minutes)

  • Tap your own bio links on mobile (like a fan would)
  • Check your Wix homepage: are the buttons correct?
  • Search your stage name + “Fansly” and see what shows up

Monthly (15 minutes)

  • Update passwords (or at least confirm 2FA is still on)
  • Review collaborators/admin access on Wix and any link tools
  • Refresh your pinned “official links” post

Content-side (easy wins)

  • Film 1 short “official links” clip in your cart persona:
    • “If you found me from my food stories—welcome. One link only. Anything else is fake.”
  • Save it as a highlight so you don’t repeat yourself forever

This protects you while matching your brand: resilient, real, energetic, and in charge.


Why “viral creator news” matters to your safety strategy (even if it’s not your niche)

On 01/02/2026, outlets were buzzing about creator-world headlines—from Sophie Rain talking about a celebrity DM to stories about big, fast earnings at 18, and a creator sharing a personal spiritual reset.

Whether you love that news cycle or hate it, it creates two effects:

  1. More new users flood adult platforms quickly (and new users are easier to scam).
  2. Impersonators hunt attention by copying whatever’s trending and slapping it onto fake pages.

So when the internet is loud, your brand needs to be clearer, not noisier:

  • one official link hub
  • consistent naming
  • calm safety language

That’s how you keep your lesbian fanbase protected while everyone else is chasing chaos.


Use this wording anywhere (site, pinned post, auto-DM):

Official links:
“I only use the links on my Fansly profile (and my official site). If you see a Wix page or ‘support’ account not linked there, it’s not me. If you’re unsure, DM me a screenshot before you click.”

It’s protective, not paranoid.


The brand lens: you’re not just preventing fraud—you’re increasing conversion

Here’s the creator-economy truth: friction kills sales, but fear kills trust.

When fans feel unsure, they hesitate. When they hesitate, they leave. When they leave, scammers win.

Your job is to remove uncertainty with:

  • consistency
  • verification cues
  • predictable boundaries

That’s not “extra work.” That’s sustainable growth.

And if you want help scaling safely across markets, you can join the Top10Fans global marketing network—built specifically for Fansly creators who want reach without losing control.

📚 Keep Reading (If You Want the Bigger Context)

If you want to track the broader creator landscape that shapes scam patterns and audience behavior, these recent pieces are a useful pulse-check:

🔾 OnlyFans’ Sophie Rain Claims Lil Yachty DMed Her
đŸ—žïž Source: Mandatory – 📅 2026-01-02
🔗 Read the full story

🔾 Teen shares earnings after joining OnlyFans at 18 and people are disturbed
đŸ—žïž Source: Mirror – 📅 2026-01-02
🔗 Read the full story

🔾 OnlyFans Star Lily Phillips Gets Rebaptized For This Reason
đŸ—žïž Source: Mandatory – 📅 2026-01-02
🔗 Read the full story

📌 Transparency & Limits

This post blends publicly available information with a touch of AI assistance.
It’s for sharing and discussion only — not all details are officially verified.
If anything looks off, ping me and I’ll fix it.