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AI, Porn, and Passive Income: The Rise of Monetized Self-Pornified Digital Twin "Supermodel" Avatars - What Parents Should Know!

  • Writer: The White Hatter
    The White Hatter
  • 38 minutes ago
  • 5 min read

Caveat - Big shout out to fellow safety advocate Susan Maclean for bringing this AI App to our attention, which allowed us to take a deep dive into its workings


Artificial Intelligence is evolving quickly, and so is its darker side. One of the fastest-moving frontiers right now is the pornification of AI, where hyper-realistic avatars can be created, sold, and interacted with for a fee. While much of this activity is currently driven by adults, it's only a matter of time before some teens start to test the limits, especially when there's money to be made.


From OnlyFans to AI generate Digital Twin Self-Pornified “Supermodels”


You may already be familiar with platforms like OnlyFans, where some youth have turned to monetizing intimate images and videos of themselves. But there's now an AI version of this same trend, and it’s happening on a platform called OhChat (found at OhChat(dot)com), which is owned and operated by a London-based tech company called Utility3 Ltd. According to a posting on Reddit about a year ago, OhChat is an evolution of another platform, LoverGPT, which seamlessly bridges 40,000 existing users to Oh, their new, uncensored AI home.


Here’s how it works:


  • Anyone can create a highly customized AI avatar that OhChat calls a Supermodel, that interacts with paying subscribers.


  • These avatars can be programmed to reflect any race, gender, voice, or even sexual personality trait a user might request.


  • The owner of the avatar keeps 80% of whatever the avatar earns through subscriptions, tips, or in-app purchases.


  • OhChat retains the remaining 20%, and currently offers three subscription tiers #1 - $4.99, Unlimited back-and-forth text chats with any “superModel” character.  This Tier offers no access to voice notes, pictures, or higher-intimacy features.  Tier #2 - $9.99, Everything in Basic, plus the ability to receive a capped number of voice messages and still images from the character and Tier #3 - $29.99/month. Unlimited texts, voice notes, and images.   Access to the character’s highest approved intimacy level (creators choose how explicit their avatar can be). Priority placement in the chat queue, so replies arrive faster. Early access to new modes the company is piloting, such as real-time calls and AI-generated video.


  • Creators get paid based on how many users interact with their avatar. There are no guaranteed salaries, only revenue from engagement.


  • “Verified” avatars (those claiming to represent real people) may receive higher visibility and trust on the platform, though verification doesn’t affect the earnings split.


What’s important to note here is that users don’t need to create content every day. In fact, they don’t need to do much at all once the avatar is set up. They simply provide their image, voice, or personality and let the AI do the rest. It’s passive income, and that’s exactly what might draw in some teens and adults


Why This Should Be on Your Radar as a Parent


We predict that some youth will try to become OhChat "Supermodels" themselves, using their likeness and social media reach to advertise their AI characters. Their logic? Let the bot do the flirting, chatting, or erotic simulation while they collect the cash. To them, it may not even feel like real content creation. Just a one-time image upload and profile setup. When we tested the age gating process it was a joke, which any teen could bypass. We also suspect that teen boys will be drawn to this platform as paying customers.


Using an AI “superModel” might feel exciting, but it puts teens in real danger. Many youth and teens who upload selfies or voice samples don’t grasp the scope of consent in a digital system that can remix, resell, or indefinitely store their likeness. Once those assets enter the platform, control shifts to algorithms and unknown third parties, opening the door to exploitation.


Anything said or shown inside OhChat can escape its walls with a screenshot or screen-recording. What seems like a private role-play today could resurface years later in group chats, subreddit threads, or future background checks, hurting college, career, or social prospects.


The legal picture is murky. OhChat claims to verify age, yet enforcement details are sparse. If a minor uploads personal images that end up fueling sexual content, laws on child exploitation could still apply in Canada if under the age of 18yrs, regardless of whether the teen typed the messages or an AI did.


Handing intimate dialogue to an avatar can also erode a teen’s sense of identity and accountability. Outsourcing flirtation or sexual banter to a bot may normalize detachment from real-world relationships, making it harder to navigate healthy boundaries offline.


A teen who promotes their avatar on Instagram or Reddit could unintentionally signal that a real person is behind the fantasy, attracting adults who hope to bypass age-of-consent laws. In other words these AI generated intimate images and video could be used for the purpose of sextortion, something we have seen with teen and adult OnlyFans content.


What Parents Can Do


  • Talk early and often about the value of personal identity and digital consent. The conversation can’t start after something goes wrong.


  • Watch for subtle mentions of “AI modelling,” “passive income,” or “digital twin” jobs in your teen’s vocabulary or online behaviour.


  • Educate yourself on platforms like OhChat. You don’t have to use them, but knowing how they work can help you ask better questions.


  • Check your child’s social media bios and links. Some youth may promote their AI characters through Linktree, Discord, Snapchat, or Twitter/X accounts.


  • Remind them that everything online leaves a trace, and that something that seems like “easy money” today could follow them well into adulthood.


OhChat isn’t the only platform doing this, but it’s one of the most advanced and monetized systems currently available to the public. With little more than a selfie and a clever prompt, anyone, including a teen, can now create a seductive, programmable avatar that makes money while they sleep which they can make money on.


As parents and caregivers, we need to understand that AI is no longer just a homework tool or creative assistant, it can also be used as a means for monetized sexualized identity. It’s critical to help young people recognize the long-term consequences of turning their likeness into a product, especially in ways that may blur the line between autonomy and exploitation.


If you're ready to start this conversation but don’t know where to begin, start with this question:


"Would you be okay with someone else pretending to be you online for money?"


That simple question might open the door to a much deeper, and much needed, conversation with your teen.


Digital Food For Thought


The White Hatter


Facts Not Fear, Facts Not Emotions, Enlighten Not Frighten, Know Tech Not No Tech

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