Vylit, an 18+ social platform from former OnlyFans CEO Ami Gan, is gearing up for a beta debut with a straightforward promise that sets it apart in today’s PG-ified feeds: topless content is allowed. The startup wants to fill the gap between mainstream social networks that ban nudity, and adult sites which lean more pornographic, while providing creators with a wide suite of monetization and promotional tools.
Gan and co-founder Kailey Magder pitch Vylit as a home where mundane moments share space with thirst traps, all in a consent-first, age-verified ecosystem. It’s invite-only to begin, but it will be more widely available once the beta is over.
- Who is building Vylit: the founders and their vision
- Content rules on Vylit and where the 18-plus line is drawn
- Age checks and AI-powered moderation across the platform
- AI twins and chat tools that scale and support creator work
- Discovery features and monetization options for all users
- Competition in the market and key compliance risks ahead
- What to monitor as the Vylit invite-only beta goes live

Who is building Vylit: the founders and their vision
Gan was the head of OnlyFans between late 2021 and mid-2023, during a period of explosive creator growth and continued policy attention. After having left, she founded marketing agency Hoxton Projects, which is where she and Magder incubated Vylit. One of their pitches is deliberately mainstream: a social network for adults that flirts with sensuality without descending into the vulgar.
The team’s thesis is part of a larger shift in the market. Analysts at Goldman Sachs estimate the creator economy could rise to nearly $480 billion by 2027, and industry reports show the number of people taking on creator roles has grown several times in recent years. Vylit aims to turn that momentum into a product available to both established and new influencers.
Content rules on Vylit and where the 18-plus line is drawn
Vylit’s rules are crude by design: “free the nipple” is in, explicit sexual content is out. Which means no genitalia or explicit acts, but naked breasts? Sure. The idea is to appeal to a wide adult audience that’s comfortable with PG-16 and soft-R fare without accidentally launching into full-blown adult entertainment upon first open.
This is what separates Vylit from Meta’s apps and TikTok, which ban adult nudity, as well as platforms like OnlyFans, where explicit content is the norm, or X and Bluesky, which permit some degree of control over adult content. The pose also gestures through to the realities of the app store economy, where distribution for sexually explicit apps is still precarious.
Age checks and AI-powered moderation across the platform
Every user will be age verified using facial age estimation and additional ID checks for content uploading users. Every post — photos, videos and text — will be subjected to AI filtering before it appears in the feed, scrubs that may be seconded by human moderators who examine flagged posts. Vylit is working with Unitary AI on automatic moderation, an area that has gained steam as platforms grapple to meet scale and safety obligations.
The challenge is execution. Facial age estimation might mitigate friction over document checks, but issues abound over privacy and accuracy. In the markets where regulators are pursuing more robust protections for children and pushing for age-gating, strong audits, transparent processes and quick appeals will be key to trust.
AI twins and chat tools that scale and support creator work
Vylit intends the design of AI-native tools to be grounded in consent and clarity. Creators can create their own “AI twin” by providing a photo of themselves and have synthetic content created in their likeness. An AI chat function would allow fans to engage either the original creator or the creator’s publicly revealed AI persona; a move aimed at preventing a bait-and-switch of fans elsewhere where they end up messaging bots or third-party “chatters” unknowingly.

Look for conscientious labeling and provenance cues to become important. Industry groups and regulators have called for the clear labeling of synthetic media; getting that right could spell whether AI is ultimately a time-saver or trust-killer.
Discovery features and monetization options for all users
Going beyond aesthetics, Vylit says its discovery system will present people by interests and hobbies, not just looks — a bid to create communities that extend after the follow. That’s a direction that aligns with the growing interest in such interest-graph feeds, which began as image-based content mining but was more recently followed by work extracting signals from niche expertise.
On the capital side, creators get staples like subscriptions, pay-per-view posts and tipping. The pitch is really that Vylit doesn’t just cater to the top 1% — it’s built in a way where newcomers can build an audience on-platform instead of taking their chances with off-platform marketing. That’s a pain point that smaller creators, who have trouble getting discovered elsewhere, are familiar with.
Competition in the market and key compliance risks ahead
Vylit enters a market already crowded with premium fan platforms, community applications and open social networks. Its middle-of-the-road content policy might assist in payments and distribution — traditional weak points for adult platforms when banks or app stores tightened their standards — but will also require tight moderation, chargeback controls and clear refund policies to please risk teams.
Age-verification laws, changing app store guidelines and synthetic media rules are fast-moving targets.
Much may depend on the infrastructure of compliance and trust signals as on novelty in topless posts.
What to monitor as the Vylit invite-only beta goes live
Vylit expects its invite-only beta to open first, followed by a broader consumer launch. What to watch for: How often moderation decisions made by AI are overturned on appeal, how many creators adopt the use of AI twins and chat transparently with themselves, and how soon accounts with smaller followings can turn interest into paying members.
If Vylit demonstrates that a mainstream 18+ network can normalize limited nudity while maintaining safety and monetization, it might redraw the borders of adult social media. That cultural bet is the bigger one: that the next phase of social isn’t just ad-driven feeds but paid members-only communities where creators get compensated — and in which “topless” is a feature, not a policy violation.
