
Once upon a time, in a bright little corner of the internet, artists were free to dream.
Whether it was spicy anime girls, fluffy pastel mascots, soft watercolor childrenâs books, or stunningly realistic AI portraits â the art flowed.
But now... a quiet storm is forming.
Not from governments.
Not from angry mobs.
But from â credit card companies.
Yes, really. The same companies that process your movie rentals, boba tea deliveries, and online shopping are now deciding what art you're allowed to see, share, or sell.
đŽ It Started with Steam...
Valve, the company behind the beloved PC platform Steam, recently added a new rule. At first glance, it seems harmless:
âContent that may violate the rules and standards set forth by Steamâs payment processors and related card networks and banksâŚâ
Sounds vague? Thatâs because it is â and that vagueness has already triggered takedowns of adult-themed games. Some included controversial narratives like incest â not illegal, but now inaccessible.
Why? Because Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal reportedly pressured Valve after groups like Collective Shout lobbied them. The message was clear:
âGet rid of this content, or lose your ability to process payments.â
Valve had no real choice. No credit card processing = no store.
đ¨ AI Art Platforms Are Next
Now, this quiet censorship is creeping into AI art communities.
Platforms like Civitai and Tensor.art have been forced to restrict:
đ NSFW models
đĽ Realistic celebrity likenesses
đ§ Soft, childlike, or âyoung-lookingâ art â even if completely SFW
These arenât legal issues. Theyâre corporate overreaches. Credit card companies are testing how much control they can get away with â and itâs working.
Civitai lost payment support altogether and had to pivot to crypto just to survive. Tensor.art had to comply after receiving âmandatory requirementsâ from financial partners and regulators.
đ Why This Matters for ALL Art â Not Just NSFW
This isnât just about adult content. If Visa or Mastercard can block that, what stops them from going further?
What happens when they decide:
Your kawaii pastel mascot looks âtoo youngâ?
Your AI elf girl is âtoo realisticâ?
Your political comic is âtoo riskyâ?
Your wholesome slice-of-life scene makes someone uncomfortable?
These companies donât understand context, style, or genre.
They only see âbrand risk.â
And their answer is always the same: Shut it down.
đŞ A Dangerous Door Has Been Opened
This is censorship creep.
A quiet policy change.
A takedown no one talks about.
A list that grows.
A community that shrinks in fear.
Today itâs NSFW.
Tomorrow, it could be your model. Your drawing. Your freedom to create.
As one user put it:
âIf they can tell you what you're allowed to see or read...
They can tell you what to say or think.â
This isn't paranoia. Itâs already happening.
đ What Can We Do?
Maybe itâs time to stop relying on systems that donât protect us.
Maybe platforms like Tensor.art and Civitai need to go fully crypto â not as a fringe workaround, but as a default shield.
Maybe artists should support decentralized platforms â where no one can erase your work at the click of a button.
And maybe â just maybe â itâs time to speak up.
đĄď¸ Defend Artistic Freedom. Even the Cute Kind.
Whether your art is bold, bizarre, beautiful, spicy, or soft and sparkly â you deserve the right to make it.
This fight isnât just for âadultâ content.
Itâs for everyone who draws, paints, animates, writes, or dreams.
Because once someone else decides what art is âokayâ...
Whatâs next?
Letâs not wait to find out.
-- Edit --
Thanks for your replies and for reading my article â I really appreciate your thoughts.
I still have hope that Tensor.art can find a way to balance compliance with creative freedom (âBut balancing âcomplianceâ with âfreedomâ under Visaâs and other corporate thumbs is like building a sandcastle in a tsunami.â The system is rigged against art.) I don't think there's anywhere else right now that offers the same mix of accessibility, community, and ease of use for people who aren't tech-savvy or can't run AI art tools locally.
The only reason I upload my cute Flux models to Tensor.art is because not everyone has the setup or knowledge to run models locally â and I want people to be able to enjoy and use them easily.
That said, I agree this situation isnât ideal. Ideally, we should all be free to create and share art without fear of sudden takedowns. Until running models locally becomes the norm, I still believe platforms like TA can â and should â evolve to better serve their users.
"Letâs focus on fighting the systems, not each other." đ¸â¨
Thank you. And Stay Creativeđ¸
~Luna