$3 Billion Off Their Bodies: OnlyFans’ Founder Was a Middleman, Not a Tech Genius
The news that Leonid Radvinsky, the owner of OnlyFans, died at 43 is a moment that demands reflection. The man reportedly made $3 billion from a platform where countless others sold themselves, their bodies, and their privacy. Every video, every message, every tip, every transaction—Radvinsky took 20%. He didn’t build a tech empire. He built the most successful middleman operation in modern history. And for years, society called him a “tech founder,” as if that somehow absolved the moral implications of what he profited from. Radvinsky wasn’t a tech visionary. He didn’t invent a new way of communicating or solving a technical problem. He simply created a marketplace, positioned himself at the top, and took a cut of the most intimate labor of others. OnlyFans was profitable from day one, no venture capital, no IPO, no external investors. Because when your business model is taking a fifth of what someone earns from their own skin, you don’t need outside validation. You need creator...