The IRS is trying to figure out what counts as porn after Trump's tax break for tips got passed, and it's turning into a whole mess. Sex workers on OnlyFans were hyped about potentially claiming the new deduction, but the government said tips from prostitution or pornographic stuff don't qualify. Tax professionals are scratching their heads about how anyone's supposed to enforce this when there's no clear definition of what makes content pornographic versus just spicy.
Conservative Christian groups lobbied hard to keep adult content creators from getting the tax break, arguing the government shouldn't support industries they see as predatory. The whole thing might not even matter for successful creators since the deduction cuts off at high income levels anyway. One performer making millions per year pointed out she's gotten plenty of tips just from posting foot pics, which raises questions about where the line actually is.
Conservative Christian groups lobbied hard to keep adult content creators from getting the tax break, arguing the government shouldn't support industries they see as predatory. The whole thing might not even matter for successful creators since the deduction cuts off at high income levels anyway. One performer making millions per year pointed out she's gotten plenty of tips just from posting foot pics, which raises questions about where the line actually is.