On FetLife, some rules come with crystal-clear consequences. Break them once, you get a warning. Break them three times, you get a timeout. Keep going, and you lose your account.
Other rules — the ones that should protect people from harassment, racism, and hate — come with nothing but silence. No strikes. No timeouts. No bans. Just “we’ll see.”
That silence is not accidental. It is a choice. And it tells us everything about who FetLife prioritizes and who they are willing to leave unprotected.
FetLife positions itself as the platform for kink community connection. But when you actually read their policies, a pattern emerges: language that sounds protective on the surface, but is vague, selectively enforced, and too often weaponized against marginalized kinksters.
This post is both a fact-check of FetLife’s own rules and a blueprint for fighting back when those rules are used unfairly.
The Policies That Get Clarity
Take Fantasy Pushing. FetLife defines it as sending someone unwanted kink or sexual fantasies. The enforcement steps are laid out like a manual:
First time? Warning.
Three warnings in private messages? One-day timeout.
Keep going? Longer timeouts.
Repeat again? Risk losing your account.
Or Team Member Impersonation. If you pretend to be FetLife staff to scam or threaten someone:
Blackmail or extortion = instant permanent ban.
Threats or intimidation = minimum two-week timeout with ban risk.
Notice the pattern. When FetLife wants to be clear, when it is about consent boundaries or protecting their own staff, the rules are black and white. No guesswork. No “caretaker discretion.”
The Policies That Stay Vague
Now look at the categories where marginalized members most need protection:
Hateful Conduct (racism, slurs, hate symbols, antisemitism, gender or orientation shaming)
Privacy Concerns (outing, doxing, screenshots, posting content off-site, sock puppet accounts)
Community Integrity (harassment campaigns, scams)
All of these are listed as violations. But FetLife never says what happens when they are broken.
No warnings. No timeouts. No bans. Just silence.
That means every case is “decided by context.” But whose context? The so-called “average person.” Which usually means the people who already hold power in the room.
Why Silence Hurts
For Black femmes, thems, and other marginalized members, this vagueness is deadly. It means:
Reports get ignored. You file harassment, and moderation shrugs because “context.”
Bias wins. A white man’s racial “joke” gets passed off as kink, while a Black femme speaking out gets flagged for disruption.
Retaliation is easy. Coordinated reporting can silence protestors while the actual abuse goes unchecked.
No way to predict safety. Survivors do not know if coming forward will mean action, punishment, or silence.
FetLife already proved it can define escalation when it wants to. It just does not want to when it is about protecting us.
Hateful Conduct vs. Real-World Impact
FetLife claims to prohibit:
Gender Shaming
Orientation Shaming
Hate Speech
Antisemitism
Hateful Slurs
Hate Symbols
Body Shaming
Kink Shaming
Aggressive Personal Attacks
On paper, this looks good. In practice, the enforcement is inconsistent. For example:
Body Shaming is defined broadly enough that calling a Black man “BBC” (Big Black Cock) without his consent is body shaming. It reduces his identity to a racialized fetish. Yet FetLife rarely enforces this.
Meanwhile, someone saying “no thanks, I do not date white men” is not shaming. It is a preference. Their own guidelines allow partner preferences, but moderators often blur that line when white fragility is triggered.
Where they fall short: the policies lack an intersectional lens. They do not name racial fetishization, misogynoir, transmisogyny, or queerphobia explicitly, even though these are lived realities on their platform.
Community Integrity (Selective Policing)
FetLife bans:
Harmful Disruption (like competitions encouraging negative behavior)
Misleading & Deceptive Profiles (catfishing, third-party managed accounts)
Team Member Impersonation (claiming you are staff when you are not)
Escalations here are inconsistent:
Impersonating staff to blackmail = permanent removal.
Impersonating staff to intimidate in an argument = two-week time-out.
Being “misleading” with your profile location = maybe nothing, maybe a removal.
This ambiguity leaves too much room for bias in who actually gets punished.
Transparency That Isn’t Transparent
FetLife’s guiding values talk about trust, safety, and openness. But the appeals process is barely visible:
Reports get triaged, but users rarely know why they were suspended.
Enforcement escalations are buried in vague “timeouts” that can increase in length without warning.
“Detrending” content (removing it from feeds but keeping it visible on a profile) is framed as harm reduction, but actually functions as a quiet silencing mechanism with no accountability.
How to Fight Back and Appeal Using FetLife’s Own ToS
If you have been targeted unfairly, here is how to use their language against them:
Cite their “What is NOT a Violation” examples.
Example: If you are accused of gender shaming, point to their allowance for “expressing partner preferences” and “restricting participation in events to specific genders.”Cite body shaming explicitly.
If someone calls you a BBC without your consent, cite body shaming and explain that it is both racial fetishization and non-consensual labeling.Force them to honor consistency.
If hateful slurs are punished instantly, why is racial fetishization not treated the same way?
If impersonation for intimidation is worth a 2-week timeout, why are queer and trans members permanently silenced for speaking about safety concerns?Document everything.
Screenshot the offending content.
Screenshot the ToS section it violates.
Screenshot your report.
If suspended, screenshot the notification and appeal referencing the exact line from their policy that supports your case.
What Needs to Change
For FetLife to be a truly safe space, their policies need:
Explicit language on racial fetishization (for example, unsolicited “BBC” comments).
Clearer definitions of body shaming vs. partner preference.
A published appeals process with timelines and accountability.
An external oversight or ombuds system so moderation is not controlled by the same people accused of bias.
Community consultation. Kinksters should help shape the policies that govern us.
Call to Action
Clear rules are not just a matter of fairness. They are a matter of survival.
FetLife already proved it can define escalation when it wants to. It is time they do it where it matters most.
Closing
FetLife markets itself as the “Facebook of kink.” But unlike Facebook, there is no transparency report, no appeals board, and no accountability for biased enforcement.
If they want to call themselves a community, then community standards must be co-created, not imposed from above and not selectively enforced.
Until then, we hold the line. We document. We appeal. And we keep receipts.
📅 On August 26, we deactivate to demand policy parity.
✊🏾 Use #WhatTheFet #FetCareFail #CaretakerCallout #UncensorBlackKink
🖤 Share your story. Share this post. Make the silence visible.
We built this space. We deserve protection in it.
Capt. Chaos
You're not gonna get a single black guy to not want to be called BBC lol. Their 6 inches is bigger than other 6 inches 🤣🤣
All of this 🫡