Creators make the internet what it is. They deserve to feel safe doing that work.
Here’s what they don’t tell you about harassment.
It’s not actually required for the job of creating content.
Dirty shoes mailed to your house.
A “fan” who knows your class schedule.
Your mom getting calls from strangers asking about your boyfriend.
When our colleague hit 20K subscribers, someone called her mom pretending to be a friend.
We’ve seen creators tracked down from the angle of sunlight in their kitchen window.
Or from a building number reflected in their car.
This isn’t hypothetical. These are Tuesday afternoons in our line of work.
The advice is garbage.
“Just ignore the trolls.”
“Don’t read the comments.”
“You chose this life.”
Right. You chose to make videos about skincare routines, not to play hide-and-seek with stalkers.
That’s like telling someone to ignore the smoke alarm while the house burns down.
The danger doesn’t disappear because you’re not looking at it.
We’ve watched creators delete accounts, move apartments, even quit what they love because everyone convinced them their fear was a character flaw.
Meanwhile, platforms spent more on office snacks last quarter than on safety tools.
Law enforcement is still asking “what’s a TikTok?”
And the security industry is busy selling six-figure contracts to executives who think doxxing is a new cryptocurrency.
You’re not paranoid. You’re paying attention.
When someone finds your address from a reflection in your sunglasses, that’s not “internet weirdness.” That’s surveillance.
When someone creates fake accounts faster than you can block them, that’s not “drama.” That’s harassment.
When your family starts getting contacted, that’s not “part of fame.” That’s escalation.
And if you’re a woman, queer, BIPOC, disabled, or otherwise marginalized? The targeting starts earlier, hits harder, and gets taken less seriously by everyone who could actually help.
Your gut already knows the difference between a weird comment and a threat. Trust it.
Here’s what riding shotgun actually looks like.
In the Old West, stagecoaches crossing dangerous territory had a guard with a shotgun riding next to the driver.
Not to grab the reins, but to watch the road for trouble while the driver focused on getting everyone to their destination.
That’s our job.
We’re scanning for patterns in your messages. Monitoring who’s sharing your content where. Watching for the information gathering that happens before things escalate. Tracking which platforms are failing you and documenting what actually works.
You’re building something that matters.
You’ve got somewhere important to go.
We handle the threat landscape so you can focus on the road ahead.
Prepared beats scared.
Protection isn’t about fortresses or paranoia.
Most creators don’t know a VPN from a VIN number. They don’t need to.
They just need boundaries that actually work. Boundaries that create space to share boldly instead of boxing you in with fear.
Safety should be simple enough that you’ll actually do it, and effective enough to matter when you need it.
Here’s how we actually work.
- We share knowledge. Every case, every technique, every “holy shit, they can do that?” moment. Secrecy protects predators, not creators.
- We refuse to profit from fear. No crisis clients, no cashing in on emergencies. If you’re in danger, we connect you to immediate resources.
- We’re a Public Benefit Corporation. Our charter requires us to prioritize creator welfare over shareholder returns. It’s not branding. It’s the law.
- We build in the open. Tools, research, advocacy - everything we learn gets shared. Safety belongs to everyone, not just the well-funded.
The system isn’t broken by accident.
Platforms profit from creator content but treat creator safety as someone else’s problem.
Law enforcement still acts like online harassment is a joke.
Traditional security companies think “creator” means “someone who makes PowerPoints.”
But when we document every case, publish every tool, and train every agency we can reach, it gets harder for anyone to pretend this isn’t systemic.
Every creator we help adds pressure for real change.
And creators are already organizing, sharing, and protecting each other.
We’re just adding our skill set to the effort.
Safety creates space for joy.
This matters. Your safety matters.
We’re not here for thought leadership content or LinkedIn engagement metrics.
We’re here because creators are getting hurt, and the people with power to protect them keep shrugging.
Safety isn’t just about dodging worst-case scenarios. It’s about reclaiming the freedom to create without constantly looking over your shoulder.
What if you could post without running threat calculations?
What if safety was just handled - like decent lighting or reliable wifi?
What if your security setup was as invisible and reliable as your camera?
That’s what we’re building: safety that runs in the background while you focus on creating.
What we’re building is bigger than us.
A world where making content doesn’t require accepting danger as the price of admission.
Where your protection scales with your audience, not your bank account.
Where boundaries work without killing your authenticity.
Where creators can focus on creating instead of managing their own security infrastructure.
We’ve got the shotgun.
You’ve got the reins.
Let’s make sure you arrive safely.