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      Findommes, Cybermediated Sex Work, and Rinsing

      research-article
      ,
      Sexuality Research & Social Policy
      Springer US
      BDSM, Cybersex, Dominatrix, Financial, Domination, Kink, Sex work

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          Abstract

          Introduction

          Financial domination involves the payment of cash or gifts from a wish list by a money slave to a money mistress, financial dominatrix, or findomme. Boundaries for findommes working through webcam and video-call services may be more fluid than via text-based modes since the domme engages in more visible displays, and modification of language, voice, and feelings to fulfil the fantasy for a client. We explore the nature of findomme work and its relationship to BDSM to understand how the interaction progresses and how the boundaries, of reasonable and permissible behaviour which affect both incoming and outgoing interactions between people, are maintained.

          Methods

          The study was in two stages. The first stage was a survey of online findommes ( n = 56) in UK and the USA. For the second stage, we explored the experience of findommes ( n = 195) on money-slavery websites and social media feeds using netnography as an observation method with cisgender male, female, and transgender participants.

          Results

          Our analysis reveals how findomme interaction progresses from text-based interaction to virtual face-to-face and voice communication. We show financial domination to be on a continuum from being a lifestyle choice in the BDSM community that reaps financial benefits to a purely economic and legitimate form of commercial labour. Although financial domination clearly elicits sexual arousal for clients, the relationship can also be exclusively psychological and focus on the relinquishing of control to a money mistress for a prescribed period.

          Conclusion

          The findings also show how personal boundaries are negotiated and enhance understanding of how the microculture of findomming interacts with other microcultures. By demystifying the process of financial domination, we clarify its relationship with other microcultures and add to the growing body of literature that destigmatizes consensual erotic labour.

          Implications

          These findings show how online support, in a decriminalised environment, enabled new and ‘instadommes’ to set and maintain healthy boundaries for enhanced physical and psychological well-being, and the research provides valuable insight into sex work that is safely carried out in online spaces by a large number of participants so adding to the growing body of work on decriminalization.

          Related collections

          Most cited references73

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          The online disinhibition effect.

          John Suler (2004)
          While online, some people self-disclose or act out more frequently or intensely than they would in person. This article explores six factors that interact with each other in creating this online disinhibition effect: dissociative anonymity, invisibility, asynchronicity, solipsistic introjection, dissociative imagination, and minimization of authority. Personality variables also will influence the extent of this disinhibition. Rather than thinking of disinhibition as the revealing of an underlying "true self," we can conceptualize it as a shift to a constellation within self-structure, involving clusters of affect and cognition that differ from the in-person constellation.
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            Identity construction on Facebook: Digital empowerment in anchored relationships

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              HIV and AIDS-related stigma and discrimination: a conceptual framework and implications for action

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                b.brooks-gordon@bbk.ac.uk
                Journal
                Sex Res Social Policy
                Sex Res Social Policy
                Sexuality Research & Social Policy
                Springer US (New York )
                1868-9884
                1553-6610
                4 September 2021
                : 1-18
                Affiliations
                GRID grid.4464.2, ISNI 0000 0001 2161 2573, Birkbeck, , University of London, ; London, UK
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6304-7496
                Article
                609
                10.1007/s13178-021-00609-3
                8418458
                aa052dca-5188-4b0a-8c38-a29927d6cf8b
                © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2021

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

                History
                : 14 June 2021
                Categories
                Article

                Sexual medicine
                bdsm,cybersex,dominatrix,financial,domination,kink,sex work
                Sexual medicine
                bdsm, cybersex, dominatrix, financial, domination, kink, sex work

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