Ki-Ki

Web foundations for SMEs

Content creator safety and digital protection

Quiet, serious security work for people who live online. That includes streamers, subscription based creators, adult workers and anyone whose income depends on platforms that attract attention from the wrong people.

The focus is simple. Account security, separation between your public work and private life, and steady protection against stalkers, scrapers and clumsy leaks. No hype, no drama, no moralising. The service runs remotely across the United Kingdom, with extra local information for creators in the North East who prefer a closer feel.

This page sits alongside the general digital support and consulting offer and uses the same build principles as the founder launch offer, tuned for individual creators instead of organisations.

The risks that follow creators around

Once you start earning from content, you do not just have followers. You have people who feel entitled to your time, your body, your private life and your location. Most platforms and agencies are not built to protect you from that very well.

  • One email address and password reused across several platforms, so one breach exposes everything
  • Link pages and sites that leak real names, locations or old usernames through small details
  • Stalkers who watch every move and probe your sites and socials for weak points
  • Scrapers, bots and archivers that quietly copy your content for later resale or gossip
  • Mixing personal and creator accounts so friends, family or partners can be dragged into it
  • People offering to help who are really just fans with access, not professionals with boundaries

None of this is unique to adult work. It shows up for fitness creators, cosplayers, streamers, political voices and anyone who pulls a crowd. The difference is that the more intimate or controversial your content is, the higher the stakes when something goes wrong.

What Ki-Ki protects and how it helps

Ki-Ki treats your creator presence like an infrastructure problem, not a gossip thread. The work sits in a few clear areas.

Core protections

  • Account security. Sorting logins, multi factor, recovery routes and device checks in a way you can actually keep up with.
  • Multi platform isolation. Separating personal and creator accounts, email addresses and identity so one mistake does not spread everywhere.
  • Location and metadata protection. Reducing the risk of EXIF, headers, payment data or support tickets giving away where you live or work.
  • Threat monitoring. Watching for odd access patterns, repeat visitors, probes and fingerprint level behaviour that suggests someone is pushing at the edges.
  • Cloudflare setups for link pages. Hardened landing pages and link trees that you own, with proper firewalls and logging instead of a generic profile page.
  • Safe payment link configuration. Saner routes to payments and subscriptions that do not casually spray your personal data around.

Extra support when things get weird

  • Stalker pattern detection. Connecting behaviour across repeated visits, sessions and devices so you can see when someone is fixated, not just present.
  • Burner route management. Setting up safer ways to handle fan contact, business queries and one off interactions without giving away core accounts.
  • Real time style alerts. Discord or email alerts when specific fingerprints, ASNs or behaviour patterns appear so you are not the last to know.
  • Impersonation protection. Support with domains, DNS and checks that help you keep control of your own name and branding.
  • Discord, Twitter, Instagram protection. Practical steps to harden your social accounts and the sites they link to, from basic hygiene up to custom rules.
  • PGP for serious cases. Encrypted contact routes for situations that need evidence and privacy, not just a quick chat.

Under the surface, this uses traffic fingerprints, user agent and ASN analysis, session and view tracking and other techniques. On your side, you see clear explanations and simple next steps instead of jargon.

What Ki-Ki does not do

Clear boundaries are part of keeping you safe. There are important lines that Ki-Ki will not cross.

  • No chasing individual leakers or running vendettas. Leaks are part of the territory. The work here is about reducing risk and damage, not playing bounty hunter.
  • No pretending that any system can stop every screenshot, screen recording or repost. Anyone who promises that is lying to you.
  • No management of your content, pricing, fans or relationships. Ki-Ki is not your agent or partner, it is your infrastructure person.
  • No public shaming, call out posts or social media drama on your behalf. The work is quiet and private on purpose.
  • No judgement about the kind of content you make. The only concern is whether your setup is safe enough for what you are trying to do.

The aim is to give you fewer things to worry about and more control over what you can control, not to drag you into another layer of chaos.

How a creator safety project runs

The work is usually short, focused and handled by email, messages or calls, so you do not need to expose more than you are comfortable with.

  1. Initial contact. You send a short email with your stage name, what platforms you use and what is worrying you. If you already have a site or link page, send that too.
  2. Quick review. Ki-Ki runs a light review of your visible setup and traffic if you have Ki-Ki style hosting in place. This is to spot obvious risks and decide whether the concern is light, moderate or serious.
  3. Scope and price pinned down. You get a clear written scope that explains what will be checked or built, what the limits are and what it will cost. The structure usually follows the founder launch offer pattern, just tuned for creator work instead of general SMEs.
  4. Implementation. Ki-Ki sets up or adjusts the agreed pieces. That might mean Cloudflare rules, safer routing, new link pages, account separation advice or watcher alerts. Where account access is needed, this is handled carefully and kept to the minimum required.
  5. Handover and next steps. You get a short record of what was done, what to watch for and how to ask for further help if your situation changes or escalates.

This sits under the same kind of written expectations as other Ki-Ki work. No open ended retainer, no surprise invoices, no pressure to keep spending.

Who this tends to suit

This side of Ki-Ki works best where there is already an audience or a clear risk, not just a vague idea.

Examples that fit comfortably

  • Creators with active subscription or tip based accounts who want a safer setup without a full agency in the middle
  • Streamers and Vtubers who have started to attract fixation, odd messages or probing on their sites
  • Adult workers who want clear separation between real identity and work identity, and who are tired of being patronised
  • People who already use or are willing to move toward Ki-Ki style hosting for their main site or link hub

When we may talk about a different shape

  • Large agencies managing many creators who want constant monitoring and white label dashboards
  • Situations that have already escalated into urgent legal or police action and need a solicitor first
  • Projects that are mainly about marketing, brand campaigns or fan engagement rather than safety

Those cases can still be discussed, but they may sit better under a broader consulting arrangement or need legal support alongside technical work.

National service, with local explainers

Ki-Ki works with creators across the United Kingdom, mostly through remote work and written handovers. If you prefer a local angle, there are short pages that talk about creator safety support in specific parts of the North East.

If your town is not listed, you can still work with Ki-Ki. These pages are simply there for people who like to see their own area named before they reach out.

Questions creators often ask

Do you work with adult creators and subscription platforms

Yes. Ki-Ki is comfortable working with adult creators, subscription based platforms and other sensitive work as long as the focus is safety and infrastructure. The work is private, non judgemental and treated like any other professional engagement.

Will you hunt down people leaking my content

No. Ki-Ki does not chase individuals or run public campaigns against leakers. The aim is to reduce how much damage leaks can do, tighten the routes that make them easy and give you clearer information if you need to speak to a lawyer or the police.

What do you see when you look at my traffic and logs

The focus is on patterns, not on judging individual fans. That includes IP ranges, countries, network providers, device fingerprints and how people move around your site. It is used to spot risk and harden your setup, not to spy on harmless support.

Do I need a Ki-Ki style website for this to work

It helps, because Ki-Ki can then control and understand the full stack, from domain and DNS to Cloudflare rules and static hosting. If you already have a site elsewhere, a light safety review can still be done and you can talk about whether a move makes sense. Ultimately, as long as your domain can be configured to work with Cloudflare, the core premise of the work still applies.

Start with a short, honest email

You do not need a full story or a perfect plan. A few lines about what you make, where you post and what is worrying you is enough to begin.