- By Shailvee Tiwari
- Mon, 13 Jan 2025 04:55 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
Zara Dar Viral Post: Famous YouTuber Zara Dar, who recently gained attention for switching her career path from a PhD program to OnlyFans to earn money, is once again making headlines. This time, she has started uploading her lectures on Pornhub. In a post on X, Zara revealed that she is using adult websites to share her STEM videos and is earning significantly higher revenue in the process.
She wrote, "People may not know this, but I publish the same STEM videos on both YouTube and Pornhub. While YouTube typically gets more views, the ad revenue per 1 million views on @Pornhub is nearly three times higher."
In her post, Zara Dar shared two screenshots of her videos on neural networks, one uploaded on Pornhub and the other to YouTube, four months ago. While the video garnered nearly a million views on YouTube compared to just 32,000 views on the adult content site. Although, Dar claimed that she earned significantly more on Pornhub. She stated that Pornhub generated $1,000 per million views, whereas YouTube brought in only $340 for the same view count.
Watch The Viral Post:
image credits: X\@zaradarz
After sharing the screenshots of her videos from the two platforms, Zara Dar's LinkedIn account was blocked after the post went viral across social media.
"I shared the same post on X and LinkedIn comparing the ad revenue I typically earn per view on YouTube versus Pornhub, where I upload my STEM videos. While the post went semi-viral on LinkedIn with many Top Voices reaching out to me, my account was unexpectedly blocked without prior notice!"
The comment section was flooded with reactions. Let's take a look at how people are responding to it. "You should make a follow-up post on LinkedIn: “Here’s what getting banned from LinkedIn because I posted about pornhub taught me about B2B SaaS." a user wrote. "You should consider opening up to affiliate marketing to fill the void, " added another user. "Both are different platforms so you should learn the terms and conditions before posting next time," a third user wrote.