Instead of a single "site" with all content, models sell individual PPV (pay-per-view) content or monthly subscriptions directly. While still pirated, it decentralizes the target—ripping one model is easier than ripping an entire site, but each model has different security.
Some platforms tried selling "limited edition" foot videos as NFTs to prevent copying. This failed because screenshots/recording still work, and the community rejected high fees.
Before understanding the "rip," one must understand the target. Allyoucanfeet Site Rip
Allyoucanfeet (often abbreviated AYCF) launched in the early 2010s as a competitor to giants like Feet9 and WikiFeet. Unlike social media platforms (Instagram, Twitter) that offer foot content incidentally, AYCF is a premium paysite. Users pay a monthly subscription fee (typically $25–$35) for unlimited streaming and downloads of content.
Key features of Allyoucanfeet that make it attractive: Instead of a single "site" with all content,
Because access is locked behind a hard paywall, a thriving underground market has emerged to circumvent it—hence the "site rip."
In internet piracy slang, a "site rip" (or "sitew rip") is the process of using automated software (scrapers, wget, HTTrack, or custom Python scripts) to recursively download every public or accessible file from a website. Because access is locked behind a hard paywall,
A full Allyoucanfeet site rip is not just a few stolen videos. It is a complete database dump that includes:
Size estimate: A full rip of Allyoucanfeet from 2015–2020 would exceed 15–20 terabytes of data.
These rips are not usually shared via streaming. Instead, they are packaged into massive torrent files or uploaded to encrypted cloud drives (MEGA, Google Drive) with links passed around private forums (Reddit’s archived subreddits, VK, Telegram, or Discord).