Protect your creator community from impersonators targeting fans.
Creators and moderators are easy to copy and hard for fans to verify at a glance. Xattix watches for copied names, avatars, bios, and suspicious account signals before fake support accounts can cause damage.
Creators face impersonation, not just moderation noise
When someone copies a trusted account, members can get tricked before spam filters notice anything unusual.
Fake creator accounts
Detect display-name lookalikes, stolen profile pictures, and copied bios that make impersonators look official.
Fake support or giveaway DMs
Warn moderators when a suspicious profile resembles the creator, staff, or support identity members already trust.
Abandoned account cleanup
Use roleless member cleanup to remove lurkers and abandoned accounts after a safe, configurable grace period.
Keep your community open without leaving it exposed
Xattix adds identity checks, actionable alerts, and dashboard visibility around the people your fans recognize.
Protect these roles
- Creator, co-host, moderator, editor, support, and community manager roles.
- VIP members whose names attackers may copy for credibility.
- Event or launch roles during high-attention campaigns.
Respond cleanly
- Use one-click Kick, Dismiss, and Whitelist actions.
- Review alerts and audit history from the web dashboard.
- Respect consent for DMs and privacy workflows.
What a creator-server impersonation attack looks like
The pattern is consistent across YouTube, Twitch, TikTok, and OnlyFans-style creator servers.
Step 1: copy the avatar
Attackers download your profile picture, lightly recolour or crop it, and use it on a fresh account with a name like creator_, creatorhq, or a Cyrillic-letter lookalike.
Step 2: join quietly
The fake account joins, says nothing in public, and waits for high-engagement moments — a video drop, a stream, a paid-tier announcement.
Step 3: DM your fans
“Thanks for being a real one, here’s an early link to my new merch / OnlyFans / Patreon / token.” Members trust the avatar; the link drains them.
How Xattix breaks the chain
The pHash avatar check flags the lookalike at join time. Bio-similarity scoring catches accounts that copy your “official” bio. The cross-server scammer blacklist flags returners burned in other creator servers.
What to monitor in your creator server
The checklist your moderators should be working through every week.
Identity signals
- Avatars resembling your protected creator account.
- Names with underscores, numbers, or Unicode lookalikes.
- Bios that paste your actual bio or social links.
- Account age under 30 days during launch windows.
Behavioural signals
- Members reporting DMs from “you” offering early access.
- New accounts joining within hours of a livestream.
- Spike in “is this real?” questions in your general chat.
- Repeat join-leave cycles using slight name variations.
Operational signals
- External platforms tagging fake-creator accounts.
- Members forwarding suspicious DMs to mods.
- Cross-server hits from other Xattix-protected creator servers.
- Increase in support tickets right after announcements.
Frequently asked questions
What creator community managers ask before deploying Xattix.
Will it block legit fans with similar names?
No. The four-signal scoring requires multiple corroborating matches before alerting, and you control the action threshold (alert only, kick on confirm, or auto-kick).
Can I protect more than one creator?
Yes. Add multiple protected roles — main creator, co-host, manager, mod team — and Xattix scores against each independently.
Does it stop impersonation outside Discord?
No. Xattix runs inside your Discord server. For other platforms, use their built-in reporting and verified-account features.
Will it slow down my events?
No. Detection runs asynchronously and the dashboard surfaces alerts in real time without blocking joins.
Protect the accounts your fans believe.
Add identity protection to your Discord community without turning moderation into a full-time job.