Actually,
some work histories do come up in background checks. And, if not, it can come up in other ways. If you are going for a private sector job in the US, there are three ways that work history will typically surface in a background check:
- Some medium and large-scale employers report employment to certain agencies which maintain work history and salary information for employees. This is typically used to substantiate pay history and employment history. Large-scale employers and background check firms pay for access to this data.
- Most employers report employment to credit reporting agencies, and the ones who don't are usually picked up by credit issuers reporting employment to those agencies based on information obtained from credit-granting applications. For instance, pull your own credit report and look at the section regarding employment history.
- Many employers will require prospective employees to provide a full list of all prior employment. They will require information and explanation about any gaps and this could be a challenge.
So, for #1 and #2, it's actually somewhat unlikely that MFC or most other adult sites reports to any of these agencies, partly because they have no good reason and partly because you are probably a contractor and not an employee. So, unless you list your adult work on applications for credit which may get reported to a credit agency, you're probably fine on those two points.
Regarding #3, it's more complicated. Let's say you had other jobs while doing adult work, or you could explain lack of employment in other ways, or you just lie/omit it. That's fine, unless your adult background comes up. Now your employer, who
might or
might not have declined to hire you for this work, has to decide if you are trustworthy since you lied on an employment application. And for most employers, that absolutely is grounds for termination.
Obviously, if you are going for certain public sector jobs, particularly ones with security clearance requirements, the background check will be far more thorough and they almost certainly will uncover all previous forms of income. But I'll assume that we're mostly talking about private sector work here.
I'm not trying to scare-monger here. I think it's both reasonable and possible to make a split from adult work if you should so desire. But anyone attempting to do so should be fully aware of how these things
can arise later.