Chinese fandoms are currently experiencing an actual Purge right now. Every fandom. Accounts are getting banned, all shipping wars has been put on hold. Everyone’s hiding their porn and moving them to ao3.
There’s reward money involved. A recent update to censorship law raised the maximum reward for reporting illicit online materials to 50k yuan (7000 USD), so some people are reporting porn like crazy right now, and apparently, BL fandoms have been especially targeted, where some even more tame things got maliciously misreported.
Anyway, it’s a mess. Content creators are just disappearing off the face of the internet left and right. Expect an influx of Chinese porn fics on AO3.
Well… if there’s one thing out of this mess… nothing bands warring ships/fandoms like censorship…
Hey guys, if some awesome person in China translated your fic into Chinese or created fan art, you really should spread the word! This could affect someone you know!
This is also a call out to all you fuckwits that repost art on Tumblr, twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram. Your negligence hurts people.
^^^
This is literally shitty and it has become worse and worse
Hopefully it will stop before long but just take care of how yiou take your stances on ao3 or what’s happening with Tumblr
A chinese homoerotic novel writer is sentenced to 10 years to prison because of “illegal publication”* and “spread of obscene materials”. After that, China government set up bounty for reporting “illegal publication”. Everyone on weibo, lofter etc. is deleting thier posts.
China is using this act as a way of controling the freedom of speech, it’s not just a matter of “no homo”. They just use the fandom content creators as an easy target and a way to scare people off from writing and publishing things the government doesn’t like.
China is living the Nineteen Eighty-Four novel. Please don’t post chinese fan works, especially not with their original chinese artists/writers right now. You could literally ruin their life.
* in China every book has to be approved by the government before
publication. Anything against the government or with “the wrong idea” will be banned. Their government didn’t pay too much attention to fan books before, but in recent years, they are tightening their grip on their people. Fandom and their activities as a whole has become a target because 1) fandom and their creative community make self-publishing a thing and China doesn’t like that the people know it’s easy to print stuffs (to spread unwanted information/ideas etc. 2) fandom and their creative community is the easiest and obvious target because of the general anti LBGT+ envirnment, general public will support the gornment for “cleansing the society from obscenity” withouth thingking about 1)
One odd complaint I’ve seen is that “AO3 hasn’t changed”. First, if something is well designed and working, it shouldn’t need to change constantly (does anyone actually like it when Tumblr makes random changes to things? no.)
Second, even at a cosmetic level, it’s just… not true? Not unless you haven’t been around very long.
AO3 in 2008 – the first decent cap from the Wayback Machine.
AO3 in 2009. Still in closed beta. About 5500 works.
AO3 opens for general signups! 2010. Also, our logo makes its appearance :3
2011 – the tabs appear at the top of the page. Things looking generally more tidy and less squished.
2012 – a more chipper intro page. Things shifted around a bit as well.
2013 – looking a little more classy now. Tweets available on the main page.
2014 – some more subtle changes, including adding the number of works and fandoms in a prominent place. 1.2 million works at that point…
2015 – look how much it’s changed! The categories move to the front page for ease of access. Recent news updates also on display. Nearing 2 million works…
2016 – I admit I picked this one because of the news update about buying a new server “after holding together mail with sticks and strings”. Nearing 2.7 million works.
2017 – cosmetically few changes but look at the works number – 3.3 million works. This was just about a year ago (October 2017) and the current number today is about 4.2 million. You can also see from the news post that this was when we were in the middle of upgrading to HTTPS, which was a difficult but important process.
And here we are at more or less the present – 2018 (September to be precise). I agree fully that if you joined the site in the last 3 years, you might not have seen a lot of cosmetic/interface changes, but that’s because people – volunteers – spent the previous 5-6 years hashing those out to get them into their present state.
More importantly, you might not have noticed the under the hood changes that necessarily come with going up by roughly a million works a year. You might not have noticed the updates to site security that came with HTTPS, and maybe you didn’t even notice the huge changes to searching and filtering over the past few months. I get that it’s easy to say “nothing has changed”. That’s because there’s a team of volunteers who are working hard to make sure pages keep loading quickly, downloads keep working as expected, searches find you what you’re looking for, and downtime is kept to a minimum. Without them, I guarantee you would notice a lot more changes at this rate of growth, and not for the better.
I missed this piece when it came out (I worked with the University of Iowa on this project as the OTW liasion), but in fact I think much of fandom has since come to terms with having their work preserved as important.
Easy to make and easy to use! Save these pictures and the next time an anti tries an overused argument, you’ve got an answer ready to go. Just post the picture instead of typing the same thing over and over again. Free for anyone to use with or without credit.
Some of these are good takes and some of these are trash takes. Like the idea that adults created fandom? Bitch, fandom is a collective enterprise, we all created fandom, STFU. Or the idea that NSFW and not safe for minors are synonymous. I wrote smut when I was 16. Or the idea that pedophilic art can’t support pedophilia. Listen, the problem with pedophilic art, or rapey art, or etc etc etc is that most people think these things are terrible horrible things on paper, but like, when they actually happen, people don’t even see it as a crime, because it’s so normal. Like prom rape. Like sure, write what you want, but media has an impact, and you should create art that makes the impact you want. Fun fact, did you know that designated drivers were invented by the media? There’s writing what you want, and there’s media illiteracy.
Adults created fandom in the sense that fandom’s been an ongoing enterprise for 50 years and therefore the vast majority of fandom creators are adults. Children and teenagers are certainly creators within fandom, but the “adults created fandom” meme is generally used as a response to the idea that adults should quietly bow out of fandom and let the kids have it… which I can’t help but think is an idea that was actually created by people who really do want to prey on and warp the opinions of young people and thus want to cut them off from having friends and mentors who are adults and don’t lie about it. Because I’ve never seen it before. My generation didn’t attack adults for existing in spaces that kids also exist in and neither did the 90′s kids and neither did the teens in the 00′s; the “grownups should get out of our sandbox!” attitude is ahistorical and bizarre, and comes at a time when there is plenty of evidence that various groups are trying to radicalize teens against things that were previously commonly accepted.
Agreed on “nsfw does not mean not safe for minors”, but in today’s environment where adults get called pedophiles for having friends who are teens, don’t expect many adults to feel safe standing up for that opinion. I’ve been arguing it my whole life, under my real name, so I’m willing to continue to say it. I feel that teens should have the legal right to consume whatever porn they want, because they can’t get STDs or get their heart broken or get pregnant by porn, and if hormones are raging and kids want to experiment with sex I’d much rather they did it in their own bedroom with the assistance of porn than to be exploited by an older person who just wants to get their own rocks off… and I think porn in fandom, where bad stuff gets tagged, is probably a lot safer and less likely to teach bad attitudes than mainstream porn is. Unfortunately, the way the law currently works, adults need to be very careful about allowing teens access to porn, because an adult who encourages someone they know is a minor to read fic containing sex could be charged with a serious crime.
The impact of fiction on reality is real but in general, in fandom, it doesn’t go quite the way people assume that it does. The fact that fandom expects you to identify that what is happening in your story or art is rape, and thus tag it, actually helps to prevent the kind of normalization of rape that you’re talking about when you bring up that “prom rape” is treated as if it’s not rape at all. What is bad about rape in fiction is not that it exists – rape is a real thing and like all real things, writers and artists have the right to engage with it – but when it’s treated as if it isn’t rape. Well, “write/draw what you want but tag it properly” is actually a direct counter to this.
When the book Lolita came out, many reviewers (I am guessing, most of them male, given the time period) called it a love story. I am not joking. If Vladimir Nabokov had had the ability to post tags on his novel like “Underage, Child Abuse, Rape”, idiots might not have been able to widely promote the idea that the book is actually positive on the concept of pedophilia or that the writer sincerely thought it was a love story.
Everyone in society thinks they despise rape and child abuse, but when it actually happens, they turn a blind eye by claiming that what happened wasn’t rape or child abuse. Writing stories in which rape and/or child abuse take place and tagging it as such helps to teach people that no, those things that they were told weren’t rape or weren’t child abuse? Actually were. The story itself doesn’t even need to explicitly tell us that the thing in question is rape or child abuse; if it’s tagged correctly, it tells us that the author knows damn well that this is a terrible thing happening and expects you to agree.
In my lifetime I’ve seen the proportion of casually rapey fanfic scenarios actually drop because instead of the standard within the community being that you only have to warn about “explicit sex” (of any type, so rape, consensual but rough BDSM, and loving vanilla sex are all the same) and same-sex relationships, nowadays you don’t warn about same-sex (you advertise, you don’t warn, because it’s not a bad thing people have to be cautioned about, but a thing some people are specifically looking for and some people are not. Like, you don’t warn that a book is science fiction but you do shelve it with the other sf books.) And you do warn about rape and rapeyness. I don’t think this change in community standards was driven by fandom itself, I think it was driven by social forces outside fandom and fandom just conformed to the new standards. But it does appear to have had an impact. I used to see a lot of fics that just didn’t seem to grasp the concept that what they were depicting was a bad thing, like the rape = love trope. That concept still exists, but now that people have to warn for it, I think there’s a lot more recognition that no, it’s still rape.
So yeah, “fiction doesn’t affect reality” is too simple a take, but “don’t ship pedophilic ships” is… a philosophy adopted by a bunch of people who really wanted support for their ship war, which has no concept of what pedophilia actually is and which actively denies teenagers any sexual agency and fails to recognize where the law actually falls. (I’ve seen people claiming that 17-year-old Peter Parker from Infinity War should not be shipped with Tony Stark because that’s pedophilia. It is not. The age of consent in New York, where both characters live, is 17. Is it gross? In my opinion, yes, very much so. Would I ship it? Hell no, I won’t even ship mentor/student if both are obvious adults. Is it pedophilia? No. Does it describe a relationship that’s illegal in the place where the characters live? Also no.) It’s a lot better to tell people they can ship what they want and then require that they tag things, because there are a lot of perfectly legal relationships that some people consider entirely morally acceptable that other people consider to be disgusting and predatory, so why not tell people (like me) that if they don’t want to read a ship with a big age gap between a very young adult and an old one, or with a mentor/student power differential, they can identify those with the tags and avoid them?
Do I detect a hint of… bedsharing? Mutual pining perhaps?
Ahh…subtle undercurrents of fake relationships
I’m getting strong notes of slow burn and friends to lovers, with a touch of smut at the finish
*drops an enormous box wine on the table*
This is just smut. Entirely smut. This smut has never even seen a plot.
Yeah that’s my order
*rolls up with a growler of 16% craft beer*
OH MY GOD
*slams growler on the table*
THEY WERE ROOMMATES
*delicately sets 4-pack of violently neon green RTDs on the table* Stuck in a car. In a snowstorm. Middle of nowhere. V. Cold. Only one character has a Big Fluffy Coat. Cuddling with a side of mutual pining. Best served with a slice of Things Mumbled While They Think The Other Character Is Asleep.
*Comes in with a hand full of those tiny alcohol bottles you see at the checkout* onshots!
*Slides bottle of whiskey across the bar*
Enemies to lovers with a double shot of confused hate-fucking because lbr, no one’s actually hating anything about the fucking up here in this joint. Not even them.
*slams bottle of clear liquids with the lable peeled off and shot glasses on the table*
Identity Porn, babes! Adventures! It could be spicy it could be sweet, who knows? I mean we all know its vodka… but is it tho?
*holds a big mug of spicy hot chocolate with some foam art – is it a cat, is it a dragon? – under you nose*
I do love the idea that in a hundred years, scholars will be citing stuff on ao3 as the “early works” of the next generation of canon authors.
“Her fascination with themes of isolation and identity can first be spotted in Tits and Cap, an erotic fanfiction written at age 19.”
“In this “coffee shop alternative universe” – a reinterpretation of an existing work wherein the characters work at a coffee shop – her characters work at an independently-owned shop at odds with the chain coffee shop that is built across the street. Her attention to the capitalist-driven labor struggles of the characters within the love story show early an early attention to the major anti-capitalist themes of her seminal work.”
I just love that podfic exists. Like, probably one of the first artistic expressions humans had was telling stories around the fire, and here fandom is in the 21st century discovering a new way to do that, to create that connection of voice, that intimacy of telling and listening aloud, as though we’re only a few feet apart instead of hundreds or thousands of miles. I am so here for it.