Tumgik
#ao3 discourse
"I still post my fics on ao3 but I don't support their policy and you're a bad person if you donate to them"
SHUT UP!
SHUT UP! SHUT UP!
OFF TO WATTPAD YOU GO! I DON'T CARE!
20 notes · View notes
myfandomrealitea · 1 year
Text
"Why can't the freaks on AO3 just go and make a site for all the gross stuff and leave AO3 alone."
Because AO3 is that site. Because AO3 was that site long before you decided AO3 was better than the sites you bullied us off of before, and I can promise you if someone somehow comes up with a fanfic site you like better specifically for the 'gross stuff' you'll try to bully us off that too so you can benefit from it.
AO3's specific core purpose is to preserve fanfiction, yes, but it was also instigated as a host site for the fanfiction that kept getting yeeted off other platforms like Wattpad. Its designed to preserve all fanfiction, not just the fanfiction you, personally, think is 'allowed' to be written.
AO3 is the site for all the gross stuff the freaks make. We've been there just as long as you. We've been funding it just as long as you have. AO3 has specifically said you have a place here. The timeline was literally:
Wattpad/FF.net/LiveJournal purge fanfics > AO3 is born > The people who's fics got purged moved over to AO3 > AO3 gains popularity as the best functioning site > The people who pushed for the fics to be purged off Wattpad move to AO3 > The same people try to push for AO3 to purge fics.
AO3's source coding is open-access. You go make a polished, strict, rigid site where nothing 'icky' is allowed. You go make a site where you can control what is hosted. We already have our space.
31K notes · View notes
Text
Dear God, I visited fanfiction.net after god knows how long because the author of a fic I was interested in told me that they are updating it faster on ff.net
First of all, I had to wait here for like five minutes
Tumblr media
But then it gets worse...
Tumblr media
That's a small, tiny paragraph broken with TWO huge-ass ads!
Tumblr media
Noooooooo!!!
Tumblr media
This is a fucking nightmare!
9K notes · View notes
just-antithings · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Good luck! I look forward to seeing yall tear each other apart in the process
Tumblr media
926 notes · View notes
unpopularfanopinion · 5 months
Text
I got distracted earlier and forgot to include this.
Imagine you have someone who is morally opposed to alcohol and it’s consumption. Okay fine. They don’t have to drink if they don’t want to. Nor do they have to allow people to drink in their home or business establishment. That is a boundary they are allowed to set for themselves. But would it be acceptable or appropriate for them to go into a bar(a business pretty much dedicated to the consumption of alcohol in a safe environment) and start demanding that everyone stop drinking while they are there. Harassing and insulting the workers and patrons all while claiming that they’re doing this because of their morals, and they are just setting personal boundaries and how dare the patron disregard them? Or is this teetotaler just being a massive disrespectful asshole, violating the boundaries and safe space of the bar and its patrons?
The recent discourse is about DNI’s being put into the tags on Ao3. Ao3 a space meant to be a safe space for fandom to post all types of transformative works without fear of judgement. Tags meant to insult and intimidate other users of the site. The people using those tags aren’t setting boundaries or protecting themselves. They’re violating the boundaries and safe space of the other users and the overall intent of Ao3. This is not the same thing as putting a DNI on your own personal tumblr, Twitter, or any other website.
517 notes · View notes
werewolf-cuddles · 6 months
Text
Can we please have one AO3 donation drive where people don't post stupid, idiotic hot takes about how awful it is for a website that doesn't run ads to ask its users to donate so they can pay server costs?
Is that too much to ask?
333 notes · View notes
cosmileech · 14 days
Note
I find it funny that some fanfic writers try to stop proshippers from reading their stuff. Like A, that’s not something you can like. Control? At all? And B, why are you policing what people read on the “stop policing reading” website likeeeee read the room a lil
We've said it before and we'll say it again, ao3 is a proship website whether you want it to be or not. You will literally get banned if you tag your works with proship DNI because its a space made FOR US. That's like going into a library and getting mad theres books there.
Antis always complain about ao3 and say that proshippers need to " make their own spaces " like dude, your in that space. You might as well walk into a gay bar and get mad if other dudes hit on you.
82 notes · View notes
queerticulate · 2 years
Text
I am surprised all the current AO3 discourse is arguing from the hypothetical as if we've not just been through that whole cycle with Tumblr. So much queer PG13 content got flagged when they wanted to remove the extremes. Things they said wouldnt be targeted did. Entire blogs disappeared into oblivion without even getting so much as a notice or explanation for what they did. So many folks got fed up and left the site altogether and it was a close call for the site to even make it out alive. And even then it took the longest time for it to build an active user base again and still to this day there is not as much gifmaking (of any kind of content, completely innocent not problematic content included) as there used to be. They said the main problem that inspired it all was the supposed rampant pedo community (which i never seen a trace of ever). And now people are acting like those who are weary of AO3 going down the same route are saying bizarre bullshit?
2K notes · View notes
roadhogsbigbelly · 10 months
Text
i think "a03 is an important site for a lot of queer creatives and it not existing would fuck over alot of people" and "a03 as a website should probably put more of an effort into not hosting racist or pedophilic content" are both ideas that can coexist at the same time
391 notes · View notes
wander-wren · 9 months
Text
every once in a while i like to poke my head into "anti [x]" tags just to see what the other side thinks. recently i was looking through "anti ao3" and found a really funny post claiming that ao3 is not anticapitalist, but actually the Definition Of Capitalism, bc it relies on volunteer labor while supposedly having the money to pay a staff.
oh, honey.
but i am not going to make unsubstantiated claims on the internet, no, and this gives me an excuse to look at ao3's whole budget myself, which i've been meaning to do for a while. these numbers are taken from the 2022 budget post and budget spreadsheet.
ao3's total income for 2022, from the two donation drives, regular donations, donation matching programs, interest, and royalties was $1,012,543.42. less than $300 of that was from interest and royalties, so it's almost all donations. and that's a lot, right? surely an organization making a million dollars a year can afford to pay some staff, right?
well, let's look at expenses. first of all, they lose almost $37,000 to transaction fees right away. ao3 and fanlore (~$341k and ~$18k, respectively) take up the biggest chunks of the budget by far. that money pays for, to quote the 2022 budget post, "server expenses—both new purchases and ongoing colocation and maintenance—website performance monitoring tools, and various systems-related licenses."
in some years, otw also pays external contractors to perform audits for security issues, and for more servers to handle the growing userbase. servers are expensive as hell, guys. in 2022, new server costs alone were $203k.
each of their other programs only cost around $3,000 or less, and otw paid around $78k for fundraising and development. wait, how do you lose so much money on your fundraising?? from the 2022 budget post: "Our fundraising and development expenses consist of transaction fees charged by our third-party payment processors for each donation, thank-you gift purchases and shipping, and the tools used to host the OTW’s membership database and track communications with donors and potential donors."
then the otw paid an additional $74k in administration expenses, which covers "hosting for our website, trademarks, domains, insurance, tax filing, and annual financial statement audits, as well as communication, management, and accounting tools."
in case you weren't following all of that math, the total expenses for 2022 come out to $518,978.48. woah! that's a lot! but it's still only a little over half of their net revenue. weird. i wonder what they do with that extra $494k?
well, $400k of it goes to the reserves, which i'll get to in a second. the last $93k, near as i can tell, gets rolled over to the next year. i'll admit this part i'm a little unsure about, as it's not clear on the spreadsheet, but that's the only thing that makes sense.
the reserves, though are clear. the most recent post i could find on the otw site about it were in the board meeting minutes from april 2, 2022: "We’re holding about $1million in operating cash that is about twice the amount of our annual operating costs. There is another $1million in reserves due to highly successful fundraisers in the past. The current plan for the reserves is to hold the money for paid staff in the future. It’s been talked about before in the past and we’re still working out the details, but it’s a rather expensive undertaking that will result in large annual expenses in addition to the initial cost of implementation."
woah....they're PLANNING to have paid staff eventually! wild!
so let's assume, for easy numbers, that the otw currently has $1.5 million in reserves. before we even get to how to use that money, let's look at the issues with implementing paid staff:
deciding which positions are going to be paid, because it can't be all of them
deciding how much to pay them, bc minimum wage sure as hell isn't enough, and cost of living is different everywhere, and volunteers come from all over the world
hiring staff and implementing new systems/tools to handle things like payroll and accounting
making sure you continue to earn enough money both to pay all of the staff and have some in reserves for emergencies or leaner donation drives
probably even more stuff than that! i don't run a nonprofit, that's just what i can think of off the top of my head.
okay, okay, okay. for the sake of argument, let's assume there is a best-case scenario where the otw starts paying some staff tomorrow. how much should they be paid? i'm picking $15 an hour, since that's what we fought for the minimum wage to be. by now, it should be closer to $20 or $25, but i'm trying to give "ao3 is capitalism" the fairest shot it can get here, okay?
ideally, if someone is being paid to help run ao3, they shouldn't need a second job. every job should pay enough to live off of. and running a nonprofit is hard work that leads to a lot of burnout--two board members JUST resigned before their terms were up. what i'm saying is, i'm going to assume a paid otw staff is getting paid for 40 hours of work a week, minimum. that's $31,200.
at $400,000 per year, the otw can afford to pay 12 people. that's WITHOUT taking into account the new systems, tools, software, etc they would have to pay for, any kind of fees, etc, etc.
oh, and btw, if you're an american you're still making barely enough to survive in most places, AND you don't have universal healthcare, vision, or dental. want otw to give people insurance, too? the number of people they can pay goes down.
it's. not. possible.
a million dollars is a lot of money on the face of it, but once you realize how MUCH goes into running something like the otw, it goes away fast.
just for reference, wikipedia also has donation drives every year. wikipedia, as of 2021, has $86.8 million in cash reserves and $137.4 million in investments. sure, wikipedia and ao3 are very different entities, but that disparity is massive. and i should note that if you give $10 to wikipedia they don't give you voting rights, i'm just saying.
by the way, you may have noticed that i didn't mention legal costs at all here. isn't one of otw's big Things about how they do legal advocacy?
yes, it is. they have a whole page about that work. and i can't for the life of me find a source on otw's website (and i'm running out of time to write this post, i'll look harder later), but i am 90% sure i learned before that most, if not all, of otw's legal work/advice/etc is done pro bono. i've also seen an anti-ao3 person claim their legal budget is only $5k or so, but they didn't have a source. but keep in mind that if they don't have a legal budget, all the numbers above stay the same, and if they do, there is even less money available for paid staff.
you can criticize ao3 and the otw all you want! there are many valid reasons to criticize them, and i do not think they're perfect either. but if you're going to do so, you should at least make sure you can back up your claims, bc otherwise you just look silly.
170 notes · View notes
brettdoesdiscourse · 20 days
Text
Tumblr media
God, some of you all are so fucking stupid I'm surprised you can survive your daily lives.
Ao3 is an archive, not a social media. It's not for raising awareness for anything. It's exclusively for fanworks. If you post a non-fanwork, you're breaking TOS regardless of the content of it.
The only acceptable way to "speak up" about something on ao3 is by adding it to the author's note on a legit fanfic. I've never seen any legitimate fic being taken down for simply mentioning something like this in the author's note.
Judging by the fact OP unironically uses the phrase "pornsick" and bitches about people donating to ao3, I'm going to assume it's a problem they created in their own head.
And I sincerely hope, since OP has an issue with companies needing to make money to stay in operation, that they never use any companies. There's always an atrocity occurring somewhere in the world and there's always companies that need to make money to stay in business (yes even during genocides.)
OP better not be at any coffeeshop, any restaurant, they better not be buying any non-necessities, they better not be buying any treats or luxuries.
50 notes · View notes
just-antithings · 7 months
Note
the thing i don't get about stories with 17 year olds having sex is that like, 99% of the time the characters being 18 instead wouldn't change the story in any noticeable way, so why not just make them 18 and save yourself the content warning?
bc the person writing it doesn’t feel like it? honestly this feels like that post about how people who want to write about high schoolers fucking should just make them college age instead, and it’s bs for the same reason. people are going to write about whatever they want to write
Tumblr media
457 notes · View notes
Text
People are allowed to make art you don’t like. People are allowed to make art you find disgusting, deplorable, and morally bankrupt. You don’t have to engage with that art, but you also don’t get to tell them not to make that art because it makes you personally uncomfortable. And you certainly don’t get to label people subhuman and deserving of violence for making art you don’t like. That’s it. End of story.
208 notes · View notes
unpopularfanopinion · 5 months
Note
The thing that bothers me about the whole argument of "I'm just setting a boundary!" In regards to things like DNIs, especially on sites like ao3, is that that's not what a boundary is.
A boundary is about how YOU will act. Aka "I'm not comfortable discussing this, so if you continue to talk to me about it, I will have to walk away from the conversation."
A demand involves telling others how THEY need to behave. Aka "You're not allowed to talk about that"
Boundaries =/= Demands. You cannot control another person, you can only control what you will tolerate and how you will react.
Pretty much. It's a complete misapplication and bastardization of the concept around boundaries.
Like boundaries are something you set for your one on one(occasionally group) interactions. Like you said, not wanting to discuss certain topics. Telling your boss not to call/contact you when you're off duty. Telling your mother not to comment on your appearance.
They're not something you get to apply to the public at large like saying you don't ever want to see any long haired freaky people walking in front of your house. (Uhm if you have a public sidewalk, anyone can walk there) That's just not something anyone has the right to do.
120 notes · View notes
werewolf-cuddles · 1 year
Text
People need to stop viewing "Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings" as the author not caring about potentially triggering people, and start viewing it instead as one big blanket archive warning. It essentially means that any of the main archive warnings could apply to this story, but the author isn't directly tagging which ones.
Think of it like this. Imagine, if you will, an author writes a story about a group of friends in high school. It starts off as a relatively happy slice of life story, with hints of a darker story lurking beneath the surface, until finally, the big twist occurs; one of the main characters dies. Perhaps they're murdered, maybe they commit suicide, but either way, it's a shocking moment.
If the author tags this fic with the "Major Character Death" archive warning, then this would spoil the twist in advance. The author wants this moment to be shocking, and if people see that archive warning, then potential readers will already know that one of the main characters is going to die, and that would lessen the impact of the twist, even if they don't know which character it applies to.
And so, "Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings", naturally being more vague, helps to preserve the surprise of that major character death, while at the same time, notifying potential readers that the story will contain content that would normally require an archive warning.
"Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings" is a "Read At Your Own Risk" label, essentially, and that's perfectly fine. If you see this particular warning, then you should understand that the content of this story could potentially trigger you. Whether or not you want to take that risk is entirely on you.
Note: "Author Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings" is a completely different label to "No Archive Warnings Apply". Please stop confusing them.
543 notes · View notes
tarsusingkirk · 7 months
Text
AO3/Online Fandom Research Study: Archival Curation Discourse 
Edit 1/2/24: Thank you for all the responses, this survey is now closed!
Hi all! 
As a part of my Master's program (Women’s and Gender Studies/Library and Information Sciences) I am doing a deep dive into fandom as a participatory community and AO3 as a community archive. I seek to better understand how fans/stans contribute to the continued evolution of AO3 as a community archive.  
In other words, yes, my research is about archival curation discourse (aka anti/proship Discourse™ through an archival lens). 
If you are over 18, please complete the attached survey, which is going to ask you about your personal experiences with anti/proship phenomena in fandom, and how they may have affected your participation in fandom spaces. 
There are no anticipated personal benefits or compensation for participating in this study and it is completely voluntary.
Thank you and have a great day! 
Link to survey
97 notes · View notes