Because tumblr isn’t a book of mine. It’s, at its best, a community, which includes a number of things, and sexuality is one of the things it includes.
I’ve got about 400,000 people following me here, and I’ve never stopped to investigate what any of them are or what they like. But sometimes I’ll click on the tumblr of someone who’s asked a good question or reblogged with an interesting comment, and found myself in very NSFW places. So assuming that people who like pop culture cannot also like nakedness, sex, or figuring out their sexuality in a safe space, would seem to me like a misguided assumption.
This is how the Archive Team is going to save Tumblr (and you can help us)
There is a website in trouble like Tumblr
We have hundreds of warriors machines, which run a special operating system made for archiving the web.
There is a tracker which is a central ToDo list worked on by each warrior. The warriors keep the files for archiving only for a moment before they hand them to the staging servers.
The staging server collect and process the data into huge .warc files which are accepted by archive.org
archive.org process and indexed our .warc files and makes them available in the wayback machine. It takes care of the long term hosting. Each TB stored costs somewhere between 1500$ and 2000$ in the long run.
Our minimum how much we will save is above 60 TBs. An estimate of the total size of the NSFW part of tumblr alone is 10-20 times that. Even when we will archive only a fraction it is going to be expensive. When you donate to archive.org today. Your donation will be matched.
i’m just gonna post all the ways i’ve found so far to get RSS Links They Don’t Want You To Know About from social media sites, because people keep Leaving Tumblr Forever in favor of sites that i’m not going to use
(if you don’t have an rss reader yet just make a feedly account, it takes about one whole minute, if you decide to use a different reader later you can export your whole list, it’s fine)
i’m gonna use strikethrough to indicate the text you need to replace and also include examples of feeds that seem to work
A General Rule
on almost any website look for the icon that looks like this
that’s the button that means ‘the rss feed is here’
Tumblr
just add /rss to the end of literally any blog’s url, including tags
i.e. unpretty.tumblr.com/rss or unpretty.tumblr.com/tagged/original/rss
now you can Leave Tumblr Forever and still follow blogs until such a time as tumblr implodes in earnest
Dreamwidth
use username.dreamwidth.org/data/rss
i.e. gallusrostromegalus.dreamwidth.org/data/rss
WordPress
if it’s hosted on WordPress.com, just add /feed to the end of the url
if it’s self-hosted (i think around 20% of people who have their own website use wordpress to host it, i know i do bc it’s easy as sin) also just add /feed to the end the url
i.e. en.blog.wordpress.com/feed or kittyunpretty.com/feed
ArtStation
use username.artstation.com/rss
i.e. beccahallstedt.artstation.com/rss
Mastodon
just add .rss to the end of someone’s profile url
i.e. cybre.space/@kittyunpretty.rss
deviantART
use backend.deviantart.com/rss.xml?q=gallery%3Ausername
i.e. backend.deviantart.com/rss.xml?q=gallery%3Aarvalis
YouTube
this one’sa goddamn pain in the dick because you need to find the channel id first
in general youtube channels have a nonsense url like youtube.com/channel/abunchofbullshit
you have to take that last bit and plug it into youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=abunchofbullshit
i.e. youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UCbpMy0Fg74eXXkvxJrtEn3w
Tapas
this is mostly handy for webcomics that were hosting on tumblr and crossposting, i think? i don’t know how tapas works for creators tbqh. anyway they’ve actually got a button at the top when you go to the comic page.
the one between ‘add to library’ and the paper airplane will give you the rss feed
LINE Webtoons
ditto wrt tumblr-hosted webcomics, and also having a button
the button to the left of the one that says +subscribe will get you the rss feed
Twitter & Instagram
these are the only two sites i’m including that don’t have native rss support, just because so goddamn many people have literally no other web presence at all for some reason
twitter used to have rss feeds but killed them, and i don’t think instagram ever had them. you have to use workarounds for these, and a lot of them end up getting killed, like TwitRSS.me. fetchrss seems to work okay but it costs money. if you pay for inoreader they’ve got built-in support for following twitter accounts but that’s not a practical solution for most people.
right now i use rsshub.app/platform/user/username
i.e. rsshub.app/twitter/user/dasharez0ne
… but the instagram one doesn’t actually seem to work, like, most of the time. i don’t know if i’ve found one that works ever. if you’re jumping ship there please consider doing the world the enormous goddamn favor of just making a free wordpress.com account and cross-posting all your instas with ifttt or something, rather than being totally at the mercy of mark zuckerberg
So here is the thing that I feel like OP left out but maybe not – the point of all that up there is so you can create what amounts to a dashboard –across all sorts of sites of everywhere people are at into a single thing for you to look at without having to visit a zillion different URLs. It’s awesome. It’s old skool tho (circa the 90s and the 00s) and doesn’t always work the way you think.
honestly, the comments on my posts about tumblr burning itself down have reminded me that sometimes fire is cleansing. i hear ao3 is a den of evil and we must shun it, so let’s go enjoy the clean, safe, inclusive, pg-rated fun of twitter, which would never delete us all by accident
I was talking to @walburgablack this morning on Instagram of all places (we are all desperate not to lose one another, and some of us jaded veterans long ago started exchanging our other handles, because we have never believed any one site would stay), and while both of us are the sort of inveterate essayists who have no real problem fitting in to a largely text-and-OP-based platform like Dreamwidth, we were mourning a little about what we’ll lose by leaving Tumblr.
She pointed out that it’s not that you can’t lurk on DW; it’s dead easy to just read and not post. But she admitted, it’s a big barrier to actually follow someone instead of reading silently on their page, and an even bigger barrier to actually leave a comment– you have to be coherent, you know?– and like her, I admitted I was using the current kerfuffle as a good reason to actually follow people I’ve definitely read for a while but never actually engaged with in any way. (I am absolutely feeling weird about the social-order inversion of following handles to other sites when they are relative to me very BNF and I’ve never actually spoken to them before but here I am with them suddenly following me back when we were never mutuals on Tumblr? It’s weird. I feel like I’m presuming.)
I was on Livejournal for about a decade before it imploded (I never left, I just also never accepted the latest TOS that wasn’t translated into English, so my crossposter broke and it kicks me back an error a day)– and in that time, I know I had a substantial following of anons who never commented, never reached out to me, never contacted me, but once in a great while someone would leave an anon comment or, later, on another platform, would confess that they’d been reading me for years. Now, I was not a big f-locker on LJ, so there was a ton of stuff I wrote publicly about. (Towards the end, I started having some hostile RL anons– I never did find out who, but someone who knew me was reading my blog and copy-pasting it for non-readers. Even f-locked posts sometimes, so I had to lock down a lot of things. This is preserved in my privacy groups on DW, even though I don’t really remember the details otherwise– some of those groups are explicitly me trying to exclude the person whose account i thought was being used to read locked posts and copy-paste them to stir shit. I never did figure it out, and anyway– LJ imploded, and the RL drama changed, and nobody cared anymore, but. This involved MySpace too, for the record, so there’s some ancient shit for you.)
And what I’ll miss about Tumblr is that it lowered the bar for engagement. I have a lot of followers on Tumblr, more than I ever had on LJ. And an awful lot of you don’t write a great deal on your own. You like posts, and you reblog stuff, and sometimes you leave replies, which usually make my day. But a lot of you have moved into being people I recognize, people I care about, people whose rare actual commentary is a thing I treasure. And that built up because I can form a mental relationship with an avatar and a series of “likes” and reblogs; I can tell what you’re interested in of my content, if it’s that you came for the fic and stayed for the cute farm pictures, or vice versa. It’s all very pleasant. Even if it’s just that you’re only into the fic and don’t care about the rest– that’s cool too! I appreciate that, and it’s part of my experience here.
And you-all are the ones I’m worried for, now. On DW, what will you do? Is there room for you? Of course I think so, I can’t help but write thousand-word essays every time I sneeze. I’m a content creator and it’s what I do and I couldn’t stop if I tried, and I have been chafing in dissatisfaction (i.e. I’ve fucking hated it) for six years on this site because it’s not really designed for me, and I’m fucking delighted to be hopefully finding enough people on a better text-based platform for it to meet my social media needs.
But, as someone said over there, it’s kind of like everyone’s coming home from war. Like… home, what a profound relief, but… we’ve lost so many and it’s been hard and some of us are pretty fucking damaged, and it’s never going to be the same.
And the casualties are going to be the people who don’t fit on text-based platforms. All of you darlings who don’t have a lot to say on your own, but love things, and curate their reblogs, and signal boost what they believe in, and like what they like and comment only rarely and with great trepidation but often with fantastic insight–
Oh, I’m just so worried for all of you. I don’t know if Pillowfort will work for you better; I’m going to look over there, worried as I am about their weird UI blind spots and their shaky underpinnings and good-natured (?) ignorance about real-world problems and why can’t i see who liked my posts why have likes– if I can get the site to load, it spun a little wheel for me for two hours last night, I haven’t logged in since mid-November– and I’ll be on Twitter and Instagram and all of that shit.
But I’m just worried. I don’t want to lose you. I didn’t really mind my LJ anons? but I couldn’t have much of a relationship with them, because I couldn’t see them, I couldn’t know who they were. And they were scary sometimes. Some of them were definitely hostile. I kept having to turn anon commenting on and off. I’ll try to turn it back on, on DW. It lets you use OpenID if you’re not willing to log in, which is a super 2005 kind of dealie, but it makes sense, I promise. I literally don’t remember how it works but it’s a thing.
(There are still hostile anons on Tumblr too! Just, the barrier for engagement is slightly higher for them, there’s no “dislike” button, and silently hatereading is as invisible as it was on LJ.)
I don’t want to go back to that. I want there to be room for everybody. I’m hoping DW brings back more nuanced discussions, sure, and Tumblr’s a hellsite I can’t wait to escape, sure. But.
I’ll miss you. I hope you find a home. And I hope that home still includes me somehow.
All of this and to also say that lurkers are absolutely welcome on dw. A single post on your dw that you read but don’t post (just so folks know it’s not an empty journal later).
As a quick note- to make it easier for y’all to find content on your blog that has been flagged
I have Xkit for chrome and I installed the “originals” extension. I went to my blogs dashboard (Y’know tumblr.com/blog/whateveryourblognameis) and then clicked “Show only originals” And scrolled down and hit review on every false flag (and boy do i have an update on that) that popped up.
It took me a good three hours? To go back as far as I could, and I know I missed some things 😦
A former staff engineer, who recently left Tumblr and asked to remain
anonymous for professional reasons, tells Vox that the NSFW ban was “in
the works for about six months as an official project,” adding that it
was given additional resources and named “Project X” in September,
shortly before it was announced to the rest of the company at an
all-hands meeting. “[The NSFW ban] was going to happen anyway,” the
former engineer told me. “Verizon pushed it out the door after the child
pornography thing and made the deadline sooner,” but the real problem
was always that Verizon couldn’t sell ads next to porn.
Porn on Tumblr is something Verizon needs to wipe out if it’s going to
make any money off what it thinks is actually valuable about the
platform — enormous fandom and social justice communities that, just
before the Verizon acquisition, Khalaf was insisting the staff figure
out how to better monetize.
On that note-
Two former Tumblr employees said they were alarmed when Khalaf chose
Black Lives Matter as an example of a community that the company should
focus on converting into Yahoo media consumers. One told The Verge,
“Simon explicitly said that Black Lives Matter was an opportunity to
[make] a ton of money.”
The Vox article that I was interviewed for is up and running, and it contains some serious fuckign information about this whole fiasco.
Information that tumblr just straight up refused to provide to its userbase at all.
Unsurprisingly to those of us watching this website deteriorate over the last year, this full content purge and ban has been in progress for a solid 6 months. The date got moved up because of the child porn thing, but it was always coming for us.
Equally unsurprising: Tumblr’s management and ownership are absolutely destroying the actual staff working on it. The company has been hemoragghing senior staff without so much as a token attempt to keep them in place. So the drops in site quality are real, and wil probably only be getting worse.
Truly astonishing is the fact that apparently this crap was supposed to “double” the userbase by the end of next year. Boy, howdy, that’s not gonna work out well for them.
Read it. Know what’s happening. Know why it is happening.
don’t join mastodon. the lax nature of regulations makes it an extremely popular platform for maps and pedophiles.
there are always alternatives to tumblr but mastodon is Not a trustworthy or good one
This is based on a drastic misunderstanding of what Mastodon is. It’s not a social media site like tumblr – it’s open-source code that allows anyone to create a social media site, which can then interact with other sites using that code. To say Mastodon has “lax regulations” is really misleading, because Mastodon itself has no regulations, it only has tools for moderators to regulate their own instances
Mastodon “allows” pedophiles in the same way that email “allows” identity theft scams. No, “email” doesn’t put a stop to identity theft, but “email” is just a set of protocols for sending messages – it’d be absurd to expect it to
Most Mastodon instances (including mastodon.social, the largest and oldest) do more to keep pedophiles off their platform than tumblr ever has, by having strict rules against it, banning any instances that don’t have strict rules against it, and actively moderating to enforce those rules. At that point it’s as if the pedophiles are on a different website entirely – because they literally are on a different domain
As someone who actually uses it, I can confirm that I’ve never had or even heard of a run-in with pedophiles. Admins know the instances that allow it and quickly block and spread the word about any new ones that pop up. Again, it’s been more of an issue for me on tumblr than it’s ever been on masto
Please reblog this. People love spreading this rumor without knowing what they’re talking about, and it’s driving people away from non-corporate, community-controlled, secure open-source social media. And that’s a real big shame