he/they/she | transmasc genderfluid | aromantic asexual | šŸ³ļøā€šŸŒˆšŸ‘½šŸ’€šŸŒŒ

1687 posts

I Can Still Recall Our Last Summer

I Can Still Recall Our Last Summer

I can still recall our last summerā€¦

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More Posts from Ladystardust-ina-moonagedaydream

Ok but think about knowingly off putting little brother regulus and obliviously supportive older brother Sirius who still get along so Sirius excitedly introduces his wonderful brother to his friends and is just completely unaware of how regulus is purposefully freaking them out and much itā€™s working, like

Regulus: ā€¦ your animagus form is a stag right?

James: howā€¦ how do you know that?

Regulus: I know a lot of things, is it a stag?

James: uh, yeah?

Regulus: cool. Have you shed your antlers yet?

James: ā€¦ what šŸ˜€

Regulus: deer shed their antlers every year. Itā€™s really gruesome, look *shows him a picture from a book* you should tell me how it feels when it happens.

James: šŸ˜Ÿ

-Later-

Sirius: isnā€™t he great? šŸ˜Š

James, fidgeting with his head where his antlers are in his animagus form: yeahā€¦ yeah heā€™s somethingā€¦


Tags :
Sirius Is Singing A Romantic Song, But Remus Only Thinks About Kissing Him, Bc He Is A Weak Man And Chained

Sirius is singing a romantic song, but Remus only thinks about kissing him, bc he is a weak man and chained to his desires šŸ„¹


Tags :

Fandom can do a little gatekeeping. As a treat.

So I finally decided to archive-lock my fics on AO3 last night. Iā€™ve been considering it since the AI scrape last year, but the tipping point was this whole lore.fm debacle, coupled with some thoughts Iā€™ve been thinking regarding Fandom These Days in general and Fandom As A Community in particular. So I wanna explain why I waited so long, why I locked my stuff up now, and why Iā€™ve come to the conclusion that Iā€™m a-okay with making it harder for people to see my stories.

Lurkers really are great, tho

Iā€™m a chronic lurker, and have been since I started hanging out on the internet as a teen in the 00s. These days itā€™s just cuz I donā€™t feel a need to socialize very often, but back then it was because I was shy and knew I was socially awkward. Even if I made an account, Iā€™d spend months lurking on message boards or forums or Livejournals, watching other people interact and getting a feel for that particular communityā€™s culture and etiquette before I finally started interacting myself. And yā€™know, that approach saved me a lot of embarrassment. Over the course of my lurking on any site, there was always some other person whoā€™d clearly joined up five minutes after learning the place existed, barged in without a care for their behavior, and committed so many social faux pas that all the other users were immediately annoyed with them at best. I learned a lot observing those incidents. Lurk More is Rule 33 of the internet for very good reason.

Lurking isnā€™t bad or weird or creepy. Itā€™s perfectly normal. I love lurking. Itā€™s hard for me to not lurk - socializing takes a lot of energy out of me, even via text. (Heck it took 12 hours for me to write this post, I wish I was kidding--) Occasionally Iā€™ll manage longer bouts of interaction - a few weeks posting here, almost a year chatting in a discord there - but Iā€™m always gonna end up going radio silent for months at some point. I used to feel bad about it, but Iā€™ve long since made peace with the fact that itā€™s just the way my brain works. Iā€™m a chronic lurker, and in the long term nothing is going to change that.

The thing with being a chronic lurker is that you have to accept that you are not actually seen as part of the community you are lurking in. Thatā€™s not to say that lurkers are unimportant - lurkers actually are important, and they make up a large proportion of any online community - but itā€™s simple cause and effect. You may think of it as ā€œyour communityā€, but if youā€™ve never said a word, how is the community supposed to know you exist? If I lurked on someoneā€™s LJ, and then that person suddenly friendslocked their blog, I knew that I had two choices: Either accept that I would never be able to read their posts again, or reach out to them and ask if I could be added to their friends list with the full understanding that I was a rando they might not decide to trust. I usually went with the first option, because my invisibility as a lurker was more important to me than talking to strangers on the internet.

Lurking is like sitting on a park bench, quietly people-watching and eavesdropping on the conversations other people are having around you. Youā€™re in the park, but youā€™re not actively participating in anything happening there. You can see and hear things that you become very interested in! But if you donā€™t introduce yourself and become part of the conversation, you wonā€™t be able to keep listening to it when those people walk away. When fandom migrated away from Livejournal, people moved to new platforms alongside their friends, but lurkers were often left behind. No one knew they existed, so they werenā€™t told where everyone else was going. To be seen as part of a fandom community, you need to submit to the mortifying ordeal of being known, etc. etc.

Thereā€™s nothing wrong with lurking. There can actually be benefits to lurking, both for the lurkers and the communities they lurk in. Itā€™s just another way to be in a fandom. But if that is how you exist in fandom--and remember, I say this as someone who often does exist that way in fandom--you need to remember that youā€™re on the outside looking in, and the curtains can always close.

Iā€™ve always been super sympathetic to lurkers, because I am one. I know thereā€™s a lot of people like me who just donā€™t socialize often. I know thereā€™s plenty of reasons why someone might not make an account on the internet - maybe theyā€™re nervous, maybe theyā€™re young and their parents donā€™t allow them to, maybe theyā€™re in a bad situation where someone is monitoring their activity, maybe they can only access the internet from public computer terminals. Heck, Iā€™ve never even logged into AO3 on my phone--if Iā€™m away from my computer I just read whatā€™s publicly available.Ā 

I know I have people lurking on my fics. I know my fics probably mean a lot to someone I donā€™t even know exists. I know this because there are plenty of fics I love whose writers donā€™t know I exist.

I love my commenters personally; I love my lurkers as an abstract concept. I know theyā€™re there and I wish them well, and if they ever de-lurk I love them all the more.

So up until last year I never considered archive-locking my fic, because I get it. The AI scraping was upsetting, but I still hesitated because I was thinking of lurkers and guests and remembering what it felt like to be 15 and wondering if itā€™d be worth letting a stranger on the internet know I existed and asking to be added to their friends list just so I could reread a funny post they made once.

But the internet has changed a lot since the 00s, and fandom has changed with it. Iā€™ve read some things and been doing some thinking about fandom-as-community over the last few years, and reading through the lore.fm drama made me decide that itā€™s time for me to set some boundaries.

I still love my lurkers, and I feel bad about leaving any guest commenters behind, especially if theyā€™re in a situation where they canā€™t make an account for some reason. But from here on out, even my lurkers are going to have to do the bare minimum to read my fics--make an AO3 account.

Should we gatekeep fandom?

Iā€™ve seen a few people ask this question, usually rhetorically, sometimes as a joke, always with a bit of seriousness. And I thinkā€¦yeah, maybe we should. Except wait, no, not like that--

A decade ago, when people talked about fandom gatekeeping and why it was bad to do, it intersected with a lot of other things, mainly feminism and classism. The prevalent image of fandom gatekeeping was, like, a man learning that a woman likes Star Wars and haughtily demanding, ā€œOh, yeah? Well if youā€™re REALLY a fan, name ten EU novelsā€ to belittle and dismiss her, expecting that a ā€œreal fanā€ would have the money and time to be familiar with the EU, and ignoring the fact that male movie-only fans were still considered fans. The thing being gatekept was the very definition of ā€œbeing a fanā€ and peopleā€™s right to describe themselves as one.

Thatā€™s not what I mean when I say maybe fandom should gatekeep more. Anyone can call themselves a fan if they like something, thatā€™s fine. But when it comes to the ability to enjoy the fanworks produced by the fandom communityā€¦that might be something worth gatekeeping.

See, back in the 00s, it was perfectly common for people to justā€¦not go on the internet. Surfing the web was a thing, but it was just, like, a fun pastime. Not everyone did it. It wasnā€™t until the rise of social media that going online became a thing everyone and their grandmother did every day. Back then, going on the internet was justā€¦a hobby.

So one of the first gates online fandom ever had was the simple fact that the entire world wasnā€™t here yet.

The entire world is here now. That gate has been demolished.

And itā€™s a lot easier to find us now. Even scattered across platforms, fandom is so centralized these days. It isnā€™t a network of dedicated webshrines and forums that you can only find via webrings anymore, itā€™s right there on all the big social media sites. AO3 didnā€™t set out to be the main fanfic website, but thatā€™s definitely what itā€™s become. Itā€™s easy for people to find us--and that includes people who donā€™t care about the community, and just want ā€œcontent.ā€

Transformative fandom doesnā€™t like it when people see our fanworks as ā€œcontentā€. ā€œContentā€ is a pretty broad term, but when fandom uses it weā€™re usually referring to creative works that are churned out by content creators to be consumed by an audience as quickly as possible as often as possible so that the content creator can generate revenue. This not-so-new normal has caused a massive shift in how people who are new to fandom view fanworks--instead of seeing fic or art as something a fellow fan made and shared with you, they see fanworks as products to be consumed.

Transformative fandom has, in general, always been a gift economy. We put time and effort into creating fanworks that we share with our fellow fans for free. We do this so we donā€™t get sued, but fandom as a whole actually gets a lot out of the gift economy. Offer your community a story, and in return you can get comments, build friendships, or inspire other people to write things that you might want to read. Readers are given the gift of free stories to read and enjoy, and while lurking is fine, they have the choice to engage with the writer and other readers by leaving comments or making reclists to help build the community.

And look, donā€™t get me wrong. People have never engaged with fanfic as much as fan writers wish they would. There has always been ā€œno one comments anymoreā€ wank. There have always been people who only comment to say ā€œMORE!ā€ or otherwise demand or guilt trip writers into posting the next chapter. But fandom has always agreed that those commenters are rude and annoying, and as those commenters navigate fandom they have the chance to learn proper community etiquette.

However, now it seems that a lot of the people who are consuming fanworks arenā€™t actually in the community.Ā 

I wonā€™t say ā€œthey arenā€™t real fansā€ because thatā€™s silly; thereā€™s lots of ways to be a fan. But there seem to be a lot of fans now who have no interest in fandom as a community, or in adhering to community etiquette, or in respecting the gift economy. They consume our fics, but they donā€™t appreciate fan labor. They want our ā€œcontentā€, but they donā€™t respect our control over our creations.

And even worse--they see us as a resource. We share our work for free, as a gift, but all they see is an open-source content farm waiting to be tapped into. We shared it for free, so clearly they can do whatever they want with it. Why should we care if they feed our work into AI training datasets, or copy/paste our unfinished stories into ChatGPT to get an ending, or charge people for an unnecessary third-party AO3 app, or sell fanbindings on etsy for a profit without the authorā€™s permission, or turn our stories into poor imitations of podfics to be posted on other platforms without giving us credit or asking our consent, while also using it to lure in people they can datascrape for their Forbes 30 Under 30 company?Ā 

And sure, people have been doing shady things with other peopleā€™s fanworks since forever. Art theft and reposting has always been a big problem. Fanfic is harder to flat-out repost, but Iā€™ve heard of unauthorized fic translations getting posted without crediting the original author. Once inā€¦I think the 2010s? I read a post by a woman who had gone to some sort of local bookselling event, only to find that the man selling ā€œhisā€ novel had actually self-published her fanfic. (Wish I could find that one again, I donā€™t even remember where I read it.)

But aside from that third example, the thing isā€¦as awful as fanart/writing theft is, back in the day, the main thing a thief would gain from it was clout. Clout that should rightfully go to the creators who gifted their work in the first place, yeah, but still. Just clout. People will do a lot of hurtful things for clout, but fandom clout means nothing outside of fandom. Fandom clout is not enough to incentivize the sort of wide-scale pillaging weā€™re seeing from community outsiders today.

Money, on the other handā€¦ Well, fandomā€™s just a giant, untapped content farm, isnā€™t it? Think of how much revenue all that content could generate.

Lurkers are a normal and even beneficial part of any online community. Maybe one day theyā€™ll de-lurk and easily slide into place beside their fellow fans because they already know the etiquette. Maybe theyā€™re active in another community, and they can spread information from the community they lurk in to the community theyā€™re active in. At the very least, they silently observe, and even if theyā€™re not active community members, they understand the community.

Fans who see fanworks as ā€œcontentā€ donā€™t belong in the same category as lurkers. Theyā€™re tourists.Ā 

While reading through the initial Reddit thread on the lore.fm situation, I found this comment:

Fandom Can Do A Little Gatekeeping. As A Treat.

[ID: Reddit User Cabbitowo says: ... So in anime fandoms we have a word called tourist and essentially it means a fan of a few anime and doesn't care about anime tropes and actively criticizes them. This is kind of how fandoms on tiktok feel. They're touring fanfics and fanart and actively criticizes tropes that have been in the fandom since the 60s. They want to be in a fandom but they don't want to engage in fandomĀ 

OP totallymandy responds: Just entered back into Reddit after a long day to see this most recent reply. And as a fellow anime fan this making me laugh so much since itā€™s true! But it sorta hurts too when the reality sets in. Modern fandom is so entitled and bratty and youā€™d think itā€™s the minors only but thatā€™s not even true, my age-mates and older seem to be like that. They want to eat their cake and complain all whilst bringing nothing to the potluckā€¦ :/ END ID]

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ā€œTouristā€ is an apt name for this sort of fan. They donā€™t want to be part of our community, and they donā€™t have to be in order to come into our spaces and consume our work. Even if they donā€™t steal our work themselves, they feel so entitled to it that theyā€™re fine with ignoring our wishes and letting other people take it to make AI ā€œpodficsā€ for them to listen to (there are a lot of comments on lore.fmā€™s shutdown announcement video from people telling them to just ignore the writers and do it anyway). Theyā€™ll use AI to generate an ending to an unfinished fic because they donā€™t care about seeing ā€œthe ending this writer would have given to the story they were tellingā€, they just want ā€œan endingā€. For these tourist fans, the ends justify the means, and their end goal is content for them to consume, with no care for the community that created it for them in the first place.

I donā€™t think this is confined to a specific age group. This isnā€™t ā€œ13-year-olds on Wattpadā€ or ā€œZoomers on TikTokā€ or whatever pointless generation war weā€™re in now. This is coming from people who are new to fandom, whose main experience with creative works on the internet is this new content culture and who donā€™t understand fandom as a community. That description can be true of someone from any age group.

Itā€™s so easy to find fandom these days. It is, in fact, too easy. Newcomers face no hurdles or challenges that would encourage them to lurk and observe a bit before engaging, and itā€™s easy for people who would otherwise move on and leave us alone to start making trouble. From tourist fans to content entrepreneurs to random people who just want to gawk, itā€™s so easy for people who donā€™t care about the fandom community to reap all of its fruits.Ā 

So when I say maybe fandom should start gatekeeping a bit, Iā€™m referring to the fact that we barely even have a gate anymore. Everyone is on the internet now; the entire world can find us, and they donā€™t need to bother learning community etiquette when they do. Before, we were protected by the fact that fandom was considered weird and most people didnā€™t look at it twice. Now, fandom is pretty mainstream. People who never wouldā€™ve bothered with it before are now comfortable strolling in like they own the place. They have no regard for the fandom community, they donā€™t understand it, and they donā€™t want to. They want to treat it just like the rest of the content they consume online.

And then theyā€™re surprised when those of us who understand fandom culture get upset. Fanworks have existed far longer than the algorithmic internetā€™s content. Fanworks existed long before the internet. Weā€™ve lived like this for ages and we like it.

So if someone canā€™t be bothered to respect fandom as a community, I donā€™t see why I should give them easy access to my fics.

Think of it like a garden gate

When I interact with commenters on my fic, I have this sense of hospitality.

The comment section is my front porch. The fic is my garden. I created my garden because I really wanted to, and Iā€™m proud of it, and Iā€™m happy to share it with other people.Ā 

Lots of people enjoy looking at my garden. Many walk through without saying anything. Some stop to leave kudos. Some recommend my garden to their friends. And some people take the time to stop by my front porch and let me know what a beautiful garden it is and how much theyā€™ve enjoyed it.Ā 

Any fic writer can tell you that getting comments is an incredible feeling. I always try to answer all my comments. I donā€™t always manage it, but my ficsā€™ comment sections are the one place that I manage to consistently socialize in fandom. When I respond to a comment, it feels like Iā€™m pouring out a glass of lemonade to share with this lovely commenter on my front porch, a thank you for their thank you. We take a moment to admire my garden together, and then I see them out. The next time they drop by, I recognize them and am happy to pour another glass of lemonade.

My garden has always been open and easy to access. No fences, no walls. You just have to know where to find it. Fandom in general was once protected by its own obscurity, an out-of-the-way town that showed up on maps but was usually ignored.

But now thereā€™s a highway that makes it easy to get to, and we have all these out-of-towner tourists coming in to gawk and steal our lawn ornaments and wonder if they can use the place to make themselves some money.

I donā€™t care to have those types trampling over my garden and eating all my vegetables and digging up my flowers to repot and sell, so Iā€™ve put up a wall. It has a gate that visitors can get through if they just take the time to open it.

Admittedly, itā€™s a small obstacle. But when I share my fics, I share them as a gift with my fellow fans, the ones who understand that fandom is a community, even if theyā€™re lurkers. As for tourist fans and entrepreneurs who see fic as content, who have no qualms ignoring the writerā€™s wishes, who refuse to respect or understand the fandom communityā€¦well, theyā€™re not the people I mean to share my fic with, so I have no issues locking them out. If they want access to my stories, theyā€™ll have to do the bare minimum to become a community member and join the AO3 invite queue.

And yā€™know, Iā€™ve said a lot about fandom and community here, and I just want to say, I hope itā€™s not intimidating. When I was younger, talk about The Fandom Community made me feel insecure, and I didnā€™t think Iā€™d ever manage to be active enough in fandom spaces to be counted as A Member Of The Community. But you donā€™t have to be a social butterfly to participate in fandom. Iā€™ll always and forever be a chronic lurker, I reblog more than I post, I rarely manage to comment on fic, and I go radio silent for months at a time--but I write and post fanfiction. Thatā€™s my contribution.

Do you write, draw, vid, gif, or otherwise create? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you leave comments? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you curate reclists? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you maintain a fandom blog or fuckyeah blog? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you provide a space for other fans to convene in? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you regularly send asks (off anon so people know who you are)? Congrats, you're a community member.

Do you have fandom friends who you interact with? Congrats, you're a community member.

Thereā€™s lots of ways to be a fan. Just make sure to respect and appreciate your fellow fans and the work they put in for you to enjoy and the gift economy fandom culture that keeps this community going.

Sirius: Whatā€™s your birth stone?

Remus: Rock bottom.

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c: @ramen-writes