audreycritter: thebibliosphere:elfwreck:olderthannetfic: kimberlyeab:athingofvikings:olderthannetfic
audreycritter: thebibliosphere:elfwreck:olderthannetfic: kimberlyeab:athingofvikings:olderthannetfic:lanninglurksnomore:olderthannetfic:*cackling*If OTW weren’t around, this wouldn’t be “scaremongering”: It would be the inescapable status quo. The people who believe this crap are the anti-vaxxers of fandom. Oh god. They kind of are, aren’t they? I’d go bigger and just say that they’re the conservatives/reactionaries of fandom–or, to frame it differently, this is how conservative and authoritarian ideologies express themselves in the context of Fandom. my opinion on AO3 is that it’s an important asset but i still find it scummy that they’ll ask for money but when their users try to ask for money they slam them with their non-monetization rules.Like Anne Rice is dead and this isn’t the 90s anymore, people are making money from fandom please catch up with the times. I think you’ve misunderstood:AO3 was built by a bunch of us with our free donated labor for the purpose of being a space free from commercial spam.It’s not a public service. It was built by us to house the type of fandom culture we liked.People who want to do fandom differently, including making money, are welcome to go build their own site with their own money or their own donated labor. AO3 does not forbid commercial links because they think fans making money from fanworks is immoral but them making money (to run the damn site) is fine.AO3 forbids commercial links because they are making a very specific claim about the legality of fanworks, and that claim is about noncommercial fanworks.They’re not saying that commercialized fanworks are against the law. They’re just not prepared to host them–nor defend them in court.In case people missed it: The OTW will not honor DMCA takedown orders that are basically, “I own X work and that’s a fanfic of it, and that’s copyright infringement so make it go away.” The OTW says, lolnope, we don’t think that’s copyright infringement. If you disagree, sue us.The OTW says: Disney - we will not remove explicit Mandalorian fanfic. Rowling, Warner Bros - we will not remove trans Harry Potter fanfic. Gabaldon - we are not removing Outlander fanfic no matter how much you think it’s illegal or a personal violation. Yarbro, if someone puts “The Adventure of the Gentleman in Black” on AO3, you will need to actually take it to trial to (try to) get it removed; none of this C&D order followed by fans caving because they can’t afford a lawyer.…So far, nobody has sued them. (This is, in my mind, the strongest proof we have that fanfic is not copyright infringement. In 13 years, not a single person or company has scrounged up a lawyer and filed a lawsuit against AO3/the OTW for hosting fanworks.)But they’re not willing to put themselves on the line for commercial works. Those get considered differently in copyright law. They’re not always infringing - there’s a whole history of parody books & songs to prove that - but the OTW is not dealing with them.The OTW does not care if fans are making money. The OTW cares if fans making money interfere with its legal defense of its archive. If you are not a copyright lawyer, your opinion about the situation is not going to be considered. Also, it wasn’t just Anne Rice coming after fandom in the 90s as though this is some relic holdover terror from ancient history.Events like Strikethrough and Boldthrough happened in the early to mid-2000s. It felt like you’d wake up every day in 2007 and find another fandom group on LJ gone. (And not just fandom groups either, important community groups for education and trauma survival were also wiped out in those purges as well.)And while not exactly the same, Yahoo Groups–and yes Yahoo Groups was a major online fandom hub at one point–were deleted as late as 2019 with very little warning, leaving a lot of older fandom groups scrambling to back up decades worth of content.I might be projecting, but Fanfic.net seems to be wobbling too. It wouldn’t surprise me to find out they go under in the next few years despite performing similar purges of adult content in 2012 and allowing for obnoxious ads, which made the site unusable on mobile unless you wanted to see an ad what felt like every couple of paragraphs. (It might be better now, I haven’t checked in a while.)It has only been in very recent memory that fandom has gained any sort of foothold that isn’t poised directly over a precarious faultline that could at any moment open up and swallow entire communities whole, and a huge part of that is the volunteers at Ao3 who decided to play chicken with the likes of Anne Rice and won.Ao3 at its core was and is built by fandom. Some people don’t like it and that’s fine, but to even suggest that the volunteers are lounging around eating peeled grapes and lighting cigars with hundred dollar bills making bank through fraud while fanfic authors are left out in the cold is beyond the scope of laughable. ASIDE from the legal protection and the fact that OTW makes its financial reports available, the internet is also…not free? I have only a very shaky layman’s understanding of most of this in its current form, so feel free to correct me if I’m wrong on the technicalities, but servers cost money to run. Servers are physical objects that require housing, controlled temps, electricity, maintenance, and network connection. All of those things cost money. When I was younger in fandom, some fandoms had a fan or two with the cash and space to host a server, but you were dependent on them continuing to afford it and being invested enough in the fandom to not ditch the group. Some of them maintained servers long after community dissolved as an archive, but usually servers (or rented space on host webservices) went down at some point. Some of my oldest stories are only available in scraps through the wayback machine, and that’s true for other stories I loved. That was true when those stories were six or seven years old– my six year old stories on AO3 are probably not going anywhere. Because people donate. To help maintain servers. That we all use. Together. Without ads. Ads can cover some of the cost of maintaining servers, but then you have ads– and as a user AND as an organization, you’re dependent on who wants to advertise through you and who sees it as a significant investment. And then you have to have staff to manage ad accounts and try to get new ones and also user tracking so you can show advertisers your foot traffic and present demographics and that you’re a worthy investment. And then if most people ignore the ads and the ads don’t get click thru, because people are busy reading a 200k fic, then it’s not a worthwhile use of a company’s ad funds and they won’t renew an account. I feel like I’ve turned into a cynical old grandmother for a moment, but things cost money to run and maintain even in a non- or not-for-profit organization. -- source link
#fandom history#ao3 discourse