Public and Private Identities

  • Links roundup for 5 March 2012

    By Claudia Rebaza on Monday, 5 March 2012 - 8:36pm
    Message type:

    Here's a roundup of fandom technology stories that might be of interest to fans:

    • Technology has always had a circular relationship with fan practices, with the format and medium shaping what fans could do, and with fans modifying the technology to accommodate their needs. This post about music fans discusses "an extraordinary 20th century of people developing behaviors, values, and communities centered on listening to records" which may now be slipping away due to changes in music distribution. However, fannishness as social glue is a continuing thread: "There was nothing else necessarily in common amongst them at all; they were all different ages and occupations. It was funny to walk into a room where nothing else mattered except he's playing the new Slim Harpo and that was enough to bond you all together."
    • One problem that sometimes springs up is that people, whether outsiders or users, confuse the platform with the practice. In this post about how Twitter changed his sports fandom, the writer notes changes in his life that have more to do with communal fandom and his own willingness to interact. "I realized I wasn't alone", "I understood I was not, in fact, bat s*** crazy", "Gameday will never be the same" and "Twitter has provided me great interaction with terrific people" could have been said in previous decades about platforms which are still in use by some. In fact, fandom today may have more problems due to platform diversity, and corporate or government control, than the inability to connect with other fans.
    • A lengthy Village Voice piece titled Rise of the Facebook Killers cited how "the architecture of communication was distorting the conversation." The artice details some of the problems users face that new projects such as Diaspora* are trying to overcome. "[Y]our posts can easily be imported into Tumblr, Twitter, and even Facebook...Diaspora* can function as a social aggregator, bringing together feeds from various other platforms...you can communicate directly, securely, and without running exchanges past the prying eyes of Zuckerberg." Additionally, "for those worried about malicious government or corporate interference, the distributed network is much less vulnerable to denial of service attacks, which makes the network much harder to take down."

    If the history of fandom technology use interests you, why not contribute to Fanlore? Additions are welcome from all fans.

    We want your suggestions! If you know of an essay, video, article, event, or link you think we should know about, comment on the most recent Links Roundup — on transformativeworks.org, LJ, or DW — or give @OTW_News a shoutout on Twitter. Links are welcome in all languages!

    Submitting a link doesn't guarantee that it will be included in a roundup post, and inclusion of a link doesn't mean that it is endorsed by the OTW.

  • Links roundup for 13 January 2012

    By Claudia Rebaza on Friday, 13 January 2012 - 9:09pm
    Message type:

    Here's a roundup of stories on freedom of expression through fanfic that might be of interest to fans:

    • A presentation about stylometry discussed how the new tool Anonymouth could de-anonymize online users and serve as a challenge to "the balance of power between trolls and moderators, between dissidents and dictators, between employers and whistleblowers, between astroturfers and commenters, and between spammers and filters." However, something else was on the mind of some audience members: "a questioner asked whether Anonymouth's methods could be used by, say, fanfic authors to make their writing style match the author whose universe they're dabbling in" suggesting that the tool could be used to anonymize authors as well as reveal them.
    • AfterEllen looked instead at femslash when asking "Does lesbian subtext still matter?". Citing the period between Xena and Rizzoli & Isles, the author noted, "Both dynamic duos have produced fervent fandoms committed to creating alternate narratives in fan fiction and fan videos, as well scrutinizing every touch and word exchanged between the characters." These fictional worlds are still of great importance to people whose own worlds deny the existence reflected in fan fiction. "Subtext matters because it creates a virtual playground for lesbian fans to interact with each other on fan forums and Twitter and Tumblr and in the comments sections of the greatest lesbian entertainment website in the world. It matters because lesbians can use that subtext, that chemistry between two female characters, to create their own versions of the story. And it matters because subtext is a gateway drug for main text."
    • An article on the GayNewsNetwork had a similar take on the importance of slash. "Slash is about seeing the whole world through queer eyes. While most mainstream entertainment is still as straight as a lightsabre, slash allows anyone and everyone to be queer. For once, we can be the heroes." However, fan fiction is seen as welcoming more than queer desires. "There's a great tradition in fandom that admonishes kink shaming - that is to demean or label unacceptable something which another fan fetishizes. Dark desires from the crusty corners of your id are not only allowed a space but encouraged. In fandom, I have discovered kinks not only that I didn't know I had but that I didn't know even existed."

    If you write or read fan fiction whether about Xena and Gabrielle, or Rizzoli & Isles, why not contribute your fandom experience to Fanlore? Additions are welcome from all fans.

    We want your suggestions! If you know of an essay, video, article, event, or link you think we should know about, comment on the most recent Links Roundup — on transformativeworks.org, LJ, or DW — or give @OTW_News a shoutout on Twitter. Links are welcome in all languages!

    Submitting a link doesn't guarantee that it will be included in a roundup post, and inclusion of a link doesn't mean that it is endorsed by the OTW.

  • Links Roundup for 26 August 2011

    By Claudia Rebaza on Friday, 26 August 2011 - 5:22pm
    Message type:

    Here's a roundup of stories about pseudonyms online that might be of interest to fans:

    • Google's decision to restrict its new + accounts to people using their legal names has resulted in a variety of protests from affected groups. The My Name is Me project has collected thousands of posts from online users who support choice in how a person identifies themselves, including OTW Board members Francesca Coppa and Rachel Barenblat, The Velveteen Rabbi. Social media scholar danah boyd called the effort to police self-identification as "an authoritarian assertion of power over vulnerable people." Both she and the My Name is Me page list a number of groups negatively affected by such policies including fans.
    • In a different look at the advantages of pseudonymity, author Hanne Blank discusses how difficult she finds it to accept praise for her professionally known work, but is greatly cheered to get comments on her fanfic posts from people she doesn't know, and who don't know her -- a contrast many fans may be familiar with.

    We want your suggestions! If you know of an essay, video, article, event, or link you think we should know about, comment on the most recent Links Roundup — on transformativeworks.org, LJ, or DW — or give @OTW_News a shoutout on Twitter. Links are welcome in all languages!

    Submitting a link doesn't guarantee that it will be included in a roundup post, and inclusion of a link doesn't mean that it is endorsed by the OTW.

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