tarotprose:

Goodbye.

Tumblr, for a long time was my home. My place of expression, connection, and hub of online social interaction with the wonderful writing and divination / tarot communities. I started this blog after a hospital stay from a failed suicide attempt. The creation of this blog was my way of coping, making friends and learning about myself. It was a place where I had the chance to connect with some of the most amazing people I have ever met in my life. I have grown as a person, reader and writer in the last few years that I have been on this platform. 

 I am conflicted because I love and care for this space that we together have created but the platform it runs on is something that I cannot support. It seems that as each year passes, Tumblr Inc regresses in their support and care for its users. There has been a blatant disregard for the safety and well being of children, the rampant p//o//r//n bots, the ever flourishing n//a//z//i community, the hate blogs, the bullying, the demonization of sex workers, the constant racism, content theft, and the list can go on. I cannot and will not support this. I do not have all the answers right now, I wish I did. I will be talking with my team to discuss my options on what I can do about the future of this blog but as of right now, this will be the last post on this platform for a while. I love you all and I thank you for your support, your love, generosity and for making this space a pivotal point in my journey. I hope all your respective Tarot journeys are worthwhile and filled with the same amount of love you have given me.

If you want to continue following me and TarotProse related content, I have an Instagram account that you can reach me at.

I wish you all nothing but the best. With your consent, sending you a big hug. ❤

Goodbye,
Ivan Ambrose (TarotProse)

dbdspirit:

In response to the NSFW ban being enacted by Tumblr Staff, on December 17th 2018 I propose that we all log off of our Tumblr accounts for 24 hours. 


The lack of respect and communication between staff and users is stark. Users have been begging staff to delete the porn bot outbreak, which has plagued the website for well over a year. The porn bots oftentimes send people asks and messages, trying to get them to go to a website full of viruses. They also spam advertisements on others posts.  

Users have also begged that Tumblr ban neo-nazis, child porn, and pedophiles, all which run rampant on the site. The site/app got so bad that it was taken off the app store.

However, instead of answering the users, Tumblr has instead taken the liberty to ban all NSFW content, regardless of age. But users have already run into issues of their SFW content being marked as sensitive and being flagged as NSFW, not allowing them to share their work.

Not only does this discriminate again content creators, but it also discriminates against sex workers. Disgustingly, the ban will be enacted on December 17 which is also International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers.

This ban is disgusting, and while I (and plenty of others) welcome porn bots and child porn being banned, the Tumblr filtration system is broken. It tags artistic work’s nipples as NSFW (when it is art), it tags SFW art as NSFW (when it is not), and does not stop the porn bots, neo-nazis and dozens of other issues.


This ban is discriminatory. This ban is ineffective. This ban is unacceptable. 


To protest, log off of your Tumblr account for the entirety of December 17th. Log off at 12 am EST or 9PM PST and stay off for 24 hours. Don’t post. Don’t log on. Don’t even visit the website. Don’t give them that sweet ad revenue. 

Tumblr’s stock has already taken a hard hit. Let’s make it tank. Maybe then they will listen to the users. 


Reblog to signal boost! We must force change.

“Same-sex romantic content will be far more likely to be remove” meaning the art of Steven Universe of the gems and content in general will it be removed and content from the new She-ra, which both shows does have lbgt and queer themes in them?

freedom-of-fanfic:

thispostisflaggedforremoval:

freedom-of-fanfic:

this won’t be official policy or anything but it will probably be the aggregate effect, yes.

why does this happen, you ask?

because the site rules are enforced by humans, and humans … are not very good at being 100% fair or unbiased. (at least, not when we’re acting in large numbers. any one person could be good at it, but the likelihood that most of a group is good at fairness drops as the group gets bigger.)

thus, 

Even when we’re trying to be unbiased:

  • material that’s potentially in violation of the tumblr TOS featuring subjects that are not ‘default’ (NOT straight, cis, perisex, white, able-bodied, healthy, etc) have a greater chance of being noticed and reported. it’s more ‘visible’ because of a combined effect of ‘this might be a violation’ and the brain’s increased awareness when something is ‘out of the ordinary’. if straight-cis-white is ‘ordinary’: things that aren’t straight-cis-white grab our attention, and are that much more likely to be scrutinized for violations of the TOS. (see: fandom’s tendency to go after media that isn’t mediocre whitebread content for failing to be ‘good enough’.)

this is severely compounded by:

  •  a lack of internal awareness of privilege/bias/etc amongst those who hold the majority opinion. (it’s the majority opinion because the majority holds that opinion.) if the majority is biased against something, that thing is more likely to get reported as a problem by people who don’t even acknowledge that they’re biased against it.

not to mention:

  • people who will participate in deliberately biased & malicious reporting. there’s plenty of people who are openly racist, openly homophobes, openly transphobes, etc. you think they won’t take special time to go after TOS violations from content that they openly loathe? because they do – and they will continue to do so.

why this happens in America/on American platforms in particular:

  • at the admin level: in America, the higher up the management ladder you go, the more likely the people making the decisions are straight white cis guys who do not have a strong awareness of their own privilege and/or bias against people who don’t share their privilege.  These are the people who will be responsible for writing & enforcing the rules for nsfw content at Oath and/or Tumblr. they are likely to be unconsciously biased towards content that they personally like and against content they personally don’t like, so in aggregate, their decisions will be more likely to favor straight white cis guy tastes & enjoyments.
  • at the cultural level: America is obsessive about keeping sexual content from ‘the children’ than violent content, because our cultural values are very much rooted in puritanial Christian morality. We also still have a lot of racism, homophobia, queerphobia, transphobia, sexism, etc. baked directly into our culture. so if something can be concievably argued as a threat to preserving the innocence/sexual ignorance of a puritanical, white Christian kid, then it has much higher potential to be flagged as n sfw. (of course, this means LGBTQ+ content (romantic or otherwise) and non-white content is more likely to be tagged as in violation of the TOS.)

tl;dr: even if every single person moderating tumblr was acting with the best intentions, trying to be 100% fair and reporting/acting without bias, the drift will be towards creating a sexually chaste, LGBTQ+-unfriendly, white-centric, and cis-bodied/perisex only space as everything else gets reported more often as a problem and purged off the site.

that’s why censorship enforces baked-in privilege in brief, folx.

Sorry to bother you, but, this post has been incorrectly flagged as explicit content by tumblr. I’m reblogging it here in hopes that you (the OP) will see this note and file an appeal.

I would file an appeal myself, but apparently ONLY the OP can.

Wow, look at that!

  • No images to be misinterpreted by a bot
  • Nothing sexually explicit at all – not even mentions of sexually explicit content.
  • One mention of n sfw (even censored as here)
  • But I did mention lgbtq+ content 🤔
  • And talk about how Tumblr’s new policy will absolutely be enforced in racist and queerphobic ways

Wild

Have you seen Miss Austen Regrets? It was awfully sad for me, but what do you think if you’ve seen it?

janeaustentextposts:

I really enjoyed it. There’s just so much about it that made it stand out, for me, from the kind of typical way Austen-based narratives get zhooshed up into a more cookie-cutter romance. (Which happens, I understand, and mostly I accept it as a starting-point of just getting these adaptations made in the first place, even if things get pigeon-holed into the standard elegant pining.)

There’s been a fair bit of comparison to the other major speculative Austen biopic Becoming Jane (most of it favouring Miss Austen Regrets, and rather deservedly so, in my opinion,) but MAR is entirely capable of standing on its own merits without drawing comparisons. The stand-out element, for me, is the focus on the lives and relationships between women at all stages of life. The accord and clash between the varying viewpoints of Jane, Cassandra, Fanny, Mrs. Austen, and even Madam Bigeon provide a range of experience and perspective that I was really hungry for, in a period drama. All of these lives which leave so little in the historical record still felt so precious and mysterious and real–it brought Jane Austen, the woman, to life in a new way, as well as examining the structures of society and family which both supported and hindered Austen as an unmarried genteel woman.

Also every woman in the cast could run me over on a bike and I’d say thank you. Buy that casting director a round.

In some respects, MAR is very similar to the film Belle, in that it draws on what very little we know of an historical figure and then illuminates the possible circumstances of their world and breathes life and humanity into them in a way I find moving and complex and wonderful.

stultiloquentia:

downthepub:

stultiloquentia:

stultiloquentia:

I am reading scholarly works about Jane Austen and having hearteyes about obscure details in the Pemberley chapters of P&P that indicate Mr. Darcy’s sustainable land management praxis.

Okay, let’s talk about Pemberley!

Austen, as a rule, doesn’t spend many paragraphs describing locations. There’s often information to be gleaned from their names (Sense and Sensibility is full of lurking references to sexual scandals and Mansfield Park to slavery), but Longbourn just means “long stream” or “long boundary,” Netherfield means “lower field,” and Rosings’ original owner was a redhead. Meryton, a pun on “merry town,” is kind of fascinating, given the installment of the militia and the threat to stability and serenity they represent. Partying and shenanigans. Possibly a Shakespeare ref.

Longbourn barely gets any description at all. From the get-go, everyone who lives there is obsessed with other places, with getting out (except Mr. Bennet, who never wants to leave his library, never mind the house). Lady Catherine deems it small and mildly uncomfortable, which is in keeping with the theme of confinement, but also it’s Lady Catherine talking. Netherfield can’t tell us much about Bingley, who is only a tenant. Rosings is expensively, ostentatiously modern and gaudily furnished, though it has a handsome park that Lady Catherine and her stifled daughter never set foot in but Elizabeth and Darcy both frequently escape to during their stays.

So it’s notable and wonderful that Austen goes out of her way to describe Pemberley as an old-fashioned, highly successful, working estate. Its practical old Anglo-Saxon name means “Pember’s clearing.” A pember is a man who grows barley. Darcy most likely still does. As Elizabeth and the Gardiners approach and tour the house, they notice and admire its beautiful surrounding woods, and then when they wander outside, the specific word Austen uses is coppice woods. A coppice is a woodland filled with tree species that grow new shoots from their stumps when you chop them down. Darcy probably has oaks on a fifty-year cycle as well as faster-growing species such as hawthorn and hornbeam for firewood, timber and cattle fodder. Coppice forestry is functional and sustainable, and provides habitat for beasts and birds.

Darcy is the anti-John Dashwood (Dashwood, srsly), the brother in Sense and Sensibility who inherits Elinor and Marianne’s childhood estate of Norland, whose wife immediately starts making plans to hack down trees (not even coppice trees, but big, gorgeous, venerable hardwoods) to make way for a folly. Jane Austen hated follies. Also, it ought to be noted that timber was so valuable in Britain at the time that estates often had inheritance clauses that detailed who was and wasn’t allowed to chop down what.

Darcy’s a food producer and land conservator, prefers nature over fussy, ornamental landscape design, his servants and tenants like him, he gives money to the poor… and… he’s a trout fisherman! He shoots, too, as do Bingley and Hurst and Mr. Bennet, but it’s a particular mark in his favour that Austen singles him and Mr. Gardiner out as anglers. It’s a pastime that signifies a taste for contemplation and quietness and appreciation of nature, as blissfully described in The Compleat Angler; or, The Contemplative Man’s Recreation, a hugely popular travel book first published in the 1600s and reprinted often for 18th C libraries. The plot of The Compleat Angler is about the conversion of a hunter (pastime of the ultra-rich) to a fisherman who learns to love the peaceful sport. We receive ample evidence elsewhere that Darcy is a man capable of swift, decisive action and formidable effectiveness. But at Pemberley, Austen takes care to show us how he’s balanced.

Most of the information in this post comes from Margaret Doody’s Jane Austen’s Names

I didn’t know any of this!  I always thought it was a bit odd how her viewing the estate changed her views of the man himself, as if it was about how big the place was.  Instead it was how he cared for the land / people.  Fascinating!  Completely missed that.

It’s literally his character reference! Most women at the time had to marry for financial security, yet marriage was horribly risky, because divorce was almost impossible. If you married someone you didn’t know well, and he turned out to be lazy, irresponsible, or abusive, you were stuck. 

This is why so many Austen heroes are mature, almost frumpy men the heroines have known for years. Local fellows with family ties. They don’t offer breathless romances; the happy endings they offer are happy because they are safe.

Darcy is not a local boy.

Darcy is not a fully formed, baggable Austen hero when he proposes at Hunsford, not just because he’s rude af, but because Lizzy doesn’t know him well enough yet. She has no real way of knowing how he would treat her. Austen sends Lizzy to Pemberley not to dazzle her with Darcy’s wealth, but to provide her with good, hard evidence of his treatment of the people under his protection, including his tenants, his sister, and the intelligent, dignified housekeeper who has known him since he was a toddler.

Character references established, we may proceed with the romance.

(n.b. He doesn’t know her either, until she’s rejected him. He proposes, despite his giant pile of reservations, because he’s so horny for her he can’t stand it (at least, to his credit, he’s turned on by her brains as much as her hot little bod), but only after her refusal does he realize how completely he has failed to understand this woman or make himself worthy of her. He falls in love for real only after she has demanded that he live up to his own high standards. Refreshing, ain’t it?)

wildehacked:

ball-hard-in-miklagard:

birdhapley:

#Area Man Briefly Considers Confessing Deep and Profound Love For Best Friend In Order to Win Argument (via @taxicabsandcupcakes)

@wildehacked did you know John Lee Miller was in an Austen film?

DID I KNOW

JONNY LEE MILLER 

WAS IN AN AUSTEN FILM

First of all, this is a miniseries, and second of all, I have seen this miniseries ten or twelve times, because it is the BEST Jane Austen miniseries! 

It’s tied with the Emma Thompson Sense & Sensibility as my Favorite Jane Austen adaptation, probably???

It’s on Amazon Prime, and I HIGHLY recommend it–Romola Garai slays as an Emma you can both easily fall in love with AND easily reconcile that with her snobbery and her occasional cruelty–like, this is a true-to-the-material Emma who you can SEE came to us by way of Clueless–and Jonny Lee Miller is amazing as Knightley. There are some Knightleys out there who are kind of moralizing, because a lot of the time Knightley is RIGHT and Emma is WRONG, and the viewer knows it even if Emma doesn’t, and there’s this like, weird pedagogical bent to the romance? yeah, that’s not the vibe here. The vibe here is BANTER. You can see that Knightley and Emma really enjoy arguing with each other, even when they both get so passionately worked up about the argument that they’re legitimately mad about it, and it does a lot to keep them on the same level, to me–JLM’s Knightley gets red-faced and irritated just when Romola Garai’s Emma is spluttering and frustrated, and if it weren’t for the fact that there are other people around, they’d easily fall into the kinds of shouting matches that end with somebody pressed up against a wall being soundly kissed. Like, LOOK AT THE GIFSET–they spend the whole miniseries arguing with each other, and therein lieth the romance of it all. 

Anyway I love JLM and I love Romola Garai and I love this miniseries and everyone should watch it instantly, thank u for your time

could you link us to that post about how to backup once blog, please? (I tru to use the search tool but nothing appears, sorry)

rex-luscus:

Sure, here are the steps:

  1. Go to “Settings” in the account menu.
  2. In the sidebar where it says “Blogs,” click on the blog you want to back up.
  3. You’ll see the page that lets you edit the appearance of the blog, etc. At the bottom, you should see a button that says “Export blog.” Click that.
  4. Tumblr will now take a shitload of time to create the backup (hours, or maybe even days if your blog has a ton of media posts) but eventually it’ll send you a link to download the backup. You don’t have to keep your browser open for that time, by the way.
  5. Once you’ve got the link, click it and download! It should give you a ZIP file with a folder of HTML files for the posts and a folder for the media files.