Toronto Star

NO NUDITY, NO COMMUNITY?

The social network is cleaning up — and driving away risque experiment­ers,

- ABBY OHLHEISER

When chief executive Jeff D’Onofrio announced Monday that Tumblr will ban adult content, he promised a “better, more positive Tumblr” as a result. But for a 27-year-old Atlanta man who calls himself Mutabear on Tumblr, the announceme­nt hurt. Tumblr was where Mutabear found, and safely explored, a part of himself.

Mutabear is out to his friends, family and acquaintan­ces as gay, but not as “kinky.” Instead, that part of his identity lived mostly on Tumblr, where he runs a blog that posts written and visual gay erotica that centres on his kinks. “It was a safe space for me to explore things online that I would not necessaril­y want to try (in) real life, where that might not be safe realistica­lly. More importantl­y, it was a way for me to connect with other like-minded people,” Mutabear, who asked not to be named for fear of profession­al repercussi­ons, said in an interview conducted over email.

After the ban announceme­nt, Mutabear told his followers that he was leaving the site. “We had some good times, pity others decided to ruin it for us all,” he wrote. He’s not sure what will come next — an alternativ­e platform with the same community and safety doesn’t exist.

The new rules will ban “images, videos, or GIFs that show real-life human genitals” or “female-presenting nipples,” a phrase that became a derisive meme about the new policy — along with a genuine source of concern among nonbinary Tumblr users over concerns on how the new policy would apply to them. Although there are exceptions for artistic, educationa­l and newsworthy content containing nudity, Tumblr will no longer allow “any content, including images, videos, GIFs, or illustrati­ons, that depicts sex acts.” The policy will apply retroactiv­ely, and will be enforced mainly through automated systems. Written erotica appears to be safe, for now.

There’s a long-running joke about Tumblr, which is that it is the home to some of the weirdest things a horny mind can make on the internet (see: pregnant Clippy, as in Clippy the Microsoft Office helper). But beyond the jokes about finding strange stuff was a more complicate­d reality.

The ban may be intended to keep Tumblr safe after its filters for child pornograph­y — content that has long been banned on the platform — failed to screen out some content that was found in an audit (which resulted in Tumblr being removed from the App Store).

“Without this content we have the opportunit­y to create a place where more people feel comfortabl­e expressing themselves,” Tumblr’s announceme­nt argues. But the decision to ban adult content, some creators say, eliminates a space that helped LGBT, kinky and other marginaliz­ed gender and sexual identities find safety and support.

“I frequently got messages from folks who saw my work and said it helped them understand part of themselves better,” ReaperSun, an anonymous Tumblr erotica artist, who participat­es in multiple fandoms, said in an interview. “That’s primarily what I saw on Tumblr, in my curated bubble: women and LGBT creators exploring sexual concepts that they didn’t feel comfortabl­e sharing anywhere else.”

Tumblr porn isn’t quite like what you’re imagining: Rather than profession­ally produced videos, adult content on the website tends to be connected to fandom or specific identities — particular­ly those identities that might not be represente­d very well in mainstream pornograph­y. ReaperSun’s drawings are based around relationsh­ips between fictional characters, mostly two male characters together. They’re as likely to draw explicit depictions of, say, Will Graham and Hannibal Lecter (of, well, Hannibal) in an alternativ­e universe romantic relationsh­ip as they are to draw the couple holding hands and fully clothed, taking their kid trick-or-treating.

As the news of the ban spread, adult content Tumblr creators and their audiences scrambled to figure out how to respond. ReaperSun has been on Tumblr since 2011. Their blog hosts seven years of their artwork. Tumblr has been the core of their online community since then. Tumblr was how they found other people who liked the same shows they liked and organized fandom activities like gift exchanges or drawing prompts. “It connected me to fandom in a way I’d never experience­d before,” they said.

Talk on social media among users turned to migration and if a new suitable home could be found. Years ago, the blogging platform LiveJourna­l was an important platform for fan communitie­s online. When it started making changes to limit obscene or adult content in 2007, fans began to move elsewhere. One of those places? Tumblr.

Tumblr appears to be in the process of flagging content that will run against the new policy when it goes into effect on Dec. 17. One Twitter thread has been collecting some of the stranger examples. “Ping Pong: too horny,” wrote one Tumblr user, showing a piece of art depicting (fully clothed) people playing ping-pong that was flagged by Tumblr. Tumblr was also apparently bothered by a digital painting of a cave.

But unlike a decade ago, there’s no next big thing for creators to move their communitie­s — and their archives — to now. “I’m completely at a loss.” ReaperSun said. “Tumblr said there are many places for us to go, but there aren’t.”

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