No Racism/Slavery Warnings in AO3's TOS update #endOTWracism
Saturday, November 9th, 2024 03:47 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Per an email from OTW a couple weeks back, I learned that they’re updating the Terms of Service (TOS) for Archive of our Own (AO3).
They finally address requests for including warnings for Hate Speech, Racism, Slavery at some length, but they’ve hidden the discussion deep in a draft.
tl;dr — No new warnings. Only a handful of people have commented. They’re soliciting comments until 17 November 2024. The rest of this post is linked excerpts from OTW’s reasoning against warnings, and from folks who've commented.
AO3 Terms of Service: 2024 Update Guide, Appendix https://archiveofourown.org/works/58283857/chapters/150137587
The discussion begins at the level 3 heading "The pitfalls of values-based moderation"
Brief extracts from that section:
After reviewing user feedback and reports from 2019-2024, PAC believes that implementing one or more of the suggested Warnings of "Racism", "Slavery", or "Hate Speech" would most likely lead to inadvertently enforcing them against fan creators of color and harming marginalized communities rather than protecting them.
[… snip …]
Disproportionate targeting of POC on AO3 by other users is not a hypothetical. For example, in 2019, AO3 was undergoing a migration of primarily Chinese users after a new wave of fandom censorship on Lofter and Weibo (popular Chinese websites). At the time the "Language" field on AO3 fanworks defaulted to English, and it was often overlooked by non-English creators new to AO3. This caused many Chinese works to be posted labeled as "English", and often with the wrong fandom.
A portion of AO3's English-speaking userbase began deliberately hunting these works down en-masse. Some left polite comments on the works to request changes to the language and fandom. Other English-speaking users left comments that were belligerent in tone or outright harassment. Some of the people enacting this targeting scheme also proceeded to use automated methods to overwhelm PAC with "incorrect language" and "incorrect fandom" tickets. Altogether, the number of "incorrect language tag" reports increased by 1530% compared to the prior year.
They continue with "Fictional Content and Real Life Harassment," as well as "The Archive is international; so are racism, hate speech, and slavery," and "Warnings must be about specific events within a work, not themes, characterization, style, or bias". The concluding paragraph:
We believe that the harassment policy, optional tags, filters, muting, and bookmark features do a better job at helping users avoid fanworks containing content they don't want to encounter. Users who create fanworks about sensitive topics are encouraged to tag appropriately, using Additional Tags if necessary. Other users can use filters, mute creators, or mute individual works that contain content that they find disturbing. Users who wish to screen or recommend works for other users are encouraged to use bookmarks to compile recommendation lists for works that they believe handle a topic well.
As I’m writing this post, there’s 3861 comments on the Open Comment Period for AO3 Terms of Service Updates https://archiveofourown.org/admin_posts/30349. The comment period closes November 17th — just 8 days away. There are only a handful of comments on the racism/slavery; I found these of interest:
EllanaCaldin highlights a distinction between tagging for racism and slavery
I still disagree about not including a mandatory archive warning for "slavery" though. To me, it's extremely similar to "rape/non-con", just not focused on sexual themes, and that particular warning isn't a problem on AO3 (even though society likes to say that it's extremely difficult to tell 99.99% of the times. Evidently not...)
I see no mention of archive warnings for slavery, racism, sexism, "homophobia", which I'd prefer to call queerism, or any other form of systemic discrimination. I remember that the Archive made certain promises in 2020, after George Floyd's murder and the resulting public outcry. I am disappointed in the lack of follow through on those promises.
There also seems to be a misunderstanding or perhaps willful ignorance of what is being asked of the Archive. Users are not asking for a warning to be put on any possible instance of racism, but instead when a work has clearly, blatantly racist content that users would like to be warned of before reading the work - especially users that are personally affected by racism. This is the absolute bare minimum that could be done to make AO3 a less hostile and harassing place for users. If the PAC team is incapable of enforcing something like that and coming up with a concrete set of guidelines and rules like they have for every other current archive warning, then you have a serious problem. If you can enforce the "Graphic Depictions of Violence" Archive Warning, with the ambiguity of defining "violence" then you can enforce some kind of Archive Warning along the lines of "Explicit Depictions of Racism".
I am mostly fine with the arguments presented for why not to add a Racism tag, but disagree with assigning Slavery under the same reasons. A lot of the reasons noted for why it’d be unclear/unwise to have a Slavery tag are applicable exactly the same for the Underage tag - and yet, we have an Underage tag. You use the warning when it’s depicted in the posted work; the noted examples of e.g. fantasy works that would include slavery systems were particularly befuddling to me because you answer the proposed issue yourself already: do you require works to be tagged only when explicit slavery is depicted? The answer is yes.
(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-11 03:35 am (UTC)I feel like that covered things reasonably well.
(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-11 03:38 am (UTC)Excellent! - - Jesse Kaysen jesse_the_k@pobox.com
(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-11 05:05 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2024-11-11 06:45 pm (UTC)Damn, I’m sorry