To celebrate the spirit of giving and gathering, we’re providing 8 invitations to all users who have been with us 6 months or more and
posted at least 1 work, or
left at least 5 comments, or
given at least 10 kudos
Since we’re generating a lot of invitations (over 7 million!), it might take a few days for them to arrive in your account, so don’t worry if you haven’t gotten them just yet! You can follow these instructions to access and share your invite codes with anyone who wants an account.
Happy Hanukkah!
Me, not thinking about how many users we have: last year we sent holiday invitations on Christmas… hey, right now it’s Hanukkah! Let’s make it eight!
Also! Why you might want to hit someone up for an invitation even if you don’t create fanworks:
Bookmark things! Even privately! Because sometimes you really want to return to that particular piece of filth over and over but you don’t want anyone to know. >.>
Change how the site looks! For example, the Reversi skin provides a dark grey background with white text, perfect for ~bedtime reading~, as 99% of our Twitter followers refer to it when we go down at certain hours.
There’s even a moderately useful skin wizard to make it easier to tweak the display if you don’t know CSS and there isn’t a skin that fits your needs. (It’s okay; I’m allowed to call it “moderately useful” because I’m the one who rewrote the code. I know where it’s lacking.)
Leave kudos with your name attached! (I mean, maybe you don’t want this, depending on your reading habits. But maybe you do!)
Subscribe to your favorite WIPs, series, or creators to get email notifications of updates! Just… don’t forget to check your spam folder or your Social tab if you use Gmail, because sometimes they end up there.
Keep track of what you’ve read and want to read with History and Marked for Later! A random selection of three works you’ve Marked for Later will even sit there on the homepage and judge you silently when you go I have nothing to reeeead.
So those of you who are backing up your blog may have noticed that it’s taking ages to actually work. For me, it took over 48 hours for my backup to be completed. This is due in part to the servers likely being flooded with backup requests and in part because lol tumblr programming
Basically, download and extract the .zip to wherever you want. Open the .exe file.
The program will automatically read your clipboard, so if you copy a tumblr url to it, it will automatically add it to the blog list. When you select a blog, the ‘details’ tab on the right will have some options that you can change, like if you want only images, video, audio, text, conversation, link, answer, quote, and various metadata. You can also look for specific tags.
I would recommend that you select all the boxes like I have above.
BY DEFAULT, the program downloads all of your posts, including reblogs. This could increase the number of files downloaded by a factor of 10. If you do not want reblogs downloaded, untick that box.
I would also recommend setting a download location.
Each of these settings can be set on a per blog basis. You do not need to be the owner of the blog to do this.
If your blog is protected, there are some additional settings you will have to change. Read through the how to use link above for more details.
To star the process, you need to add your blog to the queue, and also hit the crawl button down below. Crawl tells the program to begin the content search on a given blog, but only on the blogs added to the queue.
Tumblr seems to be in potential death throes or at least, incredibly volatile and unreliable lately, but we’ve done some pretty good and informative work on canon analysis and reference guides so I was looking for ways to back it up without losing it…and the solution became obvious to me:
Archive of Our Own, aka AO3.
“What?” you might ask if you are less familiar with their TOS. “Isn’t that just a fanfic archive??”
No! It’s a fanWORK archive. It is an archive for fanworks in general! “Fanwork” is a broad term that encompasses a lot of things, but it doesn’t just include fanfic and fanart, vids etc; it also includes “fannish” essays and articles that fall under what’s often called “meta” (from the word for “beyond” or “above”, referencing that it goes beyond the original exact text)! The defining factor of whether Archive of Our Own is the appropriate place to post it is not whether or not it’s a fictional expansion of canon (fanfic), though that is definitely included – no, it’s literally just “is this a work by a ‘fan’ intended for other ‘fannish’ folks/of ‘fannish’ interest?”
The articles we’ve written as a handy reference to the period-appropriate Japanese clothing worn by Inuyasha characters? The analyses of characters? The delineations of concrete canon (the original work) vs common “fanon” (common misconceptions within the fandom)? Even the discussion of broader cultural, historical, and geographic context that applies to the series and many potential fanworks?
All of those are fannish nonfiction!
Which means they absolutely can (and will) have a home on AO3, and I encourage anybody who is wanting to back up similar works of “fannish interest” – ranging from research they’ve done for a fic, to character analyses and headcanons – to use AO3 for it, because it’s a stable, smooth-running platform that is ad-free and unlike tumblr, is run by a nonprofit (The OTW) that itself is run by and for the benefit of, fellow fans.
Of course, that begs the question of how to tag your work if you do cross-post it, eh? So on that note, here’s a quick run-down of tags we’re finding useful and applicable, which I’ve figured out through a combination of trial and error and actually asking a tag wrangler (shoutout to @wrangletangle for their invaluable help!):
First, the Very Broad:
– “ Nonfiction ”. This helps separate it from fanfic on the archive, so people who aren’t looking for anything but fanfic are less likely to have to skim past it, whereas people looking for exactly that content are more likely to find it.
– while “Meta” and “Essay” and even “Information” are all sometimes used for the kinds of nonfiction and analytical works we post, I’ve been told “ Meta Essay ” is the advisable specific tag for such works. This would apply to character analyses, reference guides to canon, and even reference guides to real-world things that are reflected in the canon (such as our articles on Japanese clothing as worn by the characters). The other three tags are usable, and I’ve been using them as well to cover my bases, but they’ll also tend to bring up content such as “essay format” fanfic or fanfic with titles with those words in them – something that does not happen with “Meta Essay”.
– I’ve also found by poking around in suggested tags, that “ Fanwork Research & Reference Guides ” is consistently used (even by casual users) for: nonfiction fannish works relating to analyses of canon materials; analyses of and meta on fandom-specific or fanwork-specific tropes; information on or guides to writing real-world stuff that applies to or is reflected in specific fandoms’ media (e.g. articles on period-appropriate culture-specific costuming and how to describe it); and expanded background materials for specific fans’ fanworks (such as how a given AU’s worldbuilding is supposed to be set up) that didn’t fit within the narrative proper and is separated out as a reference for interested readers.
Basically, if it’s an original fan-made reference for something specific to one or more fanworks, or a research aid for writing certain things applicable to fanworks or fannish interests in general, then it can fall under that latter tag.
– You should also mark it with any appropriate fandom(s) in the “Fandom” field. Just like you would for a fanfic, because of course, the work is specifically relevant to fans of X canon, right?
If it discusses sensitive topics, or particular characters, etc., you should probably tag for those. E.g. “death” or “mental illness”, “Kagome Higurashi”, etc.
Additionally, if you are backing it up from a Tumblr you may wish to add:
– “ Archived From Tumblr “ and/or “ Cross-Posted From Tumblr ” to reference the original place of publication, for works originally posted to tumblr. (I advise this if only because someday, there might not be “tumblr” as we know it, and someone might be specifically looking for content that was originally on it, you never know)
– “ Archived From [blog name] Blog ”; this marks it as an archived work from a specific blog. And yes, I recommend adding the word “blog” in there for clarity- Wrangletangle was actually delighted that I bothered to tag our first archived work with “Archived From Inu-Fiction Blog” because being EXTREMLY specific about things like that is super helpful to the tag wranglers on AO3, who have to decide how to categorize/”syn” (synonym) various new tags from alphabetized lists without context of the original posting right in front of them. In other words, including the name AND the word “blog” in it, helps them categorize the tag on the back end without having to spend extra time googling what the heck “[Insert Name Here]” was originally.
Overall, you should be as specific and clear as possible, but those tags/tag formats should prove useful in tagging it correctly should you choose to put fannish essays and articles up on AO3 🙂
Oh, and protip sidebar for those posting, especially works that are more than plain text: you can make archiving things quicker and easier for yourself, but remember to plan ahead for tumblr’s potential demise/disabling/service interruptions.
The good news: You can literally copy and paste the ENTIRE text of a tumblr post from say, an “edit” window, on tumblr, straight into AO3′s Rich Text Format editor, and it will preserve pretty much all or almost all of the formatting – such as bold, italics, embedded links, etc!
But the bad news: keep in mind that while AO3 allows for embedded images and it WILL transfer those embedded images with a quick copy-paste like that, AO3 itself doesn’t host the images for embedding; those are still external images. This means that whether or not they continue to load/display for users, depends entirely on whether the file is still on the original external server! As I quickly discovered, in the case of posts copied from the Edit window of a tumblr post, the images will still point to the copies of the images ON tumblr’s servers.
What this means is that you should back up (save copies elsewhere of) any embedded images that you consider vital to such posts, in case you need to upload them elsewhere and fiddle with where the external image is being pulled from, later.
Personally, I’m doing that AND adding image descriptions underneath them, just to be on the safe side (and in fairness, this makes it more accessible to people who cannot view the images anyway, such as sight-impaired people who use screen readers or people who have images set to not automatically display on their browser, so it’s win-win)
Loki was convinced his brother was invulnerable and indestructable.
His big brother. His personal god.
He “tried to kill him” lots of times, but it was always really just to get his attention, because nothing could hurt Thor. When he sent the Destroyer to attack him on Earth, he might have told himself it was to kill him, but he just wanted Thor’s attention back on him, and somewhere, buried deep, he knew Thor would find a way back to him if he needed to. And dropping Thor out of the Helicarrier? Brotherly fun.
When he sees Thor’s lost his eye, he doesn’t quip. He has nothing clever or biting to say. He just looked shocked. Shaken to his core, as his certainty in Thor’s invulnerability is shattered.
So he hauls ass to bring about Ragnarok, because… he suddenly knows that Hela might actually kill Thor.
And it’s only then, knowing his brother can break, that he goes to Thor and doesn’t say a single hurtful thing, and offers his support. He tells him the eyepatch suits him, he tells him he’s there, he goes to his coronation, and supports him as king. We never see him being difficult with Thor after Thor loses his eye.
And, knowing his brother can break, he trades an infinity stone for him. He flings himself bodily between Thor and two giant fighting monsters that *personally* terrify him.
Once he knew Thor could break, Loki did anything and everything to protect him.
when you try many, many different combinations of keywords and can’t find the one that will get you a gif that you’ve seen 8 million other Tumblr users putting in their posts
The time has finally come.
We’re all getting booted from this platform, but we’re a community, and
we’ll rebuild elsewhere. The current alternative
sites are less than ideal, but maybe one will be suitable, or a new platform
will arise in the coming weeks.
In the meantime, let’s make sure we export everything so that
all our work was not in vain. We suggest a few different ways to do this, to
ensure that nothing is lost.
—
1. Send your email to
your favorite blogs to stay in touch.
Our email is: alongthehike@gmail.com
——-
2. Export a list of
people that you follow, so you don’t forget any names/blogs accounts
At the bottom click export.
It will take a while to process.
Once ready, click download backup. Ideally we’ll be able to import these files into another platform, but you should probably do the following steps just in case.
——
4. Download your full site.
This is easy, but will take a while, and probably a few GB’s.
Enter your site’s URL and run the program. It will probably take a few hours.
“It allows you to download a World Wide Web site from the
Internet to a local directory, building recursively all directories, getting
HTML, images, and other files from the server to your computer. HTTrack
arranges the original site’s relative link-structure. Simply open a page of the
“mirrored” website in your browser, and you can browse the site from
link to link, as if you were viewing it online. HTTrack can also update an
existing mirrored site, and resume interrupted downloads. HTTrack is fully
configurable, and has an integrated help system.”
——–
5. Download all media from all of your favorite blogs.
Open the program and on the bottom left enter your blog’s
URL. In settings make a new folder to
which the files should be downloaded. Right click your blog and “add to Queue” then
click “Crawl”.
You can do this with any blog you follow, but it will only
take images, and no comments, tags, etc., hence the need to download your
entire site (and/or other sites) using HTTrack in step 4 above.
Downloading your “likes” is a bit more tricky.
Click settings, then connection, and log in with your Tumblr
credentials.
With these
files/exports we should be able to migrate elsewhere and rebuild our community. It will be hard to credit everyone for their
work, but we’ll do our best.
If you have any questions on the above just respond here, or
via email.
We’re to be kicked out on the 17th, but it will probably happen
earlier, so the sooner you get started on the above the better.
It’s been a pleasure sharing with you all over the past few
years.