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8 <dc11:title>Racism, the O·T·W & the End There·of</dc11:title>
9 <dc11:date>2023-11-21T23:18:26-05:00</dc11:date>
10 <dc11:abstract rdf:parseType="Markdown"><![CDATA[
11 A follow·up to my previous post, [“End Racism in the
12 O·T·W”][end_otw_racism], with the aim of providing thoughts on how
13 fandom antiracist activism has gone of late, as well as clarifying and
14 refining my own orientation towards the [Organization for
15 Transformative Works][OTW] as an organization. And possibly also the
18 [OTW]: <https://www.transformativeworks.org/> "Organization for Transformative Works"
19 [end_otw_racism]: <https://blog.ladys.computer/2023-05-14/end_otw_racism/> "End Racism in the O·T·W"
21 <sioc:content rdf:parseType="Markdown"><![CDATA[
22 This post is a follow·up to my previous post, [“End Racism in the
23 O·T·W”][end_otw_racism], with the aim of providing thoughts on how
24 fandom antiracist activism has gone of late, as well as clarifying and
25 refining my own orientation towards the [Organization for
26 Transformative Works][OTW] as an organization. And possibly also the
29 ## Developments at the O·T·W
31 In short, the organization has showed its entire arse. Regarding the
32 End O·T·W Racism action in particular, I felt that [the
33 response][OTW-Update] was incredibly infantilizing and beside the
34 point. To quote an excerpt :—
36 > Since the posting of our original plan in 2020, we have completed or
37 > made significant progress on a series of goals to help protect our
38 > users and volunteers against harassment:
40 > - We implemented the ability to freeze comment threads and turn off
41 > comments on your works entirely, giving you more control to
42 > moderate interactions on your AO3 fanworks.
44 > - User muting was introduced to help you avoid encountering works,
45 > bookmarks, or comments from specific users when browsing the
48 > - We have implemented comment blocking to prevent specific logged‐in
49 > users from commenting on your works entirely.
51 > - You can now opt out of receiving gifts on AO3, as well as opt out
52 > of allowing your works to be invited to collections.
54 > - We have improved admin tools to facilitate investigations by our
55 > Policy & Abuse team.
57 > - Internally, we have updated our Code of Conduct to make it explicit
58 > that discrimination based on caste is not tolerated in the OTW.
60 > - We also implemented methods for volunteers to contact and submit
61 > feedback to the Board anonymously by introducing a separate
64 > We are still committed to working towards giving you more control
65 > over how you experience the Archive going forward. To that end, we
66 > will be expanding blocking features to cover more user interactions,
67 > and further limiting how guest users can interact with you on the
70 Note how ⓐ almost all of these changes are technological in nature,
71 and ⓑ none of these changes are actually specific to *combatting
72 racism*. I didn’t participate in the End O·T·W Racism action because I
73 wanted “more control” over my Archive experience, I participated
74 because I wanted the O·T·W to cease being a racist organization.
75 Absolutely none of the points listed tackle that problem.
77 Astonishingly, in a very “senpai noticed me” moment, [the Fandom Against
78 Racism team seemed happy just to have gotten a response at
79 all][EndOTWRacism-Response], and did not offer any of these criticisms.
80 This made me severely doubt whether the Fandom Against Racism team
81 actually knew what they were protesting.
83 That one specific response to that one specific action aside, the O·T·W
84 clearly demonstrated, in the lead·up to its latest Board election :—
86 - That it has a Legal staff with far too much power and influence over
87 the organization, whose area of expertise is narrow and misguided in
88 relation to the whole scope of things a platform like
89 [<cite>A·O·3</cite>][AO3] needs to handle (e·g sexualized photography
92 - That it has a Policy & Abuse team which is hopelessly overworked,
93 unable to tackle big problems (due, in part, to afore·mentioned
94 overreach of Legal), and unable to moderate even the comments of
95 <cite>A·O·3</cite>’s own blogposts.
97 - That there are individuals in the O·T·W with long histories of racist
98 and abusive behaviour, at least one of which who was a member of the
99 Board and who *still* is a sitting chairmember of a committee. (There
100 are not good processes, or maybe any processes, for removing these
101 people from their posts.)
103 - That members with·in the organization are completely willing to wield
104 its Code of Conduct as a retaliatory tool for silencing criticisms of
107 - That East Asian volunteers, and mainland Chinese volunteers in
108 particular, have had an extremely rough time of it.
110 - That the O·T·W still doesn’t know how to manage money and still is
111 not capable of hiring needed staff.
113 - That the A·O·3 codebase is still a mess and there is still no
114 organizational interest or capacity to bring the contribution
115 pipeline up to the norms and expectations of your average open source
118 I’m not providing citations for the above facts because most of the
119 discussion surrounding them happened informally on places like
120 Dreamwidth and Tumblr. You should approach them with the level of
121 rigour you generally would use for word‐of‐mouth utterances from people
122 who were there and watched it happen, and I welcome anyone with the
123 time to chronicle them in a more durable and comprehensive fashion.
125 It is important to note that the O·T·W Board has changed, seemingly for
126 the better, since most of this stuff went down. What this likely means
127 in practice is just that the systemic problems in the organization have
128 gone back to being hidden now that there are competent people in the
129 role of acting as the organization’s face. However, they are finally
130 moving forward on having an external audit with respect to diversity
131 and inclusion, and that could, eventually, result in some actual
134 ## Developments in Fandom Antiracism
136 These have likewise been largely disappointing. I was initially excited
137 about the End O·T·W Racism action, because it seemed like a potentially
138 very effective tactic at raising the issue and building an activist
139 base for future antiracist work. I think that it was, but that base was
140 squandered and the movement now seems to have died out.
142 After their initial Call to Action, Fandom Against Racism announced
143 [their second one,][EndOTWRacism-CtA2] a voting drive to elect a new
144 O·T·W board. It’s important to understand that voting in an O·T·W
145 election is restricted to those who have recently donated, which means
146 this was *in fact* [a massive fundraiser][EndOTWRacism-Donate] for the
147 very organization which they were supposedly critiquing. To add to
148 this, there were (and still are) very serious doubts among many fans
149 regarding the capacity of the Board to actually enact change (given the
150 relative power of committee chairs), and it’s also worth noting that
151 voting (a silent, confidential activity) shares none of the qualities
152 which made the first action successful. To top it off, this second
153 action was announced *prior to the announcement of candidates*, meaning
154 it was unclear initially whether there were even any good antiracist
155 candidates to vote *for*, or, indeed, whether there were enough
156 candidates that voting would even matter. As it turned out, by the time
157 elections rolled around, there were only as many candidates as there
158 were open seats and voting was largely ineffectual.
160 Poor choice of action aside, End O·T·W Racism spent much of this time
161 cosplaying the very image of a large, ineffectual liberal nonprofit,
162 introducing a mascot and promoting a [weekend of
163 love][EndOTWRacism-WoL] in place of further radical disruption. They
164 made analyses of each Board candidate (as tho᷎ they were experts) which
165 generally fell short, rating them more‐or‐less on how many buzzwords
166 they employed in their answers. They refused to comment on the long
167 list of institutional failings of O·T·W as an organization, with the
168 excuse that they were “focused on the topic of racism” (my paraphrase),
169 as tho᷎ being an inept organization with no capacity for structural
170 change wasn’t a primary means by which racism in the O·T·W has been
173 There was a board meeting during this time, which they encouraged
174 people to attend, and people did and it was a glorious mess (the extent
175 of Fandom Against Racism’s influence in this is unclear). This was not
176 followed up upon. After the (uncontested) elections wrapped up, [the
177 Fandom Against Racism team seemed largely satisfied with the
178 result][EndOTWRacism-Review] and went on haitus. Unsurprisingly,
179 whatever base they had initially managed to gather is now nowhere to be
182 ## My Position as a Fan Author
184 In my previous post, I pledged to title all of my fics “End Racism in
185 the OTW” until such a time as the demands of the movement were
186 satisfied. Given the above, I am now rescinding the pledge, with a
187 note‐to‐self that in the future I should probably add a stipulation
188 that if everyone involved throws up their hands and says “good enough”,
189 it’s fair to walk away.
191 The thing I’m walking away from, tho᷎, isn’t antiracism but
192 <cite>A·O·3</cite> and the fannish culture surrounding it. I’m not
193 interested in fixing a racist organization or a broken platform,
194 personally. I don’t think it is too big to fail, and honestly, I think
195 its failure is inevitable. In the past year, more and more people have
196 locked or removed their works out of concerns regarding harassment, A·I
197 harvesting, or simply not wanting to share space with bigoted content
198 anymore. This trend doesn’t seem likely to abate and consequently I
199 think fandom does need to start treating the platform as fundamentally
200 unreliable! Being a reliable, persistent archive is of course
201 <cite>A·O·3</cite>’s big selling point so who can say where things will
204 In terms of personal practice, *I’m* going to stop treating
205 <cite>A·O·3</cite> as persistent or reliable by simply not continuing
206 to do the work of keeping it that way. I’m going to delete more, post
207 less, and communicate less often regarding changes. This of course
208 raises the question of where the persistent home of my fanworks *will*
209 be, but in the meantime feel free to shoot me an email if you’re
210 looking for some·thing I wrote and it suddenly isn’t there anymore.
212 For the things I do post to <cite>A·O·3</cite>, I still stand by these
213 points and aim to be as blunt about them as possible :—
215 - O·T·W meets any reasonable definition of a racist organization and
216 <cite>A·O·3</cite> meets any reasonable definition of a website which
217 promulgates bigotry and hate.
219 - It is irresponsible and unethical to monetarily support such
220 organizations and websites, especially in the form of donations or
223 - O·T·W, the organization, must earn your vote by being a welrun,
224 democratic organization with good processes before any candidate
225 running for any organizational position possibly can earn your vote
226 by having good positions. (And O·T·W miserably fails that objective.)
228 I think there is value in continuing to stress these things to users,
229 but as the size and strengths of movements wane, I think the tactics
230 need to become more personal. Personal connections, communications, and
231 investment are how durable activist networks are formed.
233 When thinking about these problems, I’m also increasingly realizing
234 the troubling implications of the fact that fandom “isn’t what it used
235 to be”, by which I mean a space to be your authentic, weird, kinky self
236 and nerd out about your passions, in a place where other people are
237 also being their authentic, weird, kinky selves and doing likewise.
238 Instead I think fandom has taken on different, more mainstream social
239 functions, which is to say that I think that it has shifted from being
240 counterculture to being culture. This is a problem because while fandom
241 in its first formulation was some·thing to care about and fight for,
242 fandom in its more recent incarnation is much harder to organize
243 around. I think we need a concerted effort to bring about fandom in
244 the former sense, and I think the starting place is not in “media”
245 fandoms but in lifestyle ones (furry fandom, fashion/esthetic fandoms,
246 musical genre fandoms, and so forth). In these latter examples, the
247 word “fandom” might as well be replaced with “scene”.
249 I want to be a part of scenes which give a shit about the silly things
250 I care about (romantic c·dramas, anime, Pokémon, Nintendo). I want that
251 much more than I care about belonging to any “fandom” or “fanspace” in
252 the vernacular sense. And I think that having those scenes can form the
253 bedrock of culture, not only fan culture but also culture in a general
254 sense, a culture which produces interesting content for an audience of
255 like‐minded people, some of which may reference some person or
256 corporation’s Intellectual Property but a lot of which probably won’t.
257 Plenty of “original content” is produced by S·F·F fandom, furry fandom,
258 ⁊·c, and the willingness of people to create unique works within those
259 spaces as opposed to without I think is a testament to the fact that
260 they have some·thing which other spaces lack.
262 I’ve made my own small efforts at building these sorts of scenes, with
263 the Mastodon instance I moderate and the Discord server I run and the
264 [wiki I set up for my friends][Wiki]. I don’t think spaces like these
265 are enough (I’d love a forum), but I think they are a start. We need
266 bigger ones, tho᷎, ones that are big enough to host events or
267 challenges or other sorts of community happenings, and big enough to
268 where they can adequately serve the function of introducing one to new
269 people and ideas. I’m very interested in the inflection point from
270 “friends and family” to “community” and think that transition is the
271 only kind of scale which matters.
273 I’ve been pretty busy with life, work, and [inane highly‐technical
274 Ecmascript programming][Piscēs], but I hope to get back to this sort of
277 [AO3]: <https://archiveofourown.org/> "Archive of Our Own"
278 [EndOTWRacism-CtA2]: <https://end-otw-racism.tumblr.com/post/720333769684484096/vote-to-end-otw-racism> "#VOTE TO END OTW RACISM"
279 [EndOTWRacism-Donate]: <https://end-otw-racism.tumblr.com/post/721145850999586816/alt-text-image-of-a-cheerful-brown-owl-in-a> "DONATE To the OTW & Become and OTW Voter"
280 [EndOTWRacism-Response]: <https://end-otw-racism.tumblr.com/post/719947217883037696/the-otw-has-responded-to-our-campaign-and-provided> "The OTW has responded to our campaign…"
281 [EndOTWRacism-Review]: <https://end-otw-racism.tumblr.com/post/726465603305684992/2023-otw-board-election-review> "2023 OTW BOARD ELECTION REVIEW"
282 [EndOTWRacism-WoL]: <https://end-otw-racism.tumblr.com/post/723473630905892864/weekend-of-love> "♥ WEEKEND OF LOVE ♥"
283 [OTW]: <https://www.transformativeworks.org/> "Organization for Transformative Works"
284 [OTW-Update]: <https://www.transformativeworks.org/an-update-from-the-otw-board-and-chairs/> "An Update from the OTW Board and Chairs"
285 [Piscēs]: <https://git.ladys.computer/Pisces> "Piscēs"
286 [Wiki]: <https://wiki.ladys.computer/> "Lady’s Wiki"
287 [end_otw_racism]: <https://blog.ladys.computer/2023-05-14/end_otw_racism/> "End Racism in the O·T·W"
289 <dc11:rights rdf:parseType="Markdown"><![CDATA[
291 <a href="https://www.ladys.computer/about/#lady">Lady</a>
292 <small>[Fangirl Extraordinaire]</small>.
293 Some rights reserved.
295 This blogpost is licensed under a <a rel="license"
296 href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"><cite>Creative
297 Commons Attribution 4.0 International License</cite></a>.