

- Will the tagger see a reply on another wall archive#
- Will the tagger see a reply on another wall series#
Yet the fic has become impossible for many AO3 users to ignore thanks to a unique quirk: Its author has linked it to more than 1,700 site tags (and counting).Ī quick note about AO3’s tagging system: It is designed to let users tag creatively and freely.

It’s a very long fanfic, over a million words, and contains more than 200 chapters of porn featuring The Untamed’s large cast in endless permutations and sexual scenarios.Īll that, by itself, isn’t enough to make STWW remarkable - not on a website as wild and unpredictable as AO3.

Will the tagger see a reply on another wall series#
STWW belongs to the fandom for the wildly popular Chinese TV series The Untamed, and the “Wangxian” in the title refers to the ship name for the show’s beloved main romantic pairing. That in itself is unusual, because most AO3 users stick to their own fandoms and don’t pay much attention to what’s happening in others. Since it first appeared in October 2019, “Sexy Times With Wangxian,” or STWW, has become notorious across AO3. But it’s also a story about ethics, kindness, and connection within a community plagued by toxic abuse, and how a single disruptive user can undermine everything that community purports to stand for - even if the upheaval ultimately leads to something better. What’s wrong with the fic in question, and why is it such a powder keg? As I reported on the situation in search of answers, my perspective shifted: I thought this was a story about website moderation, taxonomy, what performance art looks like on the internet, and an online community’s complicated growing pains.Īnd it is all of those things. On February 21, the moderators reportedly suspended it for a month on a technicality - but this hasn’t fixed the problem, and its author has vowed to return with a vengeance. Over the past few months, this fic has enraged users, become a target of ridicule and harassment, and been the subject of so many abuse reports filed by members of the AO3 community that moderators reportedly stopped accepting complaints about it. But lately, the site’s approach to moderation, curation, and what even counts as fanfiction have all been thrown into upheaval and caused widespread consternation - all thanks to a single fic. Until now, that permissive approach has worked well for most AO3 users. Longstanding calls for AO3 to more closely moderate fics with toxic elements, for example, have generally been met with a polite but firm “no” from AO3 according to that mantra - a variant of the classic free-speech idea that permissiveness and openness, not restriction and censure, will bring the most benefit to the community. Because the history of fandom includes a long lineage of fanfic authors fighting for the right to write and publish fanfiction without facing deletion and/or legal threats, AO3’s rules are incredibly permissive: “Our goal is maximum inclusiveness,” explains the platform’s Terms of Service. It’s run by a fandom nonprofit, coded and moderated by volunteers, and reliant on its huge community of users to help it carry out its mission of preserving and protecting fans’ work.
Will the tagger see a reply on another wall archive#
The Archive of Our Own - the beloved, Hugo-winning fanfiction platform shorthanded affectionately as AO3 - was famously created by fans, for fans.
