![]() ![]() ![]() Content stays there, but it feels more ephemeral because you’re mostly in your feed. Tumblr is a social space, and some people do use it as an archive, but the of Tumblr do not make it a good archive. It is a place for fanfiction and commenting on fanfiction, and to some extent other kinds of fan work, like you can embed art. You can think of AO3 and Tumblr as sort of the archive side and the social side of LiveJournal, so there wasn’t a single place that people could move to, so instead you see people going to both of those places.Īrchive of Our Own is only an archive with no social interaction beyond comments. I think that those had to get popular enough, enough people moving there so that those were a place for people to move to, because when there’s nowhere for you to go, they don’t go. You can see that Tumblr and Archive of Our Own, or AO3, are both climbing around the same time. From the chart, you’ll see that it didn’t start to precipitously dip until a couple of years after that. What you’ll notice from the chart is that between 20, things were happening with LiveJournal that made people not like it anymore. This past week, when everyone’s been talking about the Facebook scandal, it’s actually solidified an idea for me that I was thinking about as I was interpreting these results, and it’s that it wasn’t enough for LiveJournal to do some things that people described as deal-breakers-there were some design things, there were some policy things, basically everyone really soured on LiveJournal around the same time-but it wasn’t enough for that to happen there also had to be a viable alternative. I was expecting the LiveJournal drop-off to be sooner. Most of it followed about what I was expecting to see based on the interviews I’d done and based on my experiences of fandom. Did the survey results turn out about how you expected them to? ![]()
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