Tumblr. Crystal AbidinЧитать онлайн книгу.
with these interests, we will also use the folkloric “queer.” 3 There were two “wars” between 4chan and tumblr: one in 2010 that involved mutual spamming (first of shock images by 4chan users to tumblr then of kitten images by tumblr users to 4chan) and another in 2014 where a tumblr blog posted a plan to shut down 4chan (some think this was created by 4chan users as a ruse), to which 4chan users responded by hijacking social justice tags on tumblr with gore content, which tumblr users responded to by burying the content into an avalanche of cute things (Knowyourmeme 2020b). 4 Sociality is a term used to describe how people are social in the world and how they experience being in collectives. 5 A social graph is the visualized network of interconnections of relationships, basically a representation of how users are connected to each other, their product pages and interests. An ego network is a slightly different perspective on the same thing – it focuses on individuals (egos) and their ties with other individuals.
1 tumblr structure
The way tumblr is set up – the likes and reblogs – provides the framework for constant feedback and support. It’s easy to feel like I’ve been heard, appreciated, understood. We are connected with very intimate parts of ourselves and it makes it easier to see people’s humanity and to be compassionate toward them. I know how hard it is to be so open and I appreciate that others do the same. I find myself responding in ways through tumblr that just wouldn’t be socially acceptable in real life, and others do the same
(Katie: personal interview by authors, 2012)
The way tumblr is set up feels to me like it replicates a couple of significant modes of offline affiliation – the ability to “like” and “reblog” as well as comment feel to me like an analogue of some of the mirroring that happens between people who are working at attuning with one another in person. So, I would say it’s just been a matter of feeling out shared likes and dislikes, and developing a sense that we share enough to have that kind of identification with one another. Or shared community identity, at any rate.
(Olly: personal interview by authors, 2012)
This chapter is about tumblr as a built space. We explore it as a platform that is wrought from computer code and design choices, owned and managed by corporate entities that have particular goals and sets specific rules for users. To do this, we analyze tumblr’s features and functions first, and then discuss tumblr’s platform governance by describing its most pertinent rules and how they are enforced. This chapter is written to be read alongside Chapter 2, where we continue to analyze how people imagine what they can do on tumblr and how they actually use it.
Features and functions
Features and functions of social media platforms can be thought of as “arrangements that mandate or enable an activity,” (Light et al. 2018: 891). Broadly, both features and functions have been defined as indications of what people can do with a thing. A feature is literally “what users can do with a technology” (Markus and Silver 2008: 612), while what an artifact is for – and it is arguably always for something – is the artifact’s function (Franssen et al. 2018). Social media platforms’ features (e.g., a “heart” button) communicate and suggest actions (e.g., clicking it) as well as an assortment of possible meanings of those actions (e.g., “if I click it, I like it” – see Bucher and Helmond 2017).
While there are many features and functions on tumblr that are similar to those on other social media platforms, there are also those that are unique to tumblr, and still others that were pioneered on tumblr before becoming pervasive across the social media ecosystem. We start with a discussion of what setting up and posting on tumblr is like. This takes us through a brief description and history of the features and functions that deprioritize the social graph and invite multimodality and personalization. We then discuss, in more detail, three clusters of features and functions that make tumblr stand out: (1) tumblr’s signature reblog, (2) the tumblr-unique format for hashtags, and (3) the unconventional features and functions for on-platform interaction.
Setting up and posting
Setting up a tumblr account is easy: users only need to provide a functioning email address and state their age and, voilà, they have a blog. Tumblr Inc.’s designers and engineers try to help new users find “what’re you into” (see Chapter 2) during the onboarding process. This directs users to curate their own blogs as interest-based spaces too. The blogs are not profiles, and whether any particular blog has a description at all depends on the chosen blog “theme”; these are available for free and for purchase in the tumblr “themes” catalogue. Further, those descriptions are completely open, filled out with any information that users deem relevant (see Oakely 2016 on self-labeling in About sections). After setting up one blog, users can set up as many “secondary” or “side” blogs as they want and toggle between their blogs from the same user interface. While only “primary” or “main” blogs (created upon account sign-up) have social features that allow following others, liking, and replying to posts, secondary blogs can be set to be private- and password-protected. A user cannot change a previously primary blog to private, or a previously secondary blog to primary (something often highlighted as a fault by users), so it is quite common for users to set up more than one primary account. Users with multiple (primary or secondary) blogs generally argue that this allows for multifaceted self-presentation, audience segregation, and identity curation.
Types of blog posts invited via specific buttons are text posts, photo posts, quote posts, link posts, chat posts, and audio or video posts (see Figure 1.1 for tumblr’s dashboard on a desktop). Visual content, in particular photos, is very popular (78.11 percent of posts in Chang et al. 2014). While most social media platforms allow sharing texts, links, and visual content, the tumblr “chat” post format is less common. Linguists Camilla Vásquez and Samantha Creel (2017) link the popularization of chat memes, especially the me-chat meme, across social media directly to this tumblr feature. Me-chat memes usually feature a pretend conversation between various facets of one’s identity, like “past me” and “present me,” or just two “me”s with incompatible goals and desires, usually to a humorous or relatable effect (see Chapter 7).
Figure 1.1: Artist’s impression of the changing interface design of tumblr’s dashboard. left: 2007; right: current browser dashboard at the time of writing in 2020. Art provided by River Juno.
While different types of posts continue to be differentiated and the “chat” post was still available via the browser-based Dashboard in 2020, the mobile interface has recently been updated to significantly alter the posting experience (Figure 1.2). The post icon looks like a pen, which feels less multimodal and more writing-centric and “bloglike.” This possibly follows Automattic’s acquisition, as the company is best known for the legendary blogging platform WordPress. Clicking on the pen icon gives further options of taking an image, uploading image or video from the camera roll, adding a link, making or choosing a GIF, choosing an audio file from Spotify or Soundcloud, and adding hashtags. However, the experience of tumblr is not just about posting but, more importantly, about consuming what other people have posted.
Figure 1.2: Artist’s impression of the tumblr interface via the app on a mobile phone. Art provided by River Juno.
Reblogs
Users who set up an account can “follow” other blogs, upon which the content posted to those blogs converges into their “dashboard” feed. Following is not necessarily reciprocal, although bloggers