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#I hate posting to tumblr via the iOS app though
kittyaugust · 3 years
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Blank Slate (4358 words) by @kittyaugust
Chapters: 2/8
Fandom: Marvel 616, Marvel (Comics), Spider-Man/Deadpool - Joe Kelly (Comics)
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Peter Parker/Wade Wilson
Characters: Peter Parker, Wade Wilson
Additional Tags: Memory Loss, Canon-Typical Violence, Sex Pollen, Identity Porn, Identity Issues, Background Case, Deleted Scenes, Missing Scene, Weirdworld, X-Men Cameos, Fantastic Four Cameos, Marvel Cameos, Other Additional Tags to Be Added, No beta we die like Wolverine, Light Angst
Summary:
"Mind wipe," the teenager clarifies, speaking slowly so Peter understands her but still focused on her phone. "Memories, bye-bye. It’s a whole thing.” She shrugs again, still not bothering to look up. “So, he might not remember if you had like a date or booty-call or something.
Peter yelps. "He told you about that? That's inappropriate, even for Deadpool."
That admission gets her attention for a moment. Unfortunately.
"No. But you just did. Ew." She looks Peter up and down in a way that makes him even more uncomfortable, especially from a teenager. She shrugs, again, and looks back at her phone. "Anyway, mind wipe. Remember? Like how he doesn't?"
<hr/>
A comics canon follow-up to the events of Spider-man/Deadpool, set in a 616-adjacent timeline. Mostly drafted last year so will probably diverge to ignore anything that has been published since early 2020 unless I really like it.
Featuring: a sex pollen case, missing memories, flashbacks and what really happened in Weirdworld, and much more!
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teaandsmut · 2 years
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Re. ^
Written adult content is within Tumblr's content guidelines so my blog isn't flagged as explicit these days, but some of my posts probably fall under the iOS app definition of "sensitive", which uses different criteria. From the Apple App Store Guidelines:
1.1 Objectionable Content Apps should not include content that is offensive, insensitive, upsetting, intended to disgust, in exceptionally poor taste, or just plain creepy. Examples of such content include: . . . 1.1.4 Overtly sexual or pornographic material, defined by Webster’s Dictionary as “explicit descriptions or displays of sexual organs or activities intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” . . .
Lol, so judgemental. If it's meant to turn you on then it's offensive/creepy.
As far as I can tell, "sensitive content" for the purposes of the iOS tumblr app is mainly going to be identified via "certain words and phrases", the list of which is "not public at this time". (I dare say you can guess a few reasons why not.) If you're using the iOS app, posts with those words and phrases will not be shown on your dashboard, search results, or tag results and blogs that "may contain or create sensitive content" will be excluded from search and tag results.
So that's unfortunate. Only applies to the iOS app, not the Android one or the desktop site.
Not sure how twitter gets away with it, but a quick search over there suggests it's difficult to opt in to seeing sensitive content (as defined on twitter) on the iOS app and has been for several months, so maybe they've been doing essentially the same thing for a while and just never announced it.
I despise twitter though and I always expect it to announce it's banning nsfw content one day. I sometimes think about not posting art there anymore and only using pillowfort or similar for nsfw art. When I finally have the guts/skill to regularly draw characters fucking, maybe I'll try to lure some more people over there. I've posted some invite links below the cut in case anyone would like one :)
Please know that on the near horizon there will be meaningful developments that will overhaul how you choose to access sensitive content safely on Tumblr – whether visiting us on mobile, mobile web or through our website.
^ From tumblr in their info about the iOS app changes but relevant to the site in general. That almost sounds like a cause for cautious optimism... And it's similar to something they said to me a few months ago in response to some feedback I sent them. They do seem to be fairly receptive to feedback sent via their support channel or their Work in Progress blog and open to hearing more if you're friendly, so get in there if you have any useful opinions about all that. (I mean, you can also just go to complain, but they already know people still hate the nsfw ban.)
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=sYL3RbEHNZ4LR1uqsICZpw
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=t8QVfeqy_uNACnG4bpJCGg
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=k-PNjOWhuQChgC4oKY2qYQ
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=x_KGF-hpXGe5nV_AfDKovA
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=_YIyglVBbWyHqqkGcSw3Jw
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=Vh7SIahWNtNkCR52MxRCGw
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=hI_CEf1c36IILBTvK6R0Fw
https://pillowfort.social/users/sign_up?invite=xJc_3hS2L_3LbHUoh46mDw
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tylerbiard · 7 years
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Some Social
So, in yet another bout of procrastination from my studies, I found a link via Facebook to an insightful article on Gen Z (or iGen), and sort of just immersed into it.  The article goes to great lengths to describe the incoming generation’s mindset and how it’s penchant for mobile phones and social media is destroying their mental health, which made me ponder my own life.
I know I’ve talked about Gen Z before, and my dealings with them, comparing them to my generation, the infamous Millennials.  I probably came off as smug.  To be sure, a lot of the things associated with Gen Z, even things that came to the fore with my generation, aren’t things I’m really enamoured by, but they aren’t the fault of Gen Z any more than they are the fault of Millennials.  I’ve actually been hearing more about Gen Z in media lately, almost as if the world has actually realized that we can’t have people born in the mid-’80s apart of the same generation as those born in the early 2010s.  I’m really just trying to not feel usurped by this upstart, now-trending generation. Gen Z encompasses people born from the late ‘90s to early 2010s, a generation that doesn’t remember 9/11 or a world without smartphones. Spooky, eh?
For me, what the article describes of the Millennial upbringing is accurate -- I did grow up with computers and the internet, but I didn’t have it around me at all hours. I remember in junior high, rushing out after school, to catch the earliest bus home so that I could chat on MSN with a friend living in Spain before he had to go to bed.  But that whole day at school?  Aside from class-designated computer time in a dedicated lab, which didn’t even occur daily, it was entirely offline.  We weren’t even able to bring our own laptops to school until 11th grade, and even then, most didn’t.  My first cellphones could only arduously send SMS via T9 technology, which limited its usefulness.  And accessing the internet with a circa 2002 Nokia?  What a joke!  This was an epoch before the endless onslaught of apps, a world without filters and Bitmoji.  Essentially, even though we largely got our first cell phones by 13 or 14, they were quite limited in capability.  What’s more is that they were strictly banned from usage during class time in junior and senior high, something that was lifted a few years after I graduated high school.  I realize this last bit is more geographically-dependent, as I’m sure many school boards throughout the world were more lax on cell phone usage circa 2008, and even with the outright ban, many still snuck it into class.
Furthermore, I didn’t really grow up with social media.  I know I’m a bit of an outlier for a Millennial, but I had Tumblr before I had Facebook, and the only social network I was apart of in high school was Flickr.  Still, I watched as peers, using Nexopia and Facebook, and migrating to early smartphones, fall prey to the now all-too-common side effects of social media and chatting.  Hell, I still dealt with it through MSN, Flickr, and such.  Our app-centric, mobile world is merely an outgrowth of this paradigm. 
Now, though, things are different.  I have an iPhone, I have multiple social media accounts, and use multiple chat services.  An onlooker could easily peg me as one fully in embrace of the 2017 “always on” lifestyle.  This is where the article really started to intrigue me.  A lot of what the article was describing vis-a-vis the Gen Z kids seemed applicable to this late Millennial.  Perhaps partly due to my not being that far removed from that generation’s eldest cohorts. Although I did grow up without iPhones and iPads and the ability to constantly be “on,” it’s now 2017, and that difference has eroded. I was surprised at the kinship I was feeling towards Gen Z and their woes mentioned in the article.  I may remember a time before all this stuff, but that doesn’t change the fact that I’m living it now.
I recognize I spend too much time on social media, on chat apps, and to a lesser extent, my computer.  It does make me feel much lonelier than when I spend time in the physical world with friends and family, even if too much of that is exhaustive.  It does produce an environment where it’s inevitable to compare yourself to others, and resent others for how much fun they’re projecting on Instagram and Facebook, even if it’s really just a veneer.  Things like read receipts, last active information, and so forth just further aid at digging in the dagger.  It also produces an environment where you’re more likely to just stay in and send Snaps to friends than go out with them, which goes against human nature, as a social species.  It’s obviously extremely toxic and yet most can’t stop the vicious cycle. 
I’ve had my issues with Facebook in particular, and regularly contemplate deleting it, especially now that you can have a Messenger account independent of Facebook.  I’ve deactivated, I’ve deleted the app; now, I’m merely abstaining from posting to it and have moved the mobile app to a more hidden locale on my phone.  But honestly, it’s a problem I have with pretty much all social media, at least social media that is more personal.  I’m more ok with Twitter; it’s mostly just news and memes, not a detailed look into personal lives.  Tumblr is similar, due to its more anonymous nature, although when it was a more active platform, I had the same issues with it.
I recognize that I’m happier when I interact more with the physical world and I really don’t like spending so much time online.  But for me, there’s two major impediments to either significantly curtailing usage, or doing a total blackout, and I recognize it as a detriment to my health.
The first is school, which is obviously not actually related to social media, and so it isn’t an obvious reason for why I can’t stop spending time online.  But, because of how post-secondary is set up now, a lot of stuff occurs online, be it through e-mail, or eClass, where you gain access to readings and slides, not to mention being a place to take notes.  I’ve stopped typing notes, except in special cases, though I still end up using a computer to access other essential stuff for my courses.  And in doing so, it is all too tempting to look one tab over to Twitter, or see a new notification on Facebook, and then you go down that rabbit hole, and bam, you’ve lost 30 minutes of productivity.  I’m beginning to intentionally keep my laptop browser’s tabs all school related now, though I sometimes still get tempted to open new tabs, or tabs sometimes remain open from downtime.  The other, ancillary thing to being on campus is that I’m out, which means I have my phone on me, which means it’s always just there.  I may turn my phone to ‘do not disturb’, but the addictive qualities of smartphones just means I will still manually check for new notifications every now and again.  To entirely remove the distraction of my iPhone, personally, it can’t be present, which is why when I do homework at home, I make sure my phone is nowhere nearby.  Perhaps I should start leaving the phone at home.
The other impediment is more obvious to those who are aware of my background as a photographer.  Since DeviantArt and Blogger, through Flickr, Facebook, et al, and onto Instagram, social networks have been utterly vital for 21st century creatives to push their work to the wider public.  So, although it can be fun to just use social for everyday stuff, I use it as a more serious avenue, and feel it as a necessary evil nowadays.  How am I supposed to share and connect with other artists in 2017 if I do a social media blackout?  A blackout may solve the previous impediment, but not this one.  Having an Instagram is now so essential to share content as a creative.
I could do away with the smartphone, and only use social media and the internet when I’m connected to a computer proper, and essentially live a 2005 existence with the 2017 internet.  I’ve contemplated swapping the iPhone for a flip phone, and I swear it’s only partly over 2000s nostalgia.  I honestly am not hating that idea.  A problem arises from something I’ve belaboured before -- my disdain for the mobile-centric nature of social networks nowadays.    Sure, you can browse and explore Instagram from Chrome on your PC or iMac, but you can’t DM, you can’t view Stories, and most importantly, you can’t upload without tricking your browser into thinking it’s an iPad. Of all the social I use for more serious use today, Instagram is by far the most pivotal, due to its visual nature and strong engagement.  I’ve connected with a lot of amazing photographers, artists, and friends through it.  Even if mobile phones are to blame for teen suicide now being higher than teen homicide, it doesn’t change the fact that they’re at the zeitgeist for connecting in 2017, and app developers know that kids are using their phones far more than their computers and correspondingly create experiences that are mobile-centric.  It helps coding for a mobile interface is easier than a traditional desktop interface, too. 
As things continue, it seems like crucial connections will be increasingly on platforms that couldn’t give a rats ass about desktop interfaces, and so I realize a mobile device is still necessary, unfortunately.  Perhaps I could swap my iPhone for an iPod Touch, or migrate my SIM card to a “dumbphone” and keep the iPhone as a Wi-Fi only device (basically turning it into an iPod Touch).  I could also just get an iPad.  I actually sort of like that idea, but many mobile apps, like Instagram and Snapchat, don’t have a proper version for this mobile device.  I could just get an Android tablet, which doesn’t have the same differentiation that iOS has between phones and tablets, but I’ve had issues with Android, such that, at the risk of sounding like a Cupertino cliche, I’d rather have an iPad if I got a tablet.
Regardless, something needs to change. The current reality is too connected for my well-being.  My productivity is way down, too.  I’m too distracted.  What I find most ironic is that I was planning on watching The Social Network tonight, and instead, got engrossed in a random article, which inspired me to write an essay for the first time in eons with Starboy as my backdrop.  The result was still the same, however -- I again thwarted plans to further push through studies. 
What a world we live in.
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