Jo
Big fan of Visual Novels and Achievement Hunter dorks
( ´∀`)☆
I enjoy reading other's RP sessions, but I don't RP myself.
Follow backs are welcome, but unnecessary.
Also, don't be scared to hit me up with any messages or submissions I'm always up for a good chat. ´ ▽ ` )ノ
Chinese fandoms are currently experiencing an actual Purge right now. Every fandom. Accounts are getting banned, all shipping wars has been put on hold. Everyone’s hiding their porn and moving them to ao3.
There’s reward money involved. A recent update to censorship law raised the maximum reward for reporting illicit online materials to 50k yuan (7000 USD), so some people are reporting porn like crazy right now, and apparently, BL fandoms have been especially targeted, where some even more tame things got maliciously misreported.
Anyway, it’s a mess. Content creators are just disappearing off the face of the internet left and right. Expect an influx of Chinese porn fics on AO3.
Well… if there’s one thing out of this mess… nothing bands warring ships/fandoms like censorship…
Seems like the cash reward will be
600,000 yuan ($86,000) from December 1st…!
Hey guys, if some awesome person in China translated your fic into Chinese or created fan art, you really should spread the word! This could affect someone you know!
This is also a call out to all you fuckwits that repost art on Tumblr, twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram. Your negligence hurts people.
^^^
This is literally shitty and it has become worse and worse
Hopefully it will stop before long but just take care of how yiou take your stances on ao3 or what’s happening with Tumblr
A chinese homoerotic novel writer is sentenced to 10 years to prison because of “illegal publication”* and “spread of obscene materials”. After that, China government set up bounty for reporting “illegal publication”. Everyone on weibo, lofter etc. is deleting thier posts.
China is using this act as a way of controling the freedom of speech, it’s not just a matter of “no homo”. They just use the fandom content creators as an easy target and a way to scare people off from writing and publishing things the government doesn’t like.
China is living the Nineteen Eighty-Four novel. Please don’t post chinese fan works, especially not with their original chinese artists/writers right now. You could literally ruin their life.
* in China every book has to be approved by the government before
publication. Anything against the government or with “the wrong idea” will be banned. Their government didn’t pay too much attention to fan books before, but in recent years, they are tightening their grip on their people. Fandom and their activities as a whole has become a target because 1) fandom and their creative community make self-publishing a thing and China doesn’t like that the people know it’s easy to print stuffs (to spread unwanted information/ideas etc. 2) fandom and their creative community is the easiest and obvious target because of the general anti LBGT+ envirnment, general public will support the gornment for “cleansing the society from obscenity” withouth thingking about 1)
please listen to this poor man losing his shit as he reads an article blaming millenials for killing the mayonnaise industry that was written by a babyboomer upset people don’t want to eat her bland salads anymore
I had some spare time and wanted to write a Seventh Heaven short for Kanade.
“The window you could see, was now wide open, the curtains dancing wildly in the wind, as if wanting to give you a final performance. As the curtains fluttered away, you couldn’t help but notice a small silhouette perched on your windowsill behind them. It seemed to be a bird, a crow looking by the size of it.
You’d always been fascinated by crows and ravens. The birds were very intelligent, yet also playful. They were shrouded in a haze of mystery, often being called bad omens, yet they were always elegant and never changed pace.
As the curtains parted you finally caught a good glimpse of the bird taking shelter in your room. It lazily plucked at it’s feathers, but the red ribbon tied around its neck was unmistakable. You’d only seen one crow pictured like that in all your years, and you couldn’t help but be wishful that its owner was perhaps the master from its tale.”