tzikeh: (our town)
[personal profile] tzikeh
[livejournal.com profile] taraljc and I have decided that what the hell, we'll tilt at the windmills a bit. We're putting together a Centralized Fandom Primer website. Once it's up, we hope that people who run lists or have archives or build faqs or run cons or what-have-you will choose to point a link our way somewhere in their cyber-existence. Obviously, nobody *has* to link to it, and we're sure to get our fair share of "who are you to tell us blah blah!?" But between T and me, we have closing in on 50 years in fandom (geez), so we think we have a decent handle on where it's come from and where it's got to. BUT WE WANT EVERYONE'S HELP.

If you would be so kind, drop a comment here and let me know: What kind of things do you wish new folks had a handle on before they arrived in fandom? What do you wish someone had told you when you first got involved? If you could announce one thing to every fannish mailing list in existence, what would it be?

We don't want to preach. We don't want to direct. (Well, actually, I do want to direct, but that's a whole other thing.) All we want to do is lay it out in plain words - "Here's where fandom came from, here's how things generally are in fandom online; here's how we treat one another. You can choose to ignore this - that's your right. But it's easier to be part of a community when you live by the community's generally agreed-upon guidelines. Some of this is common sense. Some of it is common courtesy. You'd think it doesn't need to be said, but - well, fandom's a queer duck, and online life is a queer duck, and you put those two together and sometimes people do things they'd never do if they'd actually sat and thought about it for a minute."

Let me know, guys - and ask your friends.

ETA: There are some great ideas being posted here and I just wanted folks to know that we are reading them all - please don't think if I haven't responded directly that I didn't read / didn't care what you said. I just don't want to pad out the replies with "Thanks!" fifty times.
From: [identity profile] carlanesses.livejournal.com
So many people out there use the internet without understanding how it works. Kids and students especially, who probably aren't paying for their own access or sites.

I'm not so sure. See, if you aren't organized or lucky enough to have a drag-and-drop editor, you kinda have to learn to write your own html scripts. And it's confusing enough with images you download and re-upload into your own site.

To have someone else be hosting an image on your page takes deliberate will and intent. And if you don't pay for your own bandwidth what does it matter? Unspeakably rude.

A primer might help, though. Definitely something one would look for in an index of netiquette, for sure.
Page generated Feb. 23rd, 2026 10:08 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios