A patterned catpet
patterned carpet?
Actually a cat.
πππππ
ππππππππππ πππ #ππ: ππππππππ
so now there's a discussion of whether Mal deserves all the hate. And I think we should unite to love the character of the saga:
β¨β¨ Gilβ¨β¨
Feel free to use, or message me for more banners
yes, I'm self-aware thank you
You asked, βwhy I think that a great wish!β The genie stares at you and sigh, looking at their hand. They say to you hauntingly, βBecause you will regret it like how I regret itβ¦.And there no coming back.β
A common rule among Genies is that you may not wish for more wishes. However, thinking you found a loophole, you instead wish that you had the Genieβs power. The genie laughs in your face and blatantly says, βNo, you donβt,β and for the first time, you notice the immense pain in their eyes.
Yes, that Neil Gaimanβs catπ
Neil gaiman?
Easy mistake to make. Actually a cat.
The one thing both of them have in common...They suck in art
they are just babies
Same, I literally waste all of my money on him
Joey Wheeler: AYY im walkin ere
Me: I would die for you.
Preachπ
this particular type of self-censoringβon a word-level rather than systemic levelβoccurs when someone uses special characters, spaces, or other substitutions to alter an original word/name/title. this is usually done in a manner that leaves the word legible.
examples:
d*sney
av@tar
m.arvel
n/ickelodeon
gr ishaverse
the most common version youβll encounter is the first one, in which one or more letters are swapped out for an *.
removes a word that would otherwise appear in search results (eg βhann!balβ does not show up in searches for βhannibalβ)
removes a word that would otherwise be caught by filters set to filter out that word (eg βp*rpleβ is not caught when filtering out βpurpleβ)
virtue-signalsβit gives your followers a hint about what type of content you oppose or do not like (eg if I see someone use βj@neβ or βj.ane/b.obβ, I assume that OP doesnβt like jane or the jane/bob ship)
subcategory of virtue signaling: humorous virtue signaling (eg, βI hate ch*eseβ)
In its most basic form, censorship is like a captchaβit exists to fool machines or search algorithms while remaining legible to humans.
But because of its usage in virtue signaling, for better or worse, censoring words now carries connotations of Serious ideological Disagreement. This is why humorous virtue signaling works: βI hate ch*eseβ adds Serious Ideological Disagreement to my simple dislike of cheese, and implies that I think cheese is somehow Problematicβ’.
to keep your anti-X content out of the X tag, so that X Stans do not have to see it (and potentially target or harass you as a result. also, itβs common fandom etiquette to keep your hate of a given thing out of that thingβs tagβmore on this later.)
to discuss hate speech without actually using hate speech and potentially attracting hate groups to your blog (eg βn@zi, t*rfβ)
when you censor a word, it doesnβt show up in searches and it also doesnβt get caught by filters. people who are triggered by that word and blacklisted it to protect themselves are now going to encounter it in your post.
stop censoring trigger words. seriously, stop. this doesnβt mean you have to type out slurs without censoring them, but do include a tag like βf-slurβ or βmisogynistic slursβ in order to help those who have blacklisted a given word. if youβre going to censor βt*rf,β Iβd better see the βtransphobiaβ warning tag on your post. and for the love of god, donβt censor tags like βrac*smβ
consider people with screenreaders, who are going to hear your special characters read aloud, and use them sparingly. βa.liceβ is gonna sound confusing, but presumably less confusing than β@l*c#.β (people with screenreaders, feel free to chime in on your preferred methods of self-censorship!)
these days, about 90% of the time I encounter a censored word, especially a word that is specific to fandoms (a title, name, or ship), it seems like OPβs purpose is virtue-signaling. itβs hard to tell who is and isnβt aware that theyβre also adhering to basic standards of community etiquette by keeping hate out of a tag, but occasionally someone does something that makes it painfully obvious how unaware they are: they tag the thing they just censored. if I type out βd*sneyβ but then tag my post βdisney,β I defeat the entire point of censoring the word in the first placeβunless my purpose begins and ends at virtue signaling.
the solution to this is to use βd*sneyβ in the body of my post and βanti-disneyβ in the tags. anti-X tags have a few purposes: to keep hate out of the X tag, to potentially help you find other fans who dislike X, and to ensure anti-X content can still be caught by filters.
in conclusion,Β
if your intent is to minimize harm, you may not be achieving that simply by swapping in an asterisk. and if your intent is not to look like an idiot, youβll want to avoid mistake #3 above.
further reading:
what is a grawlix?
voldemorting