
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
I’m not entirely sure how I would translate the title of this comment. The most natural translation I can think of for fil is something like “thread.” (Compare English “filament.”) So perhaps our charming aquatic couple here are following a thread, like that laid out by Ariadne for Theseus, to the source of some legend or other.
Or you could just look at the naked people. Whatever makes you happy.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please keep in mind that any moral rights the artist has remain intact under this license.
It’s no real secret that people who provide “adult” content on the web are treated pretty shabbily by the corporations that dominate much of the Internet. You pretty much can’t do anything adult at all on Facebook (which in my humble opinion is the Internet for people too stupid to be responsibly allowed access to a global communications network, but there it is). Once adult-friendly services like Tumblr, now in the clutches of the corporate suits from Verizon, have begun hiding adult content and stripping it out of search results. And there is now some sort of ongoing fiasco at Patreon, which while it hasn’t quite banned adult content, has changed its terms of service to be considerably more hostile to it. Adult content providers are also mistreated by search engine operators, which their material posted way down in search results.
My blogfather Bacchus at ErosBlog has decided, and announced in a post put up yesterday that we who are still out here on the open Internet to start pushing back. If we can’t be found on social networks or via search engines, we need to start promoting each other’s content. So Bacchus, following the brilliant Girl on the Net, has proposed that we have a regular feature called Share our Shit Saturdays (hashtagged with #SoSS). The proposal is simple:
I’m thinking maybe three links with a sentence or two about each, but here’s the core notion: you put this on your own website, not on a tumblr or a blogspot or facebook or any other social media. And the content you share and promote? Should likewise be content that’s on the independent web, not on anybody’s “free” social media server anywhere. Once your #SSoS post is up on any given Saturday, then, sure: promote the shit out of it on any social media that will allow the promotion. That’s a given. But this meme is all about promoting what’s left of the open web, on what’s left of the open web.
Bacchus has already put up his post, and I too will give it a shot, indeed I will. Here are this week’s shares, all artists.
That’s promotion for this week; more to come. Long live the free and open Internet!