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Comments on: Mass deletion sparks LiveJournal revolt

Users rebel after Six Apart deletes 500 groups, including ones devoted to literature, abuse recovery and Harry Potter fan fiction.

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ORLY?
by skyermirth May 30, 2007 4:32 PM PDT
Um... interesting that a quick search on interest shows pages and pages of people listing and discussing the interests that LJ claims prompted the suspensions.

Either you did a **** poor job of cleaning house or they're lying.
Reply to this comment
YARLY.
by ataniell93 May 30, 2007 4:44 PM PDT
They only deleted journals that WFI claimed were problematic. Including two of mine that were for RPG characters.
Nice....
by butterflypersona May 30, 2007 4:43 PM PDT
Wow. So nice of them to let you guys know, instead of their users. There are so many people commenting and checking on lj_news that a database error comes up most times I try to refresh, and still no new post about this whole fiasco. Instead the lj_support team is being told not to say anything. And what's this about building a community? There already is an LJ community; this is just tearing down parts of it, because a lot of innocent journals and communities, particularly fanfic ones, are being affected. Users are frightened, locking their journals and removing all their interests. People are pulling their paid subscriptions and reconsidering getting permanent paid accounts. Six Apart acts like they have some kind of moral high ground. They don't.
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As Maintainer of WhydoesLJcensor
by subversive_submissive May 30, 2007 4:46 PM PDT
I would like to add that the members of
Livejournal are making every possible move; from
calling Jane, head of PR at her desk (yes she is
answering calls) to writing the ACLU and even
spreading it to those who may not have heard to
being away for school, etc.
This is a horrible mess and I am proud and happy
to be a part of the solution and have no
intentions of backing down. If this is where it
starts, where will it end?

~The Original Subversive Submissive
http://asexualdreamer.livejournal.com
http://community.livejournal.com/whydoesljcensor/
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Statement to Be made in 1 1/2-2 hours by Jane: Livejournal PR rep
by subversive_submissive May 30, 2007 4:48 PM PDT
I spoke with Jane, who is head of PR for
livejournal and sixapart and she has promised a
statement in the next 1 1/2 - 2 hours. For a
transcript of the conversation, please
see:http://community.livejournal.com/whydoesljcensor/8158.html?style=mine
Reply to this comment
fandom_counts
by ktoth04 May 30, 2007 4:49 PM PDT
fandom_counts was actually created today, and its now over 9000 members... just fyi.
Reply to this comment
WFI run by a homophobic right-wing extremist
by SLWatson May 30, 2007 4:51 PM PDT
Listen: WFI is not some large organization dedicated to protecting children. It all comes down to one woman named Sue, who's link is right there on the main page. In her personal blogspot is homophobia, xenophobia and she proudly calls herself one of the 'redneck mafia'. Please, CNet, SixApart... think hard about what kind of woman you're reporting on. She is not there to do anything but further a hate-filled personal agenda.
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Big mistake.
by skyermirth May 30, 2007 5:03 PM PDT
I agree. Personally, and I'm saying this from real life experience, SixApart made a big boo-boo linking themselves to this radical group. I've read her blog and it disgusts me as an American. They are affiliated with hate groups.
WFI and LJ not handing this right AT ALL.
by niffer08 May 30, 2007 11:46 PM PDT
Obviously this is personal vendetta driven and shouldn't be taken to such a degree as it has. LJ has purged it's site of many, legitimate pedophilia and other explicitly illegal journals/communities, but it's done more harm then good in the process. And by backing it's claims by showing support to a site run by an extremist, does not show any sort of integrity.

Usually cases of internet predators, such as those that could possibly (and are definitely) lurking on blogging sites such as LJ, are taken seriously and quietly. By LJ and WFI announcing what was going on, they basically shouted 'ready or not here I come' before going in. All that is going to do is tip off these people to go further underground and **** the innocent people off.

And where are the law officials in all of this? If you ask me, this isn't being handled right at all.

Something is up with WFI. Why aren't we looking into the illegitimacy of that?
View reply
Arrogance
by annthracks June 2, 2007 1:53 AM PDT
"We are the only thing that stands between evil and innocence"
How thick and arrogant can she be??
LJ SixApart - Communities Are There To Make Money (!)
by Pixieking May 30, 2007 4:58 PM PDT
Googling for news, I came across this

http://rc3.org/2005/01/entry_6699.php

"On the other hand, Danga was a casually-run company that existed to keep Livejournal running, and its founders cupboards full. SixApart is a venture-capital backed organisation that has a much more concrete appreciation of the concept of return on investment. It?s inevitable that at some point, someone will look at the statistics and realise that fewer than one in fifty Livejournal users are actually contributing to its upkeep."

Contrast with

"What would be more interesting is why they're NOT buying LiveJournal: they're not buying the site to spam you, screw you, destroy the community, or convert you en massé to their other paid services. They just want to double our efforts and have a part in all types of blogging."

http://news.livejournal.com/82926.html

So... Where *are* people going with their fandoms? Does Journalfen cost money? :/
Reply to this comment
Journalfen
by thesilentsenshi May 31, 2007 12:01 AM PDT
JF requires a paid account unless you know a paid user who will give you one. I'm not sur ethe details as I'm a paid member myself, but paid members can invite their friends. There are other hoops you can jump through, but those require serious dedication to gaining membership on the site. However the perks far outweigh some of LJs. With 500 userpics and other things like that.

In other words, if you can't shell out the cash you need to know someone.
I forgot...
by thesilentsenshi May 31, 2007 6:05 AM PDT
to mention that Journalfen is strictly for those 18 and older. So there is little fear of worrying over being censored.
A first account of the hypocrisy, plus links.
by karibe May 30, 2007 5:17 PM PDT
I have a HUGE post here: http://roaring.livejournal.com/70304.html

First there is my personal account with my run ins for LJ first claiming they could do nothing about supposed pedophiles, because there was no proof. Mine was not the only case.

Then, it is apparent that people who have been banned without warning are now getting copy-and-paste statements from LJ stating they did this because they showed interested in illegal content.

More in my post, which is, again, here: http://roaring.livejournal.com/70304.html
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fandom_counts created TODAY & growing
by oboros May 30, 2007 5:18 PM PDT
Date created: 2007-05-30 16:12:39
current membership: 9746
Reply to this comment
it's all about advertising dollars
by thealtermind May 30, 2007 5:20 PM PDT
The WfI woman Sue explains on her blog that she had been
complaining to Six Apart for some time with no results, so she
screen capped companies ads [on LJ] being displayed next to the
objectionable content, and sent those caps to the companies
with her complaints. Those companies are then purported to
have complained to Six Apart and threatened to pull their
advertising.

That being the case, it's pretty obvious what Six Apart's other
concerns beyond legality are. Advertising has bought policy,
exactly like they promised it wouldn't when they implemented it.
But hey, they promised not to implement ads, too. They don't
care about the user "revolution," because users aren't paying the
bills like advertisers are.
Reply to this comment
Six Apart's covers tail - refuses to fix mistakes
by icarus_ancalion May 30, 2007 5:25 PM PDT
Six Apart screwed up. They deleted accounts that had nothing to do with pedophiles and now they're refusing to fix their mistake.
Reply to this comment
Six Apart is full of it
by unknown unknown May 30, 2007 5:26 PM PDT
They caved to pressure from Warriors for Innocence, a vigilante group. Judging from their site and what was deleted clearly any discussion that deviates from their view on it or works of fiction dealing with it, eg. Lolita, is unacceptable and to become a target. Apparently the inclusion of sex and child in the same sentence or the use of a word that implies it was enough in this case for Live Journal. The fight against child abuse has become so emotionally charged and fanatical that to merely being accused of it is enough to have ones life ruined and be found guilty in the court public opinion whether found innocent or not. For a company being accused of harboring pedophiles and sex offenders can be very damaging or at least make them a target for some grand standing politician that wants to appear tough child abuse. Groups like Perverted Justice and Warriors for Innocence have exploited this for their own purposes. That seems to include getting perfectly legal material removed a long with the illegal.
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Fandom_counts community membership count
by bombaykitty May 30, 2007 5:29 PM PDT
The community fandom_counts was created at approximately 12:30pm EST, right now it is 8:30pm EST and the membership count has crossed the 10,000 line and growing. LJ really stepped on a landmine with this stunt.
Reply to this comment
Ten more minutes, another 700 members.
by Mijan_Fawkes May 30, 2007 5:43 PM PDT
It's now 8:40 EST, and there are 10,716... excuse me, 10,742 members. You can't hit "refresh" fast enough. This is snowballing, and I want the world to see just how powerful the fandom is. We'll have 20,000 in a few more hours, easily.

Oh, and it's 10,809 now. (And I type fast.)
fandom_counts is over 11,000 members
by ktoth04 May 30, 2007 5:51 PM PDT
fandom_counts is over 11,000 members in less than 12 hours.
Reply to this comment
13,000 and counting
by Mijan_Fawkes May 30, 2007 6:38 PM PDT
It's 9:37, and we just passed the 13,000 mark. Love it.
Reply to this comment
Six Apart on Witch Hunting
by BritMandelo May 30, 2007 7:00 PM PDT
As someone who's been molstering the efforts (organized journals on community "whydoesljcensor", posted on every community I'm a member of, etc.) I can say that they have made no effort to reinstate anyone.

I'm an author in the USA, and I've had stories published in mass market magazines with incest between twins. It's not illegal.

Pornish_pixies has been around for almost 5 years. It had almost 3,000 watchers and a limited membership. The membership was invitation only and included the best of the best in fanwork authors. Some of them do real work elsewhere. And the funny part of it is... Only about 10% of all the fiction and art on the journal was incestuous or featured characters under the age of 15. It was a massive gathering of the best artists in fiction in the fandom and it should be immediately reinstated. It didn't fall under the pedophilia groups, some of which were sort-of-rightfully deleted. But has Six Apart done a single damn thing about it?

Of course not.
Reply to this comment
Actually
by nlfrederick May 30, 2007 7:38 PM PDT
Regarding pornish_pixies, LiveJournal was very kind to the mod of the community, even allowing her access to the backup archives that LJ keeps in order for her to gather together the community's posts and the content of said posts.
LiverJournal's actions went to protect CRIMINALS
by KlondikeWolf May 30, 2007 7:26 PM PDT
I was a member of a support group for physically, emotionally and sexually abused individuals and a post I made a year ago to the group noted that at long last, after so many years of getting away with rape and abuse, one sicko finally went to jail. I didn't give graphic details of what he did, but provided his name, court case # and the jail he would be serving time in.

About a week ago, LiveJournal suddenly disabled my account claiming I had ignored a warning from them about this post I had made a year ago. I checked and re-checked and found no such previous warning sent, they simply disabled my account.

They said that I had violated the individual's privacy by giving his name and linking to a website containing even more private information. The offending website was the website of the courthouse he was tried and convicted in.

They continually refused to answer my questions as to why LiveJournal wants to protect violent felons from their own public records.

I thought this was some random thing, but reading this, it may have been part of this broader campaign to delete websites. If so, for LiveJournal to claim its trying to prevent illegal conduct is complete and utter hogwash ... in my case they were trying to help a convicted, violent felon get away from his own public record!
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An open letter to Barak Berkowitz
by nleseul May 30, 2007 8:37 PM PDT
Mr. Berkowitz,

After a couple hundred suspensions and two days of panic and confusion among the LiveJournal userbase, I am pleased to see that you have finally deigned to comment on this fracas. Admittedly, your first comments are directed to CNet rather than to your userbase, but you commented nevertheless. You had your chance to explain yourself, to apologize to the users whose journals contained no illegal content and were wrongly suspended. But you chose not to. Instead, you had this to say:

Our decision here was not based on pure legal issues. It was based on what community we want to build and what we think is appropriate within that community and what's not.


Those are your words. They are printed in bold red type on the CNet article. With those words, you have made it clear that the responsibility for this debacle lies squarely with you—not with the nutters at Warriors for Innocence, whatever their involvement, but with you. And your userbase is going to remember them for a very long time, with any luck. After the LiveJournal abuse team has spent all day telling the owners of suspended journals and communities that the decision to suspend them based strictly on items in their interest lists was a move made to protect LiveJournal from liability, you contradicted them and disclosed that the actions taken against those journals were "not based on pure legal issues." No, they were based on the loftier goals of what community we want to build and what we think is appropriate within that community and what's not.

Who is "we," Mr. Berkowitz? Do you really mean just "you"? Do you mean SixApart's board of directors? The administrators and support team of LiveJournal? Or is it really your advertisers you mean? One thing is for sure, Mr. Berkowitz—you are not speaking for me.

So, whomever you're speaking for, you say that you're doing this on the basis of what community we want to build? You've suddenly had a new epiphany about what community we want to build? You changed your mind remarkably quickly; what is appropriate within that community now seems to be a rather radical departure from what was appropriate a few months ago. And you've decided to move forward with this new vision of what community we want to build without any announcements on the news page? Without any requests for feedback from the members of said community? Without any warning whatsoever? Overnight, LiveJournal's long-standing commitment to freedom of expression is thrown out, to be replaced with what we think is approprate within that community?

Mr. Berkowitz, arrogant patriarchs since the dawn of history have been making decrees about what community we want to build. They've been dividing the world into what we think is appropriate, and what's not. They've drawn circles of firelight and declared everything beyond the circle the Other, the outcast, the enemy. They've used fear of the enemy to justify the arbitrary strictures they place upon the righteous, to keep the shadows at bay. Only in the modern world, illuminated not by the flickering torches of superstition but by the flourescent lightbulb of reason, have cultures rejected the arrogant patriarch and begun to accept the Other into the light, begun to realize that right and wrong, good and evil are based on a higher truth than simply what we think is appropriate and what's not. The culture of the Internet is the highest realization of that ideal, and LiveJournal was once a brilliant example of that culture. But you, Mr. Berkowitz—you have redrawn the circle and told your users that the shadows—all but a dozen of them, at least—are a thing to be feared. They are not what we think is appropriate.

Look—unlike most people these days, I trust capitalism. When SixApart bought LiveJournal, I trusted it—surely it would just increase the site's access to money and talent, and wouldn't force any kind of change to the core philosophy of the service. When the advertisements began to appear, I trusted it—it's okay to take in enough money to keep the site running and make a decent profit, and they'll be opt-in anyway, right? But today you have violated that trust. Whether it's the influence of your advertisers or your own misguided vision of what community we want to build, you have used your power as owner of LiveJournal to twist it into something it was never meant to be.

Will I leave LiveJournal over this, as so many of your users are now promising to do? No, I will not. Out of love for the friends I have here, and out of respect for the quality of the site—a quality imbued in it by its original creators and owners, not by any subsequent corporate parasites—I will stay. But—if your words today are representative of the direction of the site—I will never buy a paid account. I will never upgrade to a plus account. I will never click on the ads on any other user's journal. I will use it as it was intended to be used—freely, until you decide that my use of it is no longer what we think is appropriate.

But I want to know, Mr. Berkowitz—what is the community we want to build? What is appropriate within that community? Your users deserve more than inane vagaries. They deserve a detailed statement of principles, a new Terms of Service to go with your new vision for what community we want to build. Tell us, Mr. Berkowitz. Will it be a community where people can freely discuss and explore human sexuality in all its forms? Will it be a community where people can freely tell stories about their favorite characters from fandom? Will it be a community where people can express themselves fully and openly, without needing to fear that their identity might not be what we think is appropriate?

Or will this community continue down the road you have set it on today? Will it be a place where users need to self-censor their thoughts, their stories, even their interest lists—just in case they don't match what we think is appropriate? Will it be a place where users are suspended arbitrarily, without warning, without even a standard by which they can know what we think is appropriate and conduct themselves accordingly? Will it be a place where a tiny group of nutters with unpleasant connections can speak a few words to your advertisers, and suddenly what we think is appropriate shifts overnight? Will it be a place like most other places in this world, where only certain words, certain thoughts, certain people are what we think is appropriate, and everything else is cast out into the darkness and called Other?

Tell us, Mr. Berkowitz. The choice is yours. Your users—your customers—are listening.
Reply to this comment
Argh... repost with line breaks added
by nleseul May 30, 2007 8:40 PM PDT
Sorry... reposting with line breaks, to spare you the eye pain.

Mr. Berkowitz,

After a couple hundred suspensions and two days of panic and confusion among the LiveJournal userbase, I am pleased to see that you have finally deigned to comment on this fracas. Admittedly, your first comments are directed to CNet rather than to your userbase, but you commented nevertheless. You had your chance to explain yourself, to apologize to the users whose journals contained no illegal content and were wrongly suspended. But you chose not to. Instead, you had this to say:

Our decision here was not based on pure legal issues. It was based on what community we want to build and what we think is appropriate within that community and what's not.


Those are your words. They are printed in bold red type on the CNet article. With those words, you have made it clear that the responsibility for this debacle lies squarely with you—not with the nutters at Warriors for Innocence, whatever their involvement, but with you. And your userbase is going to remember them for a very long time, with any luck. After the LiveJournal abuse team has spent all day telling the owners of suspended journals and communities that the decision to suspend them based strictly on items in their interest lists was a move made to protect LiveJournal from liability, you contradicted them and disclosed that the actions taken against those journals were "not based on pure legal issues." No, they were based on the loftier goals of what community we want to build and what we think is appropriate within that community and what's not.

Who is "we," Mr. Berkowitz? Do you really mean just "you"? Do you mean SixApart's board of directors? The administrators and support team of LiveJournal? Or is it really your advertisers you mean? One thing is for sure, Mr. Berkowitz—you are not speaking for me.

So, whomever you're speaking for, you say that you're doing this on the basis of what community we want to build? You've suddenly had a new epiphany about what community we want to build? You changed your mind remarkably quickly; what is appropriate within that community now seems to be a rather radical departure from what was appropriate a few months ago. And you've decided to move forward with this new vision of what community we want to build without any announcements on the news page? Without any requests for feedback from the members of said community? Without any warning whatsoever? Overnight, LiveJournal's long-standing commitment to freedom of expression is thrown out, to be replaced with what we think is approprate within that community?

Mr. Berkowitz, arrogant patriarchs since the dawn of history have been making decrees about what community we want to build. They've been dividing the world into what we think is appropriate, and what's not. They've drawn circles of firelight and declared everything beyond the circle the Other, the outcast, the enemy. They've used fear of the enemy to justify the arbitrary strictures they place upon the righteous, to keep the shadows at bay. Only in the modern world, illuminated not by the flickering torches of superstition but by the flourescent lightbulb of reason, have cultures rejected the arrogant patriarch and begun to accept the Other into the light, begun to realize that right and wrong, good and evil are based on a higher truth than simply what we think is appropriate and what's not. The culture of the Internet is the highest realization of that ideal, and LiveJournal was once a brilliant example of that culture. But you, Mr. Berkowitz—you have redrawn the circle and told your users that the shadows—all but a dozen of them, at least—are a thing to be feared. They are not what we think is appropriate.

Look—unlike most people these days, I trust capitalism. When SixApart bought LiveJournal, I trusted it—surely it would just increase the site's access to money and talent, and wouldn't force any kind of change to the core philosophy of the service. When the advertisements began to appear, I trusted it—it's okay to take in enough money to keep the site running and make a decent profit, and they'll be opt-in anyway, right? But today you have violated that trust. Whether it's the influence of your advertisers or your own misguided vision of what community we want to build, you have used your power as owner of LiveJournal to twist it into something it was never meant to be.

Will I leave LiveJournal over this, as so many of your users are now promising to do? No, I will not. Out of love for the friends I have here, and out of respect for the quality of the site—a quality imbued in it by its original creators and owners, not by any subsequent corporate parasites—I will stay. But—if your words today are representative of the direction of the site—I will never buy a paid account. I will never upgrade to a plus account. I will never click on the ads on any other user's journal. I will use it as it was intended to be used—freely, until you decide that my use of it is no longer what we think is appropriate.

But I want to know, Mr. Berkowitz—what is the community we want to build? What is appropriate within that community? Your users deserve more than inane vagaries. They deserve a detailed statement of principles, a new Terms of Service to go with your new vision for what community we want to build. Tell us, Mr. Berkowitz. Will it be a community where people can freely discuss and explore human sexuality in all its forms? Will it be a community where people can freely tell stories about their favorite characters from fandom? Will it be a community where people can express themselves fully and openly, without needing to fear that their identity might not be what we think is appropriate?

Or will this community continue down the road you have set it on today? Will it be a place where users need to self-censor their thoughts, their stories, even their interest lists—just in case they don't match what we think is appropriate? Will it be a place where users are suspended arbitrarily, without warning, without even a standard by which they can know what we think is appropriate and conduct themselves accordingly? Will it be a place where a tiny group of nutters with unpleasant connections can speak a few words to your advertisers, and suddenly what we think is appropriate shifts overnight? Will it be a place like most other places in this world, where only certain words, certain thoughts, certain people are what we think is appropriate, and everything else is cast out into the darkness and called Other?

Tell us, Mr. Berkowitz. The choice is yours. Your users—your customers—are listening.

Outraged By Selective Deletion
by divineundone May 30, 2007 8:53 PM PDT
This issue has really sickened me; but for an altogether different reason. About a year ago, a person added me to his friend's list. Upon further inspection, I found that this person had many posts in his journal about wanting to sleep with underage girls. This frightened me because this was on my personal journal where I post about my family, which includes my 4 year old child.

Of course, I reported his journal to the LJ Abuse Team hoping they would remove him from my journal at least, if not suspend him. But their answer to me was that it's a practice of LJ to allow freedom of speech and as long as he had no pictures of himself depicting the act, I was basically S.O.L. I accepted this, ban_set him from my journal and locked my personal posts.

After hearing about the mass suspensions yesterday I went to my user page to see if he had been suspended finally, and alas, he's still there. Still perverted as ever.

Why would LJ shut down SUPPORT groups but leave this guy to share his twisted fantasies with anyone he chooses? It makes no sense.

"fetishguy5142" is an actual pedophile and child molestor. His interests list alone lists almost all of the "keywords" that LJ has been suspending. This is outrageous!

I have, again, contacted the LJ Abuse Team about this guy and if further action is not taken; I will be leaving LiveJournal.

If LJ wanted to "do the right thing" they would have shut this guy down when it was first brought to their attention; not let him continue on hurting children and preying on the innocent.
Reply to this comment
LiveJournal just killed itself.
by Maccess May 30, 2007 8:57 PM PDT
So long...

another footnote in the history of the Web.

We understand your aim, but the bot you've used to "clean out" your system, cleaned out many legitimate, and irreplaceable works.

How many people will trust you now with their blogs and postings?
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