While most of the world carries on unaware, the last couple week has seen trauma, in-fighting and mass exodus in the world of fanfiction authors and readers. The catalyst for the current outrage being voiced by this community of creators and consumers? Fanfiction.net enforcing a ratings policy that has been in place since 2002 by deleting thousands of stories.
For those who don't know, fanfiction stories are original works written using already existing characters and situations (think Harry and Hermione get jobs at Disneyland and fall in love. I just made that one up, anyone's welcome to use it). FF.net, as it is usually called, has been the go-to archive for fanfiction for the last few years, housing millions of stories inspired by everything from Buffy to the Bible. Just under two weeks ago users started to notice stories disappearing and some writers reported having their stories deleted and their accounts suspended. On 4 June FF.net published this statement on their front page:
"Please note we would like to clarify the content policy we have in place since 2002. FanFiction.Net follows the Fiction Rating system ranging from Fiction K to Fiction M. Although Fiction Ratings goes up to Fiction MA, FanFiction.Net since 2002 has not allowed Fiction MA rated content which can contain adult/explicit content on the site. FanFiction.Net only accepts content in the Fiction K through Fiction M range. Fiction M can contain adult language, themes and suggestions. Detailed descriptions of physical interaction of sexual or violent nature is considered Fiction MA and has not been allowed on the site since 2002."
The above statement references the fact that in 2002 FF.net removed its NC17 rating, hoping to discourage explicit material from the site. However, it had little effect and sexually explicit and violent fanfiction continued to be posted.
The enforcing of this rule is not what has most FF.net users up in arms, many online reactions agree that much of the content on the site was unsuitable for the M rating and was in violation of terms of service. What does have these people riled is the method by which this sudden enforcement took place. Many are calling the mass deletion a 'purge'. To give a sense of the numbers one user (http://ffdotnetrants.livejournal.com/134901.html) compiled data which showed that as of 4 June the top 20 most popular categories had lost 0.39% of their stories, or about 8,000 works. This number continues to grow. Stories were deleted without warning and with no opportunity for recourse; for many their work was lost for good. Communities began to rally around, anonymous people sharing copies of works they had secretly saved on their hard drives. Conspiracy theories abounded about them only targeting slash fiction (stories involving male homosexual relationships) or that a group of vindictive critics, going by the name Critics United, were to blame. None of this appears to be wholly true. Rather it seems that FF.net has decided that now is the time to have a clear out.
What is of real interest here is not what rules have or have not been broken, but rather a question about the nature of fanfiction. Its very existence is one on the edge of rule breaking, a barely legitimate form of copyright infringement. The characters and situations used by these authors are, for the most part, not owned by them. As authors they have very little right to their work. The real anger seems to come from the enforcement of ostensibly black and white rules in a world governed by grey areas.
These unpaid authors are at the mercy of the sites willing to house their work and as such must adhere to the lines drawn in the very murky sand of copyright law. Some of these authors spent months writing and editing novel length works to then have them deleted entirely, as if they were something with no artistic or cultural worth; artefacts that either follow the rules or don't.
In the wake of 50 Shades of Grey by E.L. James, a current bestselling novel that started life as Twilight fanfiction, questions about the legitimacy of the format are being asked. If the only difference between a piece of fanfiction and a bestselling novel is the changing of character names and places, then is the mass deletion of thousands of stories without warning something that should be bigger news than a handful of Tumblr posts?
There is a cultural hierarchy of taste at play here, one which places fanfiction as lowbrow geek fodder undeserving of any real attention. Were a library filled with thousands of works of 'legitimate' fiction destroyed, it would make front-page news.
I don't know if the much publicised provenance of 50 Shades of Grey will change anything or if the 'purge' will receive any outside interest, but I think it's time that people other than fans and fan scholars were made aware of one of the most prolific literary sources in recent years. And I can make you one promise, if you can think of it, someone has written fanfiction about it.
NOTE: The figures regarding the number of works lost in this blog post have been amended. The initial research suggested that 3.09% of their stories, or around 62,000 works had been deleted, but the figures have now been revised to a loss of 0.39%, or about 8000 works. The blog has been changed to reflect the new more accurate figures.
Follow Hannah Ellison on Twitter: www.twitter.com/hanellison
Sam Parker: Why Erotic Makeovers for the Classics Are 50 Shades Too Far
Selina Wilken: The Victims of SOPA: Fans and the Globalised Fandom
Quora: Are Hunger Games Fans Largely Team Peeta or Is There a Sizable Team Gale Contingent?
Dr. Logan Levkoff: Deconstructing Fifty Shades of Grey
The original "purge" back in 2002 was caused by a letter from Warner Bros. lawyers, who claimed to be writing to FF.Net on behalf of J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter novels. In it, they threatened to shut down FF.Net if they didn't take down any HP fic that was over a T rating (equivalent to a PG-13 movie rating), especially ones featuring slash or yaoi* (see explanation below).
Needless to say, the owners of the site went ape and started deleting everything over an M (or R) rating and even some M rated fics, not just from the Harry Potter archive, but from the entire site.
In a magazine article published later that year, Ms. Rowling not only disavowed the letter to some extent, she listed her favorite Harry fics, but the damage had already been done. Warner Bros. had made a brilliant writer and fanfic lover and made her look intolerant of other writers.
(*Yaoi is a Japanese term for a fanfiction or a fan comic (doujinshi) that takes either two canonically straight or sexually ambiguous male characters who happen to be friends, has one rape the other, and then has the victim of said rape fall in love with their rapist. Though some fangirls claim yaoi is a realistic view of gay couples, it's not. That would be bara.)
The other thing it affects is the reader: stories which they have bookmarked as favorites are gone, and they may not be able to find them elsewhere-- especially if it is an older one and the writer has moved on to a new fandom.
As for the quality of fanfiction to be found at ff.net, well, volume speaks to a certain lack of quality control; nevertheless some really good stories can be found there anyway. It just takes longer to find it there than at a fandom specific archive.
Any "author" who doesn't have a backup copy of his own work doesn't deserve the title. The only way anything can be "lost forever" is user lack of foresight.
I've been writing online FF for 18 years. I built my own page to display it. Sure, I may submit it other places, but its existence always remains within my control. I not only have back up copies of my website, I have backup copies of the original word processor files.
At least they could give the writers notice of the takedown so they could try to print out copies of their reviews!
There are too many ways to view old caches to retrieve the text.
I wouldn't say this is a 'stupid' article, although the whole thing turned out to be a tempest in a teapot. Initially it was being reported that FFN was deleting all M-rated stories the way they did with the NC-17s back in 2002. Once the dust had settled, it turned out that the only stories being deleted were those that had MA material disguised under an M. If you can't be bothered to read the guidelines and follow them, and you can't be bothered to keep a copy of the story, well, those are the breaks.
Shipping fanfic most times was also incredibly written.It wasn't just porn.
To borrow someone else's characters and setting is to always be in debt, deeply in debt, to the true creator of the work. If that provides enough artistic expression for some people then so be it; go right on ahead, but make a backup copy. I personally couldn't be satisfied recycling someone else's universe and pretending it's my own.
That said, on any given site you are posting at the host's mercy as they are not bound by the rules of their site and you should always keep a backup if it is important to you.