I/O

Tumblr’s Vital Queer Community Is Disintegrating

Besides a still rampant porn bot problem, adult content on Tumblr is pretty much gone

Lux Alptraum
OneZero
Published in
6 min readJun 25, 2019

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Credit: Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto/Getty

AtAt the turn of the millennium, I was a young adult just beginning to understand my own queer identity: who I was attracted to, what I wanted from relationships, how I understood myself as a queer person. As a college student in New York City, I was surrounded by resources that promised access to this knowledge — campus queer groups, dance parties, the bar scene — but none of them quite met my needs. I was shy and nightlife-averse.

So I went to the internet. An avid LiveJournal user, I connected with other queers, gaining a deeper sense of what it might mean to be queer through their stories. (The vibe was well documented in a comic from The Nib called “LiveJournal Made Me Gay.”). LiveJournal ultimately connected me to the now-defunct queer message board Strap-On.org, where users gathered to gossip, chat, and engage in the kinds of discussions about identity that wouldn’t enter the mainstream discourse for another decade or so.

As the years went by and the internet shifted and changed, sites like LiveJournal and Strap-On.org fell out of favor, hemorrhaging their audiences to newer (and more profitable) social media sites like Facebook and…

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Lux Alptraum
Lux Alptraum

Written by Lux Alptraum

OneZero columnist, Peabody-nominated producer, and the author of Faking It: The Lies Women Tell About Sex — And the Truths They Reveal. http://luxalptraum.com

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