probablynotbees: (Default)
[personal profile] probablynotbees posting in [community profile] newcomers
Hello all!

I'm very new to Dreamwidth (showed up with the latest wave of Tumblr ex-pats) but thinking about using it to post some of my media-criticism thoughts that I've been collecting in a private journal for the last year or so.

However, I want to make sure I can tag these appropriately, so I have some questions.

1. What's the etiquette for posting tagging discussion of a piece of media that paints it in a negative light?

On Tumblr, it's often considered rude to bash something in its main tag, so if I wanted to make a post criticizing the Marvel Cinematic Universe, I'd tag it something like #mcu hate so that it doesn't show up in the main #mcu tag where people are trying to enjoy their thing.

(I'm primarily asking because I have some quite critical pieces about Harry Potter.)

2. Does Dreamwidth allow users to block tags? Is this something I should anticipate when tagging entries?

On Tumblr I'd tag something like #eating disorder / to hide it from people who are avoiding that topic, including the slash so that the tag isn't searchable (on my own blog or in general). Is that a thing here?

I think that's all I've got for now, but I'll probably think of more later.

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 02:36 pm (UTC)
barbaratp: https://sheliak.dreamwidth.org/125518.html (Default)
From: [personal profile] barbaratp
Como não existe um feed geral no dw as pessoas só verão aquilo que elas seguem ou pesquisam. Você pode criticar com a TAG principal (aqui acho que não existe isso em tese já que cada um faz sua TAG pois cada blog é um espaço individual). Você pode sempre usar tags normais ao falar de assuntos que levam gatilhos, pode utilizar de recurso de spoilers e marcar a postagem como conteúdo a ser visto com cautela e indicar o porque.

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 02:44 pm (UTC)
barbaratp: https://sheliak.dreamwidth.org/125518.html (Default)
From: [personal profile] barbaratp
Suas críticas são consideradas válidas e podem ser vistas como meta, algo bastante comum no dw. Lembre-se somente que seu diário só será visto por quem você desejar. Sendo público ou não o dw não é uma rede social com feed é um blog, as pessoas precisam estar ativamente buscando seu perfil ou serem seguidores dele (acompanhar, inscrever-se) e também podem lhe dar acesso. Suas tags serão exclusivas para seu próprio diário. Bem definidas elas ajudam quando alguém faz alguma busca. Por exemplo eu quero encontrar alguém falando sobre uma série, eu pesquiso e acho uma postagem pública sobre, e a busca mostra isso com base no texto ou na tag.

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 02:54 pm (UTC)
barbaratp: https://sheliak.dreamwidth.org/125518.html (Default)
From: [personal profile] barbaratp
De nada, espero que te ajude.

(Ps: não precisa traduzir os comentários, meu telefone traduz tudo do inglês para o português para mim).

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 03:37 pm (UTC)
grayestofghosts: (haruka)
From: [personal profile] grayestofghosts
I think along with everything else said, like, the culture is pretty different on DW right now in that people usually don't post just to dunk on things. Posts in general tend to be more substantive so even negative posts tend to be substantive which typically makes them less inflammatory than quick Tumblr posts in general. So "not tagging hate" is not really a thing not only because of the differences in the tagging system but also because it's generally not hate, it's just criticism.

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 03:44 pm (UTC)
soc_puppet: Adorable art of the Pokémon Piplup; its flippers are clutched close to its chin, its eyes are dewy, and it is blushing, while light pink hearts and bubbles float around it. Originally a sticker for Pokémon Go. (Love Piplup)
From: [personal profile] soc_puppet
Hello, and welcome!

[personal profile] barbaratp has covered most situations, which means less work for me 😂 So thank you!

There's an edge case in Dreamwidth's Latest Things page; it's a feed of every public post that someone has made recently. (If a post is access-locked, it won't show up there.) It's about as close to how Tumblr works as you're probably going to find here. In general, I would say that Dreamwidth users who browse that page are prepared to find takes they don't agree with, though that might change if we get a lot more users. If you want to be extra cautious about this, then putting your negative opinions behind a cut tag might be the way to go, but by and large you should be fine.

As to blocking tags, yes, it is possible to block tags! I don't know how to do it myself (oops 😅), but it is possible! That said, since there are no site-supported tags, people generally have to pick one that's really broadly applicable, and hope that others use it. "Politics" is one that I use for this purpose, and I imagine that others block "eating disorder" and even "harry potter"—though that one might be a double-edged sword on the Latest Things page, since you can surf by commonly used tags there.

I hope that helps!

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 03:48 pm (UTC)
bluedreaming: digital art of a person overlaid with blue, with ace-aro-agender buttons (Default)
From: [personal profile] bluedreaming
(You might like to crosspost this to [community profile] fictional_fans to get some other responses - commmunity guidelines on the profile at https://fictional-fans.dreamwidth.org/profile.)

As the previous commenter noted, tags on your own journal are your own business! There are some related things to consider though.

Someone finding your post via site search (if you have that turned on) is going to be encountering your post because of the keywords, so trying to ensure that your title reflects the post (as the title will show up in search) and that the top part of your post sets the tone (so that people clicking into your post from search) know what to expect would be helpful. If you want to hide things under a cut or cuts for someone who is already on your post can be done with the details html tag. (using the native cut feature only affects viewers looking at your journal, your post on their reading page if they’re subscribed, or a community page).

Someone clicking into your journal will of course see your public posts, so it’s helpful for the titles and any text above the cut to reflect the contents. A general etiquette thing (which is a rule in most communities) is not to have visible posts that are excessively long - using the Dreamwidth native cut function is generally considered courteous!

Now, posts on communities are a different thing altogether (and these are kind of like the Dreamwidth version of discoverability - though there may not be an active community that fits what you’re wanting to post) and most communities will have rules about how to use their tagging system. If you’re looking for community suggestions, I’m happy to try to give you some pointers if you’d like.

Re: blocking tags - not everyone uses their reading page (to see subscriber posts), and those who do don’t necessarily filter tags there, but there are ways for people to filter tags from their reading page on a per-journal level (this might be a paid feature though). So, while tags are helpful for organization (someone might want to browse your meta tag), they’re unlikely to be used to filter out something, even though technically that’s possible to some degree.

Dreamwidth does actually sort of have global tags on the recent posts page (https://www.dreamwidth.org/latest), but these posts are very transient and the tags really only make sense during the snowflake challenge and three weeks for Dreamwidth (and, again, are super ephemeral). I don’t think most people even check it.

Hopefully that’s helpful and not too long!
Edited (Fixing html and typos sigh) Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 03:52 pm (UTC)

Welcome!

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 04:01 pm (UTC)
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
From: [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
>> I'm very new to Dreamwidth (showed up with the latest wave of Tumblr ex-pats) <<

It's good to have you here.

>> but thinking about using it to post some of my media-criticism thoughts that I've been collecting in a private journal for the last year or so. <<

Go for it!

You might explore the Meta communities to see which if any of those are into that kind of critique. Also, [community profile] marchmetamatterschallenge is running this month, all about archiving your meta, so that's definitely a match. Any kind of meta counts.

>> 1. What's the etiquette for posting tagging discussion of a piece of media that paints it in a negative light? <<

I've seen various formats, including your example. I have a Rant tag in my blog, which I rarely use. Bash or Bashing is another option. Be aware that DW's search engine is dumb so it reads those as different, unrelated topics. :/

One thing I recommend, if you're likely to have more than one such tag, is that you put the category first then the subtopic, so they'll stick together in your alphabetical list.

* Hate MCU
* Hate Potter
* Hate Racism

Another tool you could use is filters. Tell people about your critique posts, ask who wants to read those, and put those folks on that filter. Then nobody else will see those posts. This is popular for a wide range of "consenting adults" posts that not everybody likes.


>> 2. Does Dreamwidth allow users to block tags? Is this something I should anticipate when tagging entries? <<

I have not seen that feature here.

Typically what people do is put warnings on touchy stuff, which can be hidden with a graybar.

Here are a couple of mine for examples:

"The Most Dangerous Animal in the Zoo"

"The Bones of Chihuly"

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 04:52 pm (UTC)
asuraid: A drawing of Sylvie, an original Genshin character, with the asexual flag as a border around the icon. (Default)
From: [personal profile] asuraid
to be fair as someone who's also very much on tumblr, tagging on here ends up being more for yourself for organization; since dreamwidth acts more like a journal hub, people have to actively go through journals/keywords to find things, and i usually never find myself doing that with the way i use dreamwidth

i was also worried about it, especially as someone who also has ships i dont wanna see, but i've had zero issues with that here since i don't dip into those fandoms or check the latest page, and the people i follow who have the fandom as an interest, don't talk about it. there's no option for tag blocks though

i find using the cuts/read more feature could help!!! especially if you just preface it like 'below this cut is my thoughts abt xyz, which may include more negative content', you can also create filters for people who follow, or access lock them if you want to limit it to just select people

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 05:29 pm (UTC)
barbaratp: https://sheliak.dreamwidth.org/125518.html (Default)
From: [personal profile] barbaratp
Hey estava olhando meus posts antigos e achei esse link https://www.dreamwidth.org/latest que seria o equivalente ao feed aqui no dw.

Date: Mar. 19th, 2026 06:56 pm (UTC)
fabiadrake: (International Klein Blue)
From: [personal profile] fabiadrake
Tags are really just for blog organisation; there isn’t a main tag as per Tumblr. I would say the mainstay of DW posting etiquette is using cut tags for long posts and for anything that anyone, for any reason, might not be interested in reading. (Cut tags are very similar to Tumblr’s “read more” function, but you can use multiple cut tags in a single DW post.) And of course you can use the Subject field to signpost what you’re writing about — on Tumblr most people don’t bother with titling their posts, but navigating your DW blog becomes unnecessarily annoying when every post is labelled “(no subject)”.

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