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work in progress (Posts tagged blocking)
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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

wideeyedloner asked:

To combat anonymous harassment/abuse, have you considered implementing user-facing IP logging so individuals can identify/report/block the offending accounts?

Answer: Hello there @wideeyedloner!

Thanks for the suggestion. Unfortunately, we will not be doing this. The answer is simple: there are simply too many ways it could be used for abuse itself, or reveal personal information like relative physical location. So we would ask that you please continue to report harassment like this to us, and we’ll take care of it.

Keep the questions coming, folks.

feature blocking security backend your suggestions

trudemaethien asked:

Know how when we click a tag, it opens a page for all instances of said tag, and on that page is an option to follow it; would it be possible to have a similar option to block it from the same place?

It would make blocking a tag a lot simpler, especially since sometimes it’s necessary to remember whatever complicated spelling the tag has (on mobile I can’t c/p a tag, idk about desktop) while navigating several steps to the block menu, or for blocking several similar tags in a row, such as 37 versions of #(whatever new show) spoilers is the word of the day 😂

I just think it would make sense that clicking on someone’s tag, exactly as they wrote it, and being able to block it from there would be *incredibly* useful, and if blocking tags was simple, straightforward, visible, and readily available, then more people might use it effectively. How feasible is that, and how likely?

Answer: Hi, @trudemaethien!

We are sorry to say that while it would indeed be nice to have this, and there are plenty of us on the team who would love to see it, we can’t make it a priority right now. It is also unclear when we’d get around to it, but if there are any updates here, @wip or @changes is the place you’ll find ‘em.

Thanks for your question. We appreciate submissions such as these, and fingers crossed!

feature blocking tags your suggestions

goneaway-24 asked:

Hello, I'm sure you all have plenty to do, but can you please stop showing me people I have blocked in the Popular Reblogs feed? It works just fine in the Following feed.

Popular Reblogs is great, a really good way to see things outside of my following bubble, but by not honoring the blocked list it just becomes unpleasant to use.

Thanks!

Answer: Hey there, @bitslip!

Thanks for drawing this hither our attention: what you found is a bug that we need to fix. But know that we have started looking into it, and hope to have updates with you before long. 

Thanks for your question, and have a lovely day.

feature feed blocking reblogs backend

aseriesofunfortunatejan asked:

Hi! The option to embed Tweets, that automatically adds alt text, is very practical, and I seriously appreciate it. It has some imperfections though, such as not including the text of the quoted Tweet (when applicable) or, when the Tweet includes an image that itself has alt text, not including said alt text. Is it technically possible to add these functions in the future?

Answer: Hey there, @aseriesofunfortunatejan!

We’d love to improve the alt text we add to embedded Tweets! Unfortunately, we’re only able to use the text that Twitter sends us through their oEmbed API, and they don’t include the text of quoted tweets—or the alt text of images in the Tweet.

Over on WordPress.com, we used to have a more powerful Twitter integration: we were experimenting with using it to improve Tweet embeds on Tumblr. Sadly, Twitter decided to start charging everyone prohibitively large fees to access their API in this way, which meant we had to shut it all down. It’s the same reason we had to shut down sharing to Twitter from Tumblr, too.

We’re eternal optimists, so we’ve built Tweet embedding to be pretty flexible. Should Twitter ever decide to expand the text that they send us, we’ll start using it automatically.

feature bugs search labs blocking

spookyabuki asked:

Is it possible that we could get an option to completely block tags so that they don’t show up at all rather than just having them show up with a warning?

Answer: Hey there, @spookyabuki!

So, the answer here is ultimately yes, as we’d like to work on this kind of thing and make it better. 

But doing so would mean we really need to take the time to make the whole story around filtering and blocking more cohesive. As it is, we keep adding band-aids, and it really needs a total rework. 

We hope that, sometime, we will get around to doing that exact rework. As and when we have updates here, you will be the first to know! 

feature tags blocking your suggestions

deithwen asked:

Please make it possible to hide users' posts without blocking them. Like, in cases where a person hasn't done anything wrong to be blocked, but you just don't like their posts.

Answer: Hello, @deithwen!

As it turns out, we’ve received this feature request a lot over the years. Usually, it comes in as wanting the ability to “mute” other blogs on Tumblr. While we would love to build it, we’ve balked at it a bit because of its technical and product complexity. Let us explain what that means:

In terms of technical complexity, our current blocking feature is closest to how “muting” would work. Our current blocking feature may seem simple, but it’s very complex because of how big Tumblr is. Every time we fetch a list of blogs for you or anyone on Tumblr, we have to also fetch the list of who you’re blocking, and who’s blocking you, and filter out anyone with that block relationship. This mapping of who’s-blocking-who is stored in a directional way right now, so the “cost” of loading that list gets higher the more people you’re blocking and the more people who are blocking you. If you’re blocking 1,000 blogs, we have to check that list a lot. If you’re being blocked by 1,000 blogs, that’s another big list to check against.

In technical terms, this is a “many-to-many” relationship, which is almost always incredibly difficult to manage while not degrading the experience of using a platform like Tumblr. The more people who are blocking, the harder it is to store those lists in a way that’s easy to check, but we’re working on making it smoother. The vast majority of people don’t block many others, if at all, so it’s never been a huge problem. But the outliers who block thousands of others (or are blocked by thousands of others) can degrade performance for everyone over enough time.

Adding muting would throw on top of that yet another list of blogs to check, increasing the complexity of something that’s already pretty complex. It helps that muting would be one-directional and not bi-directional (as in, it doesn’t matter who’s muting you), but, as that list of muted blogs grows, your experience may degrade further. So we’d need to solve for that, which is definitely doable. It would just take time—and lots of it.

And, as a product, Tumblr is already pretty confusing to people trying to figure out what “blocking” means already, as well as our other filtering options. Up until fairly recently, blocking was almost entirely one-directional, the opposite way you’d expect: blocking made it so the blocked person couldn’t see you, not that you couldn’t see them. We’ve been updating blocking to work both ways instead, which is more common on social media these days. Similarly, the options to filter tags versus content cause a lot of confusion because they don’t work the same way as each other.

So if we wanted to add another filtering option to that mix, “muting” blogs, we’d need to be conscious of how all of those options work together—and are confusing in context with each other. We should really clean up that experience to be more streamlined and simple, not more complex. And I didn’t even mention the oddity of how different settings apply to your primary blog versus your sideblogs if you have more than one blog!

Taken together, it is a great idea for us to clean all of this up, improve our existing options here, and add “muting” for even more control and granularity. Sadly, however, it just isn’t high enough on our list of priorities to tackle anytime soon. We don’t want to simply tack on muting for the sake of doing it—we want to do a better job than that. I hope that makes sense!

Thanks for your question. It was an important one to address. If anything should change here, you will get news through the usual channels: here at WIP, or at @changes

feature dashboard muting blocking account security backend your suggestions

bander28 asked:

I've noticed you've started doing some work towards giving sideblogs functionality with basic features which is great- can I once again beg you to make it easier to block from a sideblog? currently you have to click to go all the way onto the offensive blog so you can copy the url, get back out of there, go to settings, select the sideblog, scroll to bottom, click blocked blogs, paste url, click ok, then get back to dash... please just allow it as an option from dash like regular blocking or best of all, a "block from all your blogs" option, I BEG you (PS the offered "block from main too" when you block from inbox or messages doesn't work: maybe you could fix that as well, or stop offering it since it isn't actually an existing option)

Answer: Hey, @b-a-n-d-e-r!

Thank you for the feedback, here. We can let you know for sure that we will consider it. It’s certainly a nifty idea, and it would be nice. For now, however, we can confirm this is not on the roadmap as yet.

Watch @changes for any news on this.

feature blocking side blog security backend your suggestions

arunneronthird asked:

any thoughts on adding a whitelist? for example, if i blacklist a show name to avoid discourse or spoilers with the filtering option but follow an artist from that fandom i cannot see their art

Answer: Hey, @arunneronthird!

We understand what you’re looking for! But adding an allowlist (on top of the existing blocklist) makes content filtering more complex—both in terms of engineering and how easy it is for users to learn and use.

At the moment, let’s say you follow an artist, and they post something with a tag in your blocklist. That post will still show on your feed, just with a cover on it. You can click on this cover to reveal the content. While you do need to take an extra click to enjoy this post, we think this is the easiest and the most straightforward solution to this issue—at least for now.

We will give this some thought, though. There may be a better, third way. If there is anything more to say on this question, you will find it here on WIP or over at @changes.

feature blocking security followers backend your suggestions

ross-hori-deactivated20241109 asked:

When a blog gets blocked, why is it still able to infiltrate the feed with its sponsored posts? Surely a blocked blog is a clear indicator the content it share is unwanted at best, triggering and offensive to the blocker at worst.

Answer: Hello, @ross-hori!

Hey there! We apologize that this is frustrating. We do respect blocks for Blazed posts, as indicated in our FAQ, but it’s true that we do not respect blocks against other sponsored content. We’re working to make Tumblr a sustainable business, and ads are one way we’re trying to make that work. If you do not want to see ads, and you want to help us as a platform, please consider subscribing to Ads-Free Browsing instead.

Love,

—Cyle

feature blocking

significantfoliage asked:

Hey y'all! For reporting bots, is there any difference between reporting a spam post vs reporting the whole account as spam? When bots follow me, I report the account, but when there's spam in tags I follow, I report the post. Should I be reporting the account instead? Or in addition?

Answer: Hello, @significantfoliage!

A simple but potent answer for you: which is to report whatever you think is violating our community guidelines/policies—if it’s a post, report the post. If the whole blog is, then the whole blog. We can take it from there. Don’t overthink it. Just hit that report button, and we will take it from there.

This is an important question, so thank you for asking. Your feedback is appreciated, folks.

Best,

—Peter and Cyle

feature reposting blocking security