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cygnaut:
snaokidoki:
Forced Safe Mode just went live. Go into your account settings to check for the changes.
Here’s how to turn it off:
iOS:
Leave the Tumblr app for a sec and go to the main Settings app on your device.
Scroll down and tap “Tumblr.”
Look for “Safe Mode” and adjust the settings to match your comfort level.
Android:
Go to settings: Tap the little person in the tab bar, then the gear icon in the top right, then “General settings.”
Tap “Filtering,” then
Flip the Safe Mode switch on.
Web:
Go to settings: Click the little fella in the top bar, then click settings.
Scroll to “Filtering,” and click the Safe Mode switch on.
This is only for the app, but it just did it to me in the browser too. Fortunately it shows a link right on the filtered post to let you change that.
Hilariously, the thing it had filtered was a gifset of a fully-clothed man staring intently into the camera and then pulling his long hair back and tying it into a bun.
(Your picture was not posted)
cygnaut:
snaokidoki:
Forced Safe Mode just went live. Go into your account settings to check for the changes.
Here’s how to turn it off:
iOS:
Leave the Tumblr app for a sec and go to the main Settings app on your device.
Scroll down and tap “Tumblr.”
Look for “Safe Mode” and adjust the settings to match your comfort level.
Android:
Go to settings: Tap the little person in the tab bar, then the gear icon in the top right, then “General settings.”
Tap “Filtering,” then
Flip the Safe Mode switch on.
Web:
Go to settings: Click the little fella in the top bar, then click settings.
Scroll to “Filtering,” and click the Safe Mode switch on.
This is only for the app, but it just did it to me in the browser too. Fortunately it shows a link right on the filtered post to let you change that.
Hilariously, the thing it had filtered was a gifset of a fully-clothed man staring intently into the camera and then pulling his long hair back and tying it into a bun.
(Your picture was not posted)
no subject
Date: 2018-02-09 02:08 am (UTC)If I needed to be net-nannied on the Internet, I'd set that up myself. Or rather, my mother would set it up for me, because I'm a child who shouldn't be signing up for social media without parental guidance.
Being that I am an adult, however, and this website knows it, how does blocking content I explicitly chose to see make sense as a business model?
...Everything I know about Tumblr makes me want to throw my hands in the air and screech, and I don't even use the site except in the loosest sense!