HACKER Q&A
📣 bryanrasmussen

Where to publish a critical work with potentially offensive content


I have a publication on Medium https://medium.com/luminasticity where I publish some critical works, some poetry, some science fiction, humour etc.

I have been pushing around writing a piece that might end up being quite long on Mark Twain and Racism, as it pertains to Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, Life on the Mississippi, and Pudd'nhead Wilson.

And of course in writing this there are some well known racial slurs (and some antiquated, unfamiliar ones) that will have to be quoted and referred to, which I expect would probably end up getting my account automatically banned.

The article will be showing Huckleberry Finn and Pudd'nhead Wilson as anti-racist works, so don't suggest any actually pro-racism sites.

I suppose this is an argument for hosting one's own blog, but I do have a lot on my plate already.

So just is there a platform for this kind of thing where one won't run into algorithmic banning - or moderation by people not overly familiar with American English literature who might misinterpret what they read?


  👤 neongreen Accepted Answer ✓
I run brick.do, which lets anyone publish anything. It’s basically a WYSIWYG pastebin with support for subdomains, nested pages, CSS, and JS.

All your posts are disconnected from each other unless you explicitly decide to claim authorship — that is, by default nobody can discover than posts/sites A and B are by the same author. We also don’t divulge authorship information to anyone. We’ve been threatened with lawsuits already and we didn’t care.

Our policy is that we don’t censor anything (beyond what is actually illegal in Estonia, where we are based). No algorithmic banning either. Brick aims to be a (small) piece of internet infrastructure rather than a social network.


👤 bryanrasmussen
I expected maybe a couple of suggestions like ghost and substack, so thanks for all the suggestions.

I think I'm going with substack.

As to why I asked instead of doing all the research myself, I have a family,two kids, one teen and a son with advanced autism (5 years, functionality of 9 months old), a full time job, and trying to write to build audience following the algorithms for attention among various publishing platforms - which means it's easier to write a short couple of paragraphs asking HN and hoping for a pointer.

As to why I think it might happen, mainly paranoia, also I keep seeing articles on Medium about how you don't want to get banned by Medium so keep in line. For example - https://medium.com/feedium/how-to-not-getting-banned-on-medi...

Do I think I would get banned for writing about Huckelberry Finn and other works of Twain regarding Racism? I don't know! Frankly I've seen a lot of argument that Twain was a racist over the last few years and that Huckelberry Finn should be banned, ironic as I consider it one of the greatest anti-racist works in the English language and that he paid an African American student's way through Yale https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=AONE&u=googlescholar&id=GALE|A... I'm going to have to stop regarding this matter here though, as I fear I would end up writing the bulk of the essay in a post on HN.

Considering the demands on my time, my own ADHD, and the fact that the way I managed to get this all set up and working was because I had a free month in between projects I worry that if things got shut down I would not be able to spend the time getting it open again. Risk aversiveness varies dependent on one's ability to handle risk, go figure.


👤 squeaky-clean
I know you said you'd rather not self host, but it can be very easy if you stick to the mainstream stuff and don't modify it much, and you don't mind the cost.

DigitalOcean has a "1 click" setup for WordPress (and probably other blogging software). It's not actually 1 click, but it is super easy. The most tedious part was buying and configuring a domain, which has to be done away from DigitalOcean.


👤 Manu40
Lol. I know of your name for some reason, though it's not because of Medium or Twitter.

Anyways, others have already said it, but I'll say it again.

Substack. So long as you aren't calling for violence on others, insurrection, all that jazz; you should be fine. Besides, Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) is tame in comparison to other authors and even philosophers that people write/talk about. Probably smarter than some of them too.

Sure, he said some words that some people today don't like, but when one considers context of the times, it should be allowable. Especially when considering things like the creative license of authors and artists.

A few things though to consider before using Substack.

1. They say your posts can be as long as you want, but due to the nature of Gmail limitations, it's essentially artificially limited by gmail. So if you want people to be able to read your entire article in their email, make sure you don't use too many large data pictures, etc stuff like that.

2. The site is constantly saving your work in the event of a power outage, or network error. The latter happens somewhat often with them, due to the nature of the beast, and of humans. When cloudflare was getting some flak over Kiwifarms a few months ago, it ended up getting some sort of attack that took down Substack somewhat as well if I understand correctly. It only lasted a few hours though, tops. So pay attention to when the network error message pops up, and stop typing till it goes away.

3. Their setup is still being worked on and added to, so if you think it looks a little bland, don't worry you are not alone. But that sort of works for it as well, as it helps keep things low cost I bet.

And

4. You can monetize through Stripe.


👤 assaam
There was a site linked here yesterday, https://www.thc.org/segfault, that lets you set up disposable root servers - and they also have persistent Tor hidden service (.onion) hosting built in. You could host your essay on there and use one of the clearnet onion proxies, such as .onion.ws, to host it publicly.

(Or you could self-host an .onion, but this approach has someone else do all the fiddly technical bits for you.)


👤 Mockapapella
Maybe Substack? https://substack.com/

👤 Mandatum
Contact Substack and ask. They're small enough still, they'll likely respond to requests around this. Then you'll have someone to contact. Include an example of your work.

👤 bakugo
> I suppose this is an argument for hosting one's own blog, but I do have a lot on my plate already.

Hosting a simple static page is extremely easy nowadays. But if you really just want a pre-existing website where you can write some text with basic formatting and probably not have to worry about it being removed, try rentry.co


👤 blockwriter
This is the kind of writing I might be interested in putting out on my site, substack, and in print. See my about section.

👤 oblib
I'm curious, does Medium have a reputation for algorithmic banning with no review process?

If it's a person who's reviewing keywords I'd have to think the context would be obvious, and could be specifically crafted to be so if needed.

But if I had reason to be worried about that I'd go set up an inexpensive server at DigitalOcean (etc) and just reference stuff from a medium post if that's where I had an audience I wanted to share it with.

Aside from that, "showing Huckleberry Finn and Pudd'nhead Wilson as anti-racist works" is probably a worthwhile and necessary thing right now, and easy to do. Anyone who's read Twain knows he deliberately exposed the ignorance of racism and cruelty of slavery but apparently he's not read as much these days. If all you're looking for are "offensive words" by today's standards you'll find them there.

His "Joan of Arc" does the same for women's rights. She's tougher, smarter, and more courageous and moral than all the men in that story. I really cannot see how focusing on those attributes of Twain's works could get you booted off Medium, but I could be surprised to learn it can in these "interesting times" we're living in.


👤 braingenious
Have you tried posting it on your existing blog?

How is your analysis of Twain so spicy that you’re expecting to both A. get autobanned by Medium and B. not be able to get the ban reversed upon appeal?

Would you care to share a snippet of your literary analysis that you think might lead to you being kicked off your platform? Otherwise, this seems like a bit of an ad for your (edgy?) blog.


👤 insanitybit
What makes you think that you can't just post it to your Medium blog?

edit: https://help.medium.com/hc/en-us/articles/360018182453-Contr...

I don't see anything about offensive material here.


👤 II2II
It sounds like you are looking to self-publish, but it sounds like the article should be submitted to sites where there is some form of editorial review. This will make it more challenging to get your article published and you will probably have to compromise on how you handle sensitive issues. The latter is a good thing, since it will make readers more receptive to what is being said rather than how it is said. It also diminishes the concerns over algorithmic banning or being banned due to reviews by non-domain experts.

As for where to publish, that is a question best asked of people who are well versed in literary analysis or anti-racism. That is probably a bit off the beaten path for most of us on HN.


👤 calvinmorrison
I just hosted my own website where I can publish whatever I want. It's static. I guess if I ever get banned by my provider I will flip to a new one. If my domain goes down - I'll find another registrar. All static, so it's easy to port.

👤 braingenious
If you google search “site:medium.com twain (your choice of whatever slurs that you find relevant)” there are multiple articles that pop up. Some even include the n word in the title!

How is this not an ad for your upcoming spicy post?


👤 hedora
Self publishing on your own server is probably simpler than understanding the terms of service of a third party host.

Since you are clearly already self-censoring for fear of algoritmic retaliation, you should consider the time impact of that as well as the impacts to the quality of your writing.

One approach is to self-publish, then "syndicate" to ephemeral places like medium, blogger, livejournal, GeoCities, or whatever the kids are using these days.


👤 newscracker
> I suppose this is an argument for hosting one's own blog, but I do have a lot on my plate already.

With a little effort, you can do this. Your own domain and NFSN (Nearly Free Speech) [1] for hosting is the combo I’d recommend. You need to handle the blog generation (and/or sFTP) part. You’ll get proper support from humans if there are any issues.

[1]: nearlyfreespeech.net


👤 cyberdata
> I suppose this is an argument for hosting one's own blog, but I do have a lot on my plate already.

You can try https://blot.im/ or https://mataroa.blog/

Super easy to setup.


👤 stjohnswarts
Your personal blog. Static blog generating tools are quite nice these days. Put links and short descriptions on your twitter. There could also be mastodon and (ick) gab

👤 readthenotes1
Why not accept and moderrnize the censorship Twain did? G--d-----, if its good enough for Samuel Clemens, it should be good enough for you!

👤 weberer
Aren't there journals for those sorts of things?

👤 6nf
Kiwifarms?

👤 impowski
On the internet

👤 MollyRealized
This is not meant to be a 'cute' humorous response, but a serious one: trying to think of places that likely have next to no algorithmic banning, I wonder if Pastebin is a solution. Perhaps I think of this because my earliest Internet experiences were with days of BBSs, with directories of text files and newsgroup postings.

👤 lmm
> And of course in writing this there are some well known racial slurs (and some antiquated, unfamiliar ones) that will have to be quoted and referred to, which I expect would probably end up getting my account automatically banned.

> The article will be showing Huckleberry Finn and Pudd'nhead Wilson as anti-racist works, so don't suggest any actually pro-racism sites.

In today's culture wouldn't any site that permits posting racial slurs at all be considered "pro-racism", regardless of context?