![]() You can use our Mass Post Editor to do it faster! Need to add Community Labels to multiple posts at once? The option to add a community label is located just below the space where you'd add tags to your post: However, you can use the Mass Post Editor to add labels to posts created with the legacy editor! Note: community labels are not available in the legacy post editor. Sexual ThemesĪ post with a Sexual Themes community label could contain content such as nudity, erotic writing, or sexually suggestive subject matter. ViolenceĪ post with a Violence community label might contain violent or graphic content similar to what you might see in a movie. Drug and Alcohol AddictionĪ post with a Drug and Alcohol Addiction community label might contain a discussion of substance abuse or addiction experience that may be dangerous to or trigger those at risk. If you feel like none of the other categories apply but you think there should still be some kind of warning on the post, Mature is probably the right one to select. Any post with a community label will also have the Mature label (for example, it isn't possible to add the Violence label and not the Mature label). It can be used on its own or in conjunction with one of the other categories. The Mature community label is a catch-all and the default community label. There are four categories of community labels. You'll be able to go back and change/remove your community label too, as long as it was not added by our moderators. You can add a community label when creating a brand-new post, when editing an existing post, or when reblogging a post. They are essential tools for curating your Tumblr experience. Tag and content filtering aren't going anywhere, by the way. The addition of community labels makes browsing Tumblr a more consistent experience. This has worked okay for years, but it can be tricky (if you're filtering the #ferengi tag, you'd still see a post with the tag #tw ferengi, for example). We want to encourage creativity, self-expression, and exploration, but we also want to make sure that folks can avoid content they'd rather not see.īefore community labels, you'd need to trust that the person publishing or reblogging a post would add the correct tags so that your filtering options would hide the post. They can also blur the posts, or choose to have them show up like normal. On the post consumption side, community labels allow anyone on Tumblr to omit categories of posts from their dashboard completely if they so choose. Community labels gives a post creator more control over who can see their post (only those who want to see it, or only those over eighteen, for example). ![]() Tumblr is whatever you want it to be, after all. Why Do We Need Community Labels?īroadly speaking, our goal is to give you more control over the type of content you'd like to see (or not see!) on Tumblr. You can read more about the different categories here. ![]() There are currently four community label categories: Mature, drug and alcohol addiction, violence, and sexual themes. On the post consumption side, you can adjust your settings so that posts with community labels are completely hidden for you, shown with an overlay, or shown just like any other post. When you're making a new post, reblogging a post, or editing an existing post, you'll have the option to add a community label. There are two sides to community labels on Tumblr: The post creation side and the post consumption side. ![]()
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