blakeley h. payne

@blakeley@hci.social
162 Followers
143 Following
31 Posts
fat liberation now | phd-ing @ CU Boulder Information Science | previously AI + ethics @ MIT, Math + CS @ UofSC | she/her 🏳️‍🌈
Websiteblakeleyhpayne.com

🌟 New paper alert! 🪩

Our paper “Building Solidarity Amid Hostility: Experiences of Fat People in Online Communities” is out and will be presented at GROUP ‘25!

So much care from @jordant, @katta, @cfiesler, and I went into it! 💜

Read it here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.04614

Building Solidarity Amid Hostility: Experiences of Fat People in Online Communities

Online communities are important spaces for members of marginalized groups to organize and support one another. To better understand the experiences of fat people -- a group whose marginalization often goes unrecognized -- in online communities, we conducted 12 semi-structured interviews with fat people. Our participants leveraged online communities to engage in consciousness raising around fat identity, learning to locate "the problem of being fat" not within themselves or their own bodies but rather in the oppressive design of the society around them. Participants were then able to use these communities to mitigate everyday experiences of anti-fatness, such as navigating hostile healthcare systems. However, to access these benefits, our participants had to navigate myriad sociotechnical harms, ranging from harassment to discriminatory algorithms. In light of these findings, we suggest that researchers and designers of online communities support selective fat visibility, consider fat people in the design of content moderation systems, and investigate algorithmic discrimination toward fat people. More broadly, we call on researchers and designers to contend with the social and material realities of fat experience, as opposed to the prevailing paradigm of treating fat people as problems to be solved in-and-of-themselves. This requires recognizing fat people as a marginalized social group and actively confronting anti-fatness as it is embedded in the design of technology.

arXiv.org

💻📢 Excited to share our study of fat people's experiences in online communities (w/ @blakeley, @katta, @cfiesler) has been accepted to GROUP 2025!

https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.04614

Building Solidarity Amid Hostility: Experiences of Fat People in Online Communities

Online communities are important spaces for members of marginalized groups to organize and support one another. To better understand the experiences of fat people -- a group whose marginalization often goes unrecognized -- in online communities, we conducted 12 semi-structured interviews with fat people. Our participants leveraged online communities to engage in consciousness raising around fat identity, learning to locate "the problem of being fat" not within themselves or their own bodies but rather in the oppressive design of the society around them. Participants were then able to use these communities to mitigate everyday experiences of anti-fatness, such as navigating hostile healthcare systems. However, to access these benefits, our participants had to navigate myriad sociotechnical harms, ranging from harassment to discriminatory algorithms. In light of these findings, we suggest that researchers and designers of online communities support selective fat visibility, consider fat people in the design of content moderation systems, and investigate algorithmic discrimination toward fat people. More broadly, we call on researchers and designers to contend with the social and material realities of fat experience, as opposed to the prevailing paradigm of treating fat people as problems to be solved in-and-of-themselves. This requires recognizing fat people as a marginalized social group and actively confronting anti-fatness as it is embedded in the design of technology.

arXiv.org

Also a note on the above survey: We designed and piloted this before before Bluesky launched. We added a few questions about Bluesky, but it is focused on Twitter and Mastodon.

Also for those of you who are still on Twitter, an RT over there would be really helpful too. We are hoping to also hear from a lot of folks who haven't left! https://twitter.com/cfiesler/status/1661807702266499072

Dr. Casey Fiesler on Twitter

“We're conducting a survey about social media platform migration! If you're at least 18 & have used Twitter and/or Mastodon and/or Bluesky you're eligible to participate. You can optionally provide an email to enter a drawing for $75 gift cards. Please RT! https://t.co/ofPPIudlDh”

Twitter
We ( @bkeegan @MattNicholson @blakeley ) are researchers at University of Colorado Boulder conducting a survey about social media platform migration. If you are at least 18 and have used Twitter and/or Mastodon you are eligible to share your experiences with leaving (or choosing not to leave) Twitter and/or joining (or choosing not to join) Mastodon. You can optionally provide your email address to enter a drawing for a $75 gift card. Please boost! Survey link: https://cuboulder.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3BLXjcmBmKpyR2S
Qualtrics Survey | Social Media Platform Migration Survey

The purpose of this research is to explore the factors that lead to and challenges of leaving and joining social media platforms, including federated social media. This research will help us to understand how socio-technical infrastructures are regenerated and remain resilient from influxes of newcomers, in order to inform better designs and processes.

#TechEthicsInTheNews is back! The graduate students in my class and I are weekly sharing news articles from the past week in tech ethics in policy. (Also if you're interested you can see several years worth of this in other tabs on the spreadsheet!) https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nHgRYtNQ_VeMzycayrpfGs1UFjw_-gipMcdH-SFgnTo/edit#gid=1614692948
Recent Tech Ethics & Policy News - Google Drive

My friends made the outlandish decision to require day-of rapid tests for all guests at their dinner party, and I responded by … gladly taking a rapid test! I care about my friends enough to take a few minutes to help keep them and their family safe. It’s that simple.
It seems like a cool, or perhaps *the* cool thing, about mastodon is the ability for different communities to set different norms and cultures. I am deeply interested in these conversations and how we create a space that considers the most vulnerable "in the room," so to speak. But I have no idea if or where these conversations are happening.
A thing about reverse-chron feeds is that if there were any important norm-setting, community-building conversations on here in the past week (I'm thinking conversations about like, "what do we want this space to be as a community"), those conversations are basically invisible to me bc I was offline most of this week.
Seems like I should maybe post & pin: I don't suffer mansplaining. If you do it, I will call it out. Think twice about whether you are telling me something I could reasonably be expected to already know.

Okay I have two questions that I can't seem to find answers to, which are: (1) is it possible to see who the moderators are on our instance?, and (2) what happens after you report a toot?

Sorry if this has been discussed before, those discussions don't seem very searchable. And all I can find online are "future feature" discussions on github. #contentmoderation