I'm glad these can help. I've barely been around long enough to collect some links, really, so it's nice to be able to point someone to resources. I never got into Twitter myself, and I only vaguely know that ITPE has been going on for a while. (Since 2011, according to the AO3 collection.)
Transformative Work Policies/Statements aren't found in every fannish circle, in a manner of speaking. It can depend on what type of site a fandom started on, if they've had overlap with LJ/DW/blogging sites, if there's a non-AO3 presence, if the fandom has recreated the idea of reading fic aloud, and so on. If you'd like to read an explanation of blanket permission statements with links to examples, Rindle has Blanket Permission Meta, or akamine_chan has meta about transformative work statements with more links to Fanlore and examples.
(Blanket permission isn't really different from a transformative works policy/statement per se, but I usually find it easier to not use 'blanket permission' when explaining this to others. The idea of a blanket statement is that one doesn't have to ask follow up questions of the author, but I don't want to accidentally set off the gut reaction that 'blanket permission = yes to everything' for some. A more general sounding 'transformative works policy' can allow for caveats, doesn't have to be limited to podfic, and it can include ask first/yes/no to different transformative works.)
no subject
I'm glad these can help. I've barely been around long enough to collect some links, really, so it's nice to be able to point someone to resources. I never got into Twitter myself, and I only vaguely know that ITPE has been going on for a while. (Since 2011, according to the AO3 collection.)
Transformative Work Policies/Statements aren't found in every fannish circle, in a manner of speaking. It can depend on what type of site a fandom started on, if they've had overlap with LJ/DW/blogging sites, if there's a non-AO3 presence, if the fandom has recreated the idea of reading fic aloud, and so on. If you'd like to read an explanation of blanket permission statements with links to examples, Rindle has Blanket Permission Meta, or akamine_chan has meta about transformative work statements with more links to Fanlore and examples.
(Blanket permission isn't really different from a transformative works policy/statement per se, but I usually find it easier to not use 'blanket permission' when explaining this to others. The idea of a blanket statement is that one doesn't have to ask follow up questions of the author, but I don't want to accidentally set off the gut reaction that 'blanket permission = yes to everything' for some. A more general sounding 'transformative works policy' can allow for caveats, doesn't have to be limited to podfic, and it can include ask first/yes/no to different transformative works.)