As teachers, one of the most rewarding parts of our job is helping every student thrive, especially when it comes to something as foundation
btw
Genuinely, if you have dyslexia or another learning disability that affects reading (or if you just generally find reading hard or unpleasant) try setting everything you can to one of these fonts
Evidence strongly suggests that are also easier/faster to read for neurotypicals and non-dyslexic people
Also if you're a student try writing your papers in this and then converting them to the required or standard font at the last second
Also tbh great for writer's block and writing fatigue
Font highlights
1. OpenDyslexic
OpenDyslexic is one of the most well-known dyslexia-friendly fonts for students. It’s free to download and widely used in schools across the world. The letters are weighted at the bottom, which helps anchor each character to the page, making them less likely to flip or rotate in the reader’s mind. This is especially helpful for students who experience letter reversal or movement while reading.
Teachers who’ve used OpenDyslexic in the classroom often report improved reading stamina and reduced frustration among dyslexic learners. It’s easy to integrate into worksheets, presentations, and even web browsers, making it a versatile choice for modern classrooms.
Download the font here
Also you can download a browser extension that will change most/all text on the internet to display on your computer in OpenDyslexic. It's completely free and open source (which means it's permanently free). Download links:
For Firefox (this one will also work on Firefox's mobile browser)
For Chrome
For Edge
2. Comic Sans
You laugh but genuinely Comic Sans is the most dyslexia-friendly standard font. (x, x, x, x)
"One thing that can make a big difference for people with dyslexia is the font they read in. Enter Comic Sans, the dyslexia-friendly font. Studies have shown that Comic Sans is easier to read for people with dyslexia because the letters are more distinct and easier to distinguish from each other."
-via DyslexicHelp.org, May 2024
If you can't have fun (and/or inoculate the people around you against the power of cringe), the other best standard font when it comes to dyslexia and accessibility generally seems to be Arial
Also there's a list of much more subtle and adult/professional/formal looking fonts at the first link!! Several of which are free and open source!!
Reposted because the original poster blocked me — and conversations like this don’t just disappear. They deserve clarity, not erasure.
Okaaaaay... Let’s break down each of those points, one by one. 🫠
Because if we’re going to shout about AI ethics, maybe we should actually talk ethics — not just post 12-step guides on how to isolate people and call it “activism.”
1. “When your friend or family mentions AI garbage, tell them how you feel about it, and that you hate it when people use it.”
🧠 Sure — communication is healthy. But trying to guilt your loved ones into feeling bad about a tool they may rely on (especially disabled folks) isn’t “speaking your truth,” it’s moral grandstanding.
2. “Download and then delete free AI apps and leave reviews on them about how bad and unethical AI garbage is.”
📉 This isn’t protest — it’s review bombing. It doesn't change corporate policy, and it drowns out honest feedback from people with legitimate concerns and actual use cases.
3. “When you see a post with an AI generated image in it, comment about there being ai slop in it.”
🗑️ If your activism amounts to drive-by harassment, it's not activism. It’s just bullying in a socially-acceptable trench coat.
4. “Urge politicians to make laws regulating AI.”
✔️ This one? Yes. We agree. Please do! Regulation matters — but let’s base it on facts, not fearmongering or Tumblr takes.
5. “Don’t use AI ‘tools’ when a program or website tries to push them on you.”
🛠️ Then don’t — but don’t shame others for using accessibility tools, content aids, or creative support systems that help them thrive.
6. “Contact companies adding AI to their service about how much you hate AI and how unethical it is.”
📬 Feedback is good. But sweeping “AI = unethical” hot takes don’t help anyone. Be specific. Target exploitative data practices or lack of transparency — not the existence of the tech.
7. “Tell your friends and family how much you hate AI.”
🫤 Repeating the same complaint over and over doesn’t make it more meaningful. Especially when your neurodivergent cousin is using AI to manage her executive dysfunction.
8. “Don’t reblog or repost AI generated content.”
👀 That’s your choice. But gatekeeping visibility doesn’t make your blog morally superior — it just narrows the conversation.
9. “Fill out surveys about opinions on AI and say you don’t like it.”
✅ Go for it. Just remember: valid criticism hits harder when it’s informed and balanced — not reactionary.
10. “Refuse to use AI even if your workplace or school forces you to.”
📉 You’re allowed to take a stand. But demanding others sabotage their job, grades, or accommodations because you personally don’t like AI? That’s not solidarity — it’s self-righteousness.
11. “Keep posting about hating AI no matter how big it becomes.”
📢 Free speech is real. So is repetition fatigue. If you're screaming louder than you’re thinking, you’re not winning a war — you’re just spinning in place.
12. “Cut people out of your life who use AI until they stop.”
🪓 This is cult mentality dressed as conviction. Encouraging people to socially isolate others over a tool? That’s not activism. That’s control.
And just to add some ✨context✨:
The author claims to be neurodivergent — which makes it all the more disheartening. Many neurodivergent folks depend on AI to bridge executive dysfunction, manage anxiety, process language, or create safely. Treating them like villains because their support tool doesn’t fit your aesthetic? That’s ableism, not ethics.
If you're serious about fighting unethical AI use, start by demanding transparency, better labour rights, consent-based training data, and clear opt-out mechanisms.
Not just yelling "AI bad" while using Tumblr, Discord, and TikTok — all running on the same infrastructure as the models you hate.
The real enemy isn’t the tool.
It’s how humans choose to wield it.
It strikes me that so many people I've spoken to don't know about the feature, but you can have a block of text that's dictated by Siri and then made into an MP3.
To do this put the text you want dictated into a word processor, I used textEdit, then highlight the whole text and scroll down to services, then click on Add to Music as a Spoken Track. Then there will be a small dialogue box where you select what voice you want and what to name it.
Then hopefully you should have an MP3. I use it for required reading, so I can listen to the chapters whilst doing other things, but you can really do it for any block of text. It is a computer voice, still, so if that's something you don't like, then maybe give this one a miss.
I don't know how to do this same thing on PC, so if anyone else knows, then please add on to this post.
✨ AI and Fanfiction: Tools, Taboos, and Tectonic Shifts
Let’s talk about AI and fanfiction.
Not in the apocalyptic sense, and not in the “replace all writers” dystopia. I mean the real, everyday, often invisible ways AI is already shaping fan spaces—especially for those of us who write.
🔧 AI as a tool, not a threat
For neurodivergent, disabled, or just chronically overwhelmed writers, AI can be a game-changer. From untangling plot threads to helping organize timelines, write scene summaries, or refine tone—AI can be like that friend who doesn’t judge you for needing help with basic tasks. Is it the same as writing everything yourself? No. But neither is using Grammarly, thesauruses, or your group chat.
🚫 The taboo
There’s an unspoken shame around using AI in fandom. Even a whisper of it in your process, and suddenly you’re “cheating,” “lazy,” or “ruining art.” This ignores how every tool—from spellcheck to Scrivener—is assistive tech. When does help become heresy? And who decides?
🧠 The neurodivergence angle
Many of us write fanfiction not despite being autistic, ADHD, dyslexic, or otherwise atypical—but because we are. And AI helps us get the words out when executive dysfunction blocks the door. Shaming its use disproportionately affects the very people fanfic is supposed to be a haven for.
📚 Fanfiction is already transformative
AI-assisted writing doesn’t break the rules—it proves the rules were never fixed. Fanfiction was never about purity of process. It’s about love, obsession, catharsis, and world-building. So what if you used AI to smooth your pacing or brainstorm alternate endings? The story’s still yours.
💥 The real danger isn’t AI—it’s gatekeeping
The people screaming “AI is killing creativity” are often the same ones who never considered fanfiction “real” writing to begin with. Let’s not mistake their scorn for insight. What threatens fandom isn’t AI—it’s the policing of how we create.
📂 Tectonic Shift #1: “Let Them Starve”
“If you couldn’t be bothered to write, I can’t be bothered to read it.”
“Don’t engage. Don’t even give them attention. Let them starve.”
🧵 Let’s unpack the casual cruelty in this post—and why it says more about the poster than the people they’re targeting.
🔹 “Couldn’t be bothered to write” assumes a lot.
Let’s talk about who this rhetoric actually harms.
Some of us aren’t using AI because we’re lazy—we’re using it because we’re disabled, burnt out, or stuck in the middle of a story we desperately want to finish but can’t untangle alone.
AI isn’t a replacement. It’s a ramp.
It helps us get through writer’s block, clean up prose, sort ideas, organize chapters. The creative work still comes from us.
Calling that “not real writing” erases the reality of neurodivergence, executive dysfunction, trauma, and chronic illness. If you’ve never sat at a screen for six hours with nothing but static in your brain, congratulations. Some of us live that every day.
🔹 “Let them starve.”
Let’s not gloss over how nasty that phrasing is. This isn’t just “criticism.” It’s an attempt to dehumanize and isolate.
Telling people to starve—for using tools that help them function—isn't edgy. It's ableist. It’s a dogwhistle dressed up as discourse.
You don’t have to like AI-assisted stories. That’s your right. But encouraging people to block, ignore, and ostracize creators based on how they write? That’s a campaign—not a boundary.
🔹 “AI fanfic isn’t real writing.”
Let’s check that logic.
Using:
a fic prompt from Tumblr? Fine.
plot generators? Still fine.
a co-writer or Discord partner? Totally fine.
Grammarly, spellcheck, text-to-speech, or Scrivener? All good.
But an AI tool that helps generate structure or phrasing based on your outline? Suddenly the world ends.
It’s not about “real writing.” It’s about purity policing.
🔹 The real danger isn’t AI. It’s this.
This kind of rhetoric divides communities. It punishes the most vulnerable creators—those with fewer spoons, fewer supports, fewer hours in the day—and tries to shame them out of creating at all.
AI isn’t replacing writers. Writers are using AI. Some of us just needed new tools.
If your fanfic experience hinges on the belief that other people’s creativity is only valid when it conforms to your process? Maybe you’re not defending fandom—you’re gatekeeping it.
📌 TL;DR:
AI tools aren’t a threat to creativity.
Disabled and neurodivergent people deserve to write too.
Saying “let them starve” is cruelty, not critique.
Fanfiction has never been about purity. It’s always been about transformation.
We're not starving. We're still writing.
📂 Tectonic Shift #2: “Soulless Slop” and the Myth of Purity
“Write grammatically fucked up fics. Make disproportionate drawings. Produce things that will haunt you to your grave for how ugly you think they are. It’s still better than any AI content, because it’s yours.”
This post isn’t about creativity. It’s about purity politics disguised as inspiration.
Let’s break it down.
✏️ Messy art is beautiful. But AI art isn’t inherently soulless.
Yes—messy, awkward, grammatically feral fanfiction is wonderful. We need more of it. That rawness is what makes fandom feel alive.
But that doesn’t mean AI-assisted work is “soulless slop.” That assumes the creator had no soul involved. That they cared less. That they were trying to “cheat.”
For many of us, AI isn’t a substitute for care—it’s scaffolding for survival. We’re still the ones behind the story. Still the ones choosing words, fixing tone, building scenes, and feeling vulnerable enough to share it.
💔 This kind of rhetoric punches downward.
This post isn’t really about self-expression. It’s about drawing a moral line between “real” and “fake” creators.
Let’s be blunt:
Who needs AI help? Neurodivergent people.
Disabled people.
Overworked, under-supported, exhausted people.
New writers who don’t know where to begin.
People living in their second language.
People writing while grieving, dissociating, surviving.
Telling them “your work is soulless” because they got help isn’t empowering. It’s gatekeeping wrapped in encouragement.
🧠 You are still you—even if you use AI.
AI doesn’t erase the “you” in your art. It doesn’t override your intent, taste, experience, or effort. It doesn’t strip your voice from the page unless you let it.
You’re still the one telling the story. The tool didn’t dream the plot. It didn’t build the mood board. It didn’t spend hours wondering if your character would say that or something softer.
⚠️ The bottom line:
You don’t have to like AI in your process. But when you start deciding what’s “real art” and what isn’t based on tool usage—not on intention, love, or effort—you’re no longer uplifting creators.
You’re sorting them into castes.
📎 Next time someone tells you it’s “better because it’s yours,” remember:
AI-assisted fanfic is still yours.
You still dreamed it. You still fought through the fog to shape it. You still cared.
That’s what makes it art.
📂 Tectonic Shift #3: “Write It Shitty (As Long As It’s Not With Help)”
Two different Tumblr users, @thatsthewrongwallcraig and @dearlizzies, posted the same screenshot of AO3’s “Created Using Generative AI” tag. One calls AI users “spineless,” the other says, “get the fuck off—you’re not a writer.”
Let’s talk about this performance of creative purity, and how quickly it turns into moral policing.
🪓 Both posts say: “Even bad writing is better than AI writing.”
Cool. Agreed.
But the second part of that argument is always implied—or, in these cases, explicit:
“If you used AI, it doesn’t count.”
“You don’t belong.”
“You’re not a writer.”
What we’re seeing isn’t love for flawed human art.
It’s fear of contamination.
The actual claim is: I’d rather read bad fanfiction by a human than good fanfiction from someone who used AI—because the latter makes me uncomfortable.
And instead of sitting with that discomfort, these users lash out.
🧠 The spineless argument is a projection.
“Write it scared,” the first post says—
but then immediately calls AI-assisted writers cowards.
The contradiction is almost funny.
People who use AI aren’t avoiding effort. Many are showing up scared, burned out, insecure, or overwhelmed—and reaching for a tool because they still want to write. That’s not spinelessness. That’s persistence.
This entire genre of post pretends to encourage vulnerability while condemning anyone who’s vulnerable in the “wrong” way.
🚪 “Get out” is always the endgame.
Both of these screenshots end the same way:
You don’t belong here.
It’s not just about how you write anymore—it’s become about whether you’re allowed to be here at all.
The AI tag on AO3 exists to provide transparency.
These users are using it to create a hit list.
Let’s be clear:
No one is forcing you to read AI-assisted fic.
No one is tagging AI works as non-AI.
These works are clearly labeled.
This is about shaming existence, not protecting readers.
🎯 TL;DR:
These posts aren’t about empowering flawed creativity. They’re about punishing the wrong kind of flaw.
Not the kind you can romanticize in hindsight, but the kind born from desperation, illness, trauma, neurodivergence—where the tool is survival, not shortcuts.
So when someone says “write it shitty,” what they really mean is:
“Write it shitty—as long as you suffer properly for it.”
We see you.
We’re still writing.
However...
🏷️ About that AO3 tag...
The tag “Created Using Generative AI” was intended for disclosure, not punishment. But even beyond how it’s used, the tag itself is misleading by design.
Why? Because:
It lumps together wildly different use cases—everything from a fully AI-generated outline, to a single sentence reworded by a language model.
It does not distinguish between AI-written and AI-assisted.
AO3 has no mechanism for nuance, no sub-tag, no clarification. You either check the box or you don’t.
The mere presence of the tag now marks a work as illegitimate in the eyes of people actively watching the tag just to shame others.
On AO3, you can’t say how you used AI—just that you did.
There’s no difference between “used a chatbot to title this chapter” and “let a bot write the whole thing.” The nuance disappears the moment you check that box.
Writers are self-reporting—often out of ethics or honesty—and getting punished for it.
Others are avoiding the tag to protect themselves, which leads to… more outrage over “AI fics not being labeled.”
It’s a closed loop of paranoia, weaponized transparency, and performative purity.
🔍 The reality is:
Someone who uses AI to brainstorm scene structure gets flagged the same way as someone who generates entire chapters with no edits.
A disabled fan who rephrases dialogue using ChatGPT gets lumped in with botspam.
This isn’t about reader clarity anymore. It’s a scarlet letter.
The hostility we’ve seen — from mocking people for using AI as a beta, to telling others they “aren’t writers,” to aggressively tagging posts just to rally disdain — isn’t about protecting creativity. It’s about gatekeeping expression and punishing difference.
The “Created Using Generative AI” tag was meant to promote transparency. Instead, it’s become a blacklist — even for works written entirely by humans who just used a tool for brainstorming, grammar checks, or line edits. Many of the people using this tag are being transparent. They’re disclosing more than most fanfic authors ever have to. But rather than being met with nuance or curiosity, they’re met with disgust, pile-ons, and calls for removal.
People are being shamed not for deceiving anyone, but for telling the truth.
The problem isn’t that AI users aren’t being honest.
It’s that fandom decided honesty is grounds for exile.
If you’ve been unsure how to feel about AI and fanfic—good. That means you’re still thinking. That means there’s room to grow.
Now, I recognise that I'm possibly just talking out of my arse here, but given there's a feature to switch the priority of mouse buttons (presumably for left handed people), I couldn't help wondering if there's any market for an mirrored QWERTY keyboard for the same?
I'm fairly certain I've heard of keyboards with the numpad on the left rather than the right, but given the layout is designed for right hand dominant people, surely fully reversing the keyboard would help....