lmao she ran a blog where in she posted pics of herself laying around naked with her snake wrapped around her and talking about mysticism and sexual awakening wrt to owning the critter. Seriously fetishized big snake keeping, it was weird. But hey, if you want to be alone in a room with that, I ain't gonna stop you. Different strokes![]()
And yeah public doesn't exactly have access to contact with the website's IT department. Tumblr isn't a small, private forum, it's a huge platform for millions of individuals to run unmoderated blogs. No one on the website actively reviews content for legality. Even TOS violations have to be reported and go through the system first. Much of their services are automated. This all happened within a span of a couple hours in one day, where as contacting a live person on the staff, getting the issue seen to, and then finally had something done about it would have likely taken a week for each step.
Believe me, if there was more that could have been done at the time, there are at least five of us in my personal circle that would have done it, not to mention all the other people that became aware of the situation. In this day and age protection of the person using the site and their privacy is the top concern of most websites. This comes with both benefits and draw backs. I can be assured as a user that some weirdo isn't going to make up stories to get my home address and come stalk me, but that also means we can't get that info on someone doing legit bad things. If they get caught in their home town, then the local authorities will deal with it as that state and city's laws provide.









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