This answer likely won't feel satisfying but: it depends.
DW is really about you as a person engaging with fandom. Your blog is how you want it. Some people will never want anything reposted/reblogged but others will be fine with it. The only way to know is to find out from the person.
I could see Tumblr culture shifting this idea, but I would expect a lot of resistance from the "old guard" to changing the social norms they've been using for a few decades.
Of course, people will discuss any public posts all they like in their own space. But reposting content is a different beast.
Currently, basically, to figure it out you interact with the person and ask or read it on their posts/profile. Yeah, pretty much every single user. It is what makes DW different from Tumblr (and appealing to people who are using it, rather than being a minus). You need to engage with the person to find out what they want.
no subject
Date: 2019-01-08 08:04 pm (UTC)DW is really about you as a person engaging with fandom. Your blog is how you want it. Some people will never want anything reposted/reblogged but others will be fine with it. The only way to know is to find out from the person.
I could see Tumblr culture shifting this idea, but I would expect a lot of resistance from the "old guard" to changing the social norms they've been using for a few decades.
Of course, people will discuss any public posts all they like in their own space. But reposting content is a different beast.
Currently, basically, to figure it out you interact with the person and ask or read it on their posts/profile. Yeah, pretty much every single user. It is what makes DW different from Tumblr (and appealing to people who are using it, rather than being a minus). You need to engage with the person to find out what they want.