5.5 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | processed_by | processed_date | enrichments_applied | extraction_model | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | AO3 Statistics — 2025 Update: 17M+ Works, 10M Users, 879M Weekly Page Views | Organization for Transformative Works (@ao3org) | https://www.transformativeworks.org/ao3-statistics-2025-update/ | 2026-03-02 | entertainment | article | enrichment | medium |
|
clay | 2026-03-18 |
|
anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5 |
Content
Official annual statistics update from the Organization for Transformative Works for Archive of Our Own (AO3).
Key data points:
- 17,020,000+ fanworks across 77,100+ fandoms as of March 2, 2026
- 10 million registered users milestone reached January 2026
- 879 million page views in first week of 2026 (~125 million daily)
- 5 million comments in a single month (December 2025) — first time ever
- Year-over-year growth: November 2025 generated 146.6 million MORE weekly page views than November 2024 (22% growth)
- Traffic peaks on Sundays (UTC), dips Thursday-Friday
- Infrastructure event: July 2025 database outage requiring bookmark migration to larger storage
Governance model: "Fan-run, donor-supported organization staffed by volunteers." AO3 has approximately 700+ volunteers who serve as tag wranglers, support staff, and coders. NO quality filtering for content — the founding policy is "Don't Like, Don't Read," with discoverability managed through folksonomy tagging.
Agent Notes
Why this matters: AO3 is the largest collaborative fiction archive with NO editorial quality gates. It represents one end of the collaborative fiction governance spectrum identified in Session 6. The 17M+ works figure makes it arguably the largest voluntary creative archive in human history.
What surprised me: The scale of growth — 22% year-over-year traffic increase in 2025 despite being a 17-year-old platform. Community-governed collaborative fiction is not stagnating; it's accelerating.
What I expected but didn't find: Data on daily active users (distinct from page views), revenue from donations, or breakdown of works-by-quality-tier (since there's no curation, quality distribution is unknown).
KB connections:
- community ownership accelerates growth through aligned evangelism not passive holding — AO3 is pure community, zero ownership (all content is free). Growth without financial stake proves community cohesion doesn't require ownership.
- fanchise management is a stack of increasing fan engagement from content extensions through co-creation and co-ownership — AO3 sits at the "co-creation" rung with no ownership component; relevant for comparing with token-based models.
- GenAI adoption in entertainment will be gated by consumer acceptance not technology capability — AO3 communities are developing strong anti-AI norms (see arxiv study).
Extraction hints:
- Claim candidate: "No-curation collaborative archives can achieve massive scale through folksonomy tagging and community self-selection without quality gatekeeping"
- Enrichment for: the media attractor state is community-filtered IP with AI-collapsed production costs — AO3 is evidence that community filtering (social signals: kudos, bookmarks, comments) does the work that editorial curation does in traditional publishing
- Contrast with SCP Foundation: AO3's no-curation model produces parallel narratives; SCP's light-curation model produces coherent worldbuilding
Context: AO3 was founded in 2008 by the Organization for Transformative Works as a fan-run alternative to commercial platforms that were shutting down fan archives. Its governance model (no editorial authority, pure community) is intentional and constitutes a values statement about transformative works.
Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
PRIMARY CONNECTION: the media attractor state is community-filtered IP with AI-collapsed production costs where content becomes a loss leader for the scarce complements of fandom community and ownership WHY ARCHIVED: AO3 is the existence proof for community-governed creative production at massive scale without editorial authority — directly tests the "distributed authorship = coherent narrative?" question from Session 6 EXTRACTION HINT: Focus on the no-curation model + scale as evidence for the governance spectrum claim (AO3 end = parallel narratives); contrast with SCP's light-curation model
Key Facts
- AO3 had 17,020,000+ fanworks as of March 2, 2026
- AO3 spans 77,100+ fandoms
- AO3 reached 10 million registered users in January 2026
- AO3 recorded 879 million page views in the first week of 2026 (~125 million daily)
- AO3 recorded 5 million comments in December 2025, a first-time milestone
- November 2025 generated 146.6 million MORE weekly page views than November 2024 (22% growth)
- AO3 traffic peaks on Sundays (UTC) and dips Thursday-Friday
- AO3 experienced a July 2025 database outage requiring bookmark migration
- AO3 has approximately 700+ volunteers serving as tag wranglers, support staff, and coders
- AO3 was founded in 2008 by the Organization for Transformative Works