Social media platforms are important venues for identity expression, and the Human-Computer Interaction community has been paying growing attention to how marginalized groups express their identities on these platforms. Joining the emerging literature on intersectional experiences, we study blind TikTokers (“BlindTokers”) who are also women and/or LGBTQ+. Using interview data from 41 participants, we identify their intersectional experiences as mediated by TikTok’s socio-technical affordances. We argue that BlindTokers’ intersectional marginalization is infrastructural: TikTok’s classification and moderation features interact with social norms in ways that push them aside and distort how they are treated on the platform. We use this infrastructure perspective to understand what these experiences are, how they were formed, and how they become harmful. We further recognize participants’ infrastructuring work to address these problems. This study guides future social media design with accessible creator tools, inclusive identity options, and context-aware moderation developed in partnership with communities.
ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems