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The Founder Of 4chan Leaves The Controversial Company After More Than 11 Years

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Chris Poole

Chris Poole, the founder of the controversial forum 4chan, is leaving the company he founded more than 11 years ago at age 15.  

"As 4chan's sole administrator, decision maker, and keeper of most of its institutional knowledge, I've come to represent an uncomfortably large single point of failure," he writes.

He'll be retiring from his role and passing his duties on to a few senior volunteers. 

Since Poole started 4chan as a high schooler, the site became known for its often seedy or hateful content — notorious for spawning online abuse, high-level pranks, and the infamous hack of Sarah Palin's email.

Even though 4chan became one of the biggest, most powerful websites in the world, Poole never made any money from it, and had to use money from a second startup, DrawQuest, to pay the bills

"The journey has been marked by highs and lows, surprises and disappointments, but ultimately immense satisfaction," Poole writes of 4chan. "I'm humbled to have had the privilege of both founding and presiding over what is easily one of the greatest communities to ever grace the Web." 

Interestingly, Poole announced the failure of his drawing-based art community DrawQuest exactly a year ago today. 

Here's Poole's full letter:

I founded 4chan eleven and a half years ago at the age of 15, and after more than a decade of service, I've decided it's time for me to move on.

4chan has faced numerous challenges over the years, including how to continuously satisfy a community of millions, and ensure the site has the human, technical, and financial resources to continue operating. But the biggest hurdle it's had to overcome is myself. As 4chan's sole administrator, decision maker, and keeper of most of its institutional knowledge, I've come to represent an uncomfortably large single point of failure.

I've spent the past two years working behind the scenes to address these challenges, and to provide 4chan with the foundation it needs to survive me by bolstering its finances, strengthening its infrastructure, and expanding and empowering its team of volunteers. And for the most part, I've succeeded. The site isn't in danger of going under financially any time soon, and it's as fast and stable as ever thanks to continued development and recent server upgrades. Team 4chan is also at its largest, and while I've still been calling the shots, I've delegated many of my responsibilities to a handful of trusted volunteers, most of whom have served the site for years.

That foundation will now be put to the ultimate test, as today I'm retiring as 4chan's administrator. From a user's perspective, nothing should change. A few senior volunteers—including 4chan's lead developer, managing moderator, and server administrator—have stepped up to ensure a smooth transition over the coming weeks.

I'll need time away to decompress and reflect, but I look forward to one day returning to 4chan as its Admin Emeritus or just another Anonymous, and also writing more about my experience running 4chan on my personal blog. The journey has been marked by highs and lows, surprises and disappointments, but ultimately immense satisfaction. I'm humbled to have had the privilege of both founding and presiding over what is easily one of the greatest communities to ever grace the Web. It was truly an honor to serve as 4chan's founding administrator, and I look forward to seeing what the next decade holds for the site.

On to the next chapter.

4chan

 

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4chan's overlord Christopher Poole reveals why he walked away

How the creator of the 'trollface' meme turned an MS Paint cartoon into a six-figure payday

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trollface meme troll face mask

Like Nyancat, "the cake is a lie," Tron Guy, and Doge, "trollface" is a bona fide piece of internet history.

And more than that: It's an incredible profit-generating machine for its creator.

Kotaku reports that the black-and-white cartoon face was originally drawn by 24-year-old Carlos Ramirez, and since 2008, he's made more than $100,000 off of his creation.

Ramirez drew the cartoon 7 years ago and posted it to anonymous imageboard 4chan, and it immediately exploded in popularity.

The internet is littered with millions of derivatives and copycats (just search Google for "trollface"), and has even been referenced in mainstream media like Adam Sandler movie posters and the comic Deadpool, Kotaku points out.

Such is the life of a meme: Sudden, meteoric growth, before slowly tailing off over a period of years. What sets Trollface apart is what Ramirez' mother encouraged him to do next — copyrighting the cartoon.

trollface troll face meme face paint lol i troll uThe accidental artist told Kotaku that at the peak of trollface's popularity, he was making "between $10,000 and $15,000 every few months." This would come from merchandising, licensing, and settlements over unauthorised reproductions of the meme. Overall, Ramirez has made made more than $100,000.

It's a rare success story for a meme, which often have far more unpleasant unintended consequences for their originators. Blake Boston, the unwitting star of the "Scumbag Steve" meme, was hit with a wave of online abuse after being painted as a "scumbag." And Ghyslain Raza, who is better known as "Star Wars kid,"was on the receiving end of years of bullying after a video of him "goofing around" with a fake lighsaber made its way online.

Here's a link to the original DeviantArt comic where it all began »

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This horrific Twitter ad shows why harassment is a threat to growth

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Earlier this year, Dick Costolo identified the toxic culture and hate speech that permeates Twitter as a major obstacle to the company's user growth

Now, with an incident involving the flagrant misuse of paid promoted tweets on Twitter, we see a perfect example of how a few jerks with an agenda are presenting the company with a serious business challenge.

(Be warned, there's some nasty language and at least one slur involved here.)

It started with this terrible ad, ostensibly in the name of prominent feminist Caitlin Roper, that somebody paid to have placed into people's Twitter feeds unbidden:

caitlin moran framed tweet

It's bad. Really bad. The eagle-eyed may notice that the Twitter username "@Caitlin_Roperr" has an extra "r" at the end, but many didn't see that. 

An anonymous troll from 4chan, the Internet's very own underbelly, claimed responsibility, saying that it was retribution for Roper's efforts to get the video game Grand Theft Auto V banned from Australia on the basis of its violent and sexist content. 

A Twitter spokesperson said in an emailed statement that the company does not allow the promotion of hate content, including hate speech against a group based on sexual orientation or gender identity. "Once this instance was flagged, we immediately suspended the account and stopped the campaign," Twitter said.

Filtering offensive material is no easy task on an open platform like Twitter, where users are not required to use their real names.

One potential solution on the advertising side would be to make sure that every paid ad is vetted by a human. But that would add a major bottleneck to Twitter's advertising business, which appeals to many marketers because of its quick, self-serve nature. 

Presumably Twitter already uses some technology to automatically scan and reject ads containing offensive terms — though this incident shows that it's not working perfectly. 

Any solution is sure to require more spending, adding more pressure to margins at a company that's already struggling to turn a profit. 

Still, there's really only one way forward if Twitter wants to fix the situation and boost its user growth: Continue to invest in anti-harassment policies, tools, and technologies to improve the experience for everybody and get the haters off the service so these issues don't come up in the first place and customers can buy ads in peace.  

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Notorious forum 4chan has been sold to the creator of the Japanese site that helped inspire it

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christopher poole moot 4chan

Notorious internet imageboard 4chan has been sold to the creator of the Japanese site that helped originally inspire it.

Founded in 2003, 4chan is an anarchic melting pot of internet culture. It has given birth to a diverse array of phenomena which have since crossed into the mainstream, including "rick-rolling," lolcats, and Anonymous. Because of the site's hands-off approach to moderation — especially on its /b/ random board — it has also been highly controversial at times, particularly for its raids on other sites.

The site's creator, Christopher Poole, said 4chan was based on the Futaba channel — a Japanese-language imageboard dedicated to anime and manga — which was in turn inspired by 2channel, another Japanese-language site. (4chan was originally intended for discussion of the same topics, and its culture remains heavily influenced by the mediums.) On Monday, Poole — posting under his moniker "moot"— announced that 4chan had been acquired by Hiroyuki Nishimura, the founder of 2channel.

In an interview with The New York Times, Poole characterised the sale as the site "coming full circle." Hiroyuki is "literally the only person in the world with as much if not more experience than myself in running an anonymous, large destination community that serves tens of millions of people," he said. "He’s the great-grandfather of all of this."

That the site has been sold doesn't come as a huge shock. Back in January 2015, Poole announced his retirement, and that he was passing the site on to a team of volunteers. 4chan has never had full-time employees (except for Poole), instead relying on a team of anonymous volunteers and moderators.

The terms of the sale have not been disclosed. In contrast with other internet culture hubs like Reddit, 4chan has never taken outside funding. It offers advertising, but it has struggled to attract mainstream clients due to the often wildly controversial content posted to its boards. It also sells a $20 "4chan Pass."

In a post on 4chan's news blog, Poole writes that he first met Nishimura in 2011, "and we became fast friends, bonding over our shared passion for creating and managing online communities. He is one of few individuals with a deep understanding of what it means to provide a digital home for tens of millions of people for more than a decade. There is nobody more qualified than Hiroyuki to lead 4chan, and I can't think of a person better suited for the task."

He continues: "4chan sits on the eve of two great milestones—its 2 billionth post and 12th birthday. It has been a great privilege to serve as 4chan's founder and steward for almost twelve years, and I can't wait to see what lays in store under Hiroyuki's experienced leadership."

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The founder of the one of the most controversial websites on the internet is joining Google (GOOG)

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4chan Chris poole

Chris Poole, the founder of the controversial online forum 4chan, is joining Google.

Google confirmed to Business Insider that Poole will be working under Bradley Horowitz, VP of Google Photos and Streams, the two products spawned from the break up of Google+ last year.

4Chan is one of the web's most popular forums for online discussions, but the site has gained a reputation as a repository of seedy or hateful content, notorious for spawning abuse and high-level pranks (for example, users infamously posted the password to Sarah Palin's email and spread thousands of nude celebrity photos).  

Poole founded it when he was only 15 and ran the forum for more than 11 years before leaving in January 2015.

He writes that Google's commitment to "some of the world's most interesting and important problems" drew him to the company.

"When meeting with current and former Googlers, I continually find myself drawn to their intelligence, passion, and enthusiasm — as well as a universal desire to share it with others," Poole writes on his blog. Continuing: "I can’t wait to contribute my own experience from a dozen years of building online communities, and to begin the next chapter of my career at such an incredible company."

Even though 4chan became one of the biggest, most powerful websites in the world, Poole never made any money from it, and had to use money from a second startup, DrawQuest, to pay the bills. DrawQuest shut down in 2014.

Interestingly, an anonymous 4chan user claiming to be a Google employee posted about Poole (who uses the identity "moot") last week:

MOOT

There was a follow-up on Saturday, where someone claiming to be a Google employee placed Poole on the Photos team: 

Moot

SEE ALSO: Founder of 4chan leaves the controversial company after 11 years

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Googler promises G+ won't become a 'den of infamy' after hiring 4chan founder Chris Poole (GOOG, GOOGL)

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Chris Poole

Even though Chris Poole, the founder of controversial online forum 4chan is joining Google Plus, the social network won't become a "den of infamy." 

That's the promise of one of Google's lead engineers, responding to the announcement on Monday that Poole would be join its social team. 

Yonatan Zunger, a long-time Google engineer who currently acts as the chief architect for social, posted about Poole's hiring on Google Plus

4Chan is one of the web's most popular forums for online discussions, but the site has gained a reputation as a repository of seedy or hateful content, notorious for spawning abuse and high-level pranks (for example, users infamously posted the password to Sarah Palin's email and spread thousands of nude celebrity photos).  

Zunger says that despite 4chan's penchant for trolls, "Poole is by no means a troll or a troll-curator." 

Here's his full post:

Since several people have been asking me about this, I just want to mention: At Bradley's instigation, I spent a few hours chatting with Chris Poole a few years ago. What I discovered was a man who was quite thoughtful about issues of social dynamics and interactions. 

The things that 4chan became (in)famous for grew rather organically out of the system, out of the people who ended up congregating there and the ways they used the tools. Poole is by no means a troll or a troll-curator, and I actually think that with the rather different crowd of people who hang out here on G+, he's going to make something really exciting.

(When you ignore the people who came and went quickly, there's actually a pretty awesome culture here on the Plus. I've had more good conversations on this site than I've had, cumulatively, on the entire rest of the Internet. This is a good place to build from.)

So I'm looking forward to seeing what he does. And fear not: we aren't about to become a den of infamy. This isn't that kind of place, and we don't intend for it to be.

SEE ALSO: The founder of the one of the most controversial websites on the internet is joining Google

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The real reason Google hired the founder of one of the internet's most controversial websites (GOOG, GOOGL)

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4chan Chris poole

When Chris Poole, the founder of the controversial online forum 4Chan, announced in March his plan to join Google, it looked as if he was going to work on the social network Google+.

After all, Google confirmed at the time that Poole was working under Bradley Horowitz, VP of Google Photos and Streams — the two products that Plus is based on.

One Google engineer even publicly promised that Plus wouldn't become a "den of infamy" with Poole on board.

But Business Insider has learned that Google actually hired the young founder to assist Horowitz on a different project: Google's new in-house startup incubator, Area 120.

The division, first revealed in April by The Information, is a formalized version of Google's famous "20% time," meant to carve out time for entrepreneurial-minded employees to create ambitious projects inside the company. Accepted Googlers will get several months and access to company resources to work on their projects.

Although Horowitz and Google's corporate development exec, Don Harrison, are spearheading the incubator, they're keeping up their other respective duties, whereas Poole will be working on Area 120 full time, the company confirmed with Business Insider.

We've heard that Area 120 received "hundreds" of applications that its aims to winnow down to a handful of worthy business ideas by the fall.

4chanPoole, 27, has plenty of experience from his own roller-coaster career as a startup founder to lend to Area 120's mission.

He launched 4chan at 15 as a forum for sharing anime, but it swelled into the internet's "greatest factory of memes and mayhem," spawning subsets of digital culture like LOLcats and the hacktivist group Anonymous.

It ultimately gained a reputation for NSFW content and high-level pranks. (For example, users infamously trolled Google's trending search list with swastikas and, more recently, spread thousands of leaked nude celebrity photos.)

Throughout, Poole has defendedthe value of internet anonymity while also dealing with death threats from 4chan users who are upset with his decision to ban certain content or topics. 4chan brought in enough money to sustain itself, but not enough to make Poole rich.

Meanwhile, he raised about $3 million in 2011 for an image message board startup called Canvas that eventually pivoted into DrawQuest, an app that gave users daily illustration prompts. In 2014, Poole wrote a frank blog post declaring that although DrawQuest had built a vibrant community of artists, it couldn't figure out a way to make money and would shut down.

Poole stepped down as 4chan's sole administrator in January 2015 and ultimately sold the site last September.

When he joined Google, Poole wrote on his blog he was impressed by the company's passionate employees and commitment to tackling big problems:

"I can't wait to contribute my own experience from a dozen years of building online communities, and to begin the next chapter of my career at such an incredible company," he wrote.

SEE ALSO: If you have the latest iPhone, Google has a new app that will make your photos look way better

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How the human 'punching bag’ who created one of the internet's most controversial websites is leading an unlikely second act at Google (GOOGL, GOOG)

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Chris Poole

Before he was old enough to drink, Chris Poole controlled one of the most influential internet communities in history.

At 15, he founded the freewheeling online image board 4chan, which achieved notoriety early on for hatching memes among a stew of not-safe-for-work content, ranging from inventive pornography to stomach-turning gore.

Poole’s control of the site caused him to field phone calls from the FBI and appear in court, left him nearly bankrupt and turned him into a human "punching bag."

For the young New York-born techie, it was a formative experience, that forced Poole to reconcile his love for community and the benefits of anonymity with his contempt for some of the objectionable content on the site. And when he stepped down in 2015 and later sold the site, most assumed it was to escape into his own anonymity after the stress and the challenges that came with running the controversial forum.

As it turns out, Poole was just preparing for his next act. And in one of the most surprising moves in tech this year, Poole has resurfaced at Google, leading the internet company's fledgling entrepreneurship program. The one-time keeper of the memes is now punching the clock at one of the most respected companies in the world.

To succeed at his new role, Poole will need to shed the reputation that's stubbornly clung to him and his site for years. But if he pulls it off, he’ll have accomplished a feat as impressive as any Silicon Valley turnaround story: the chance to reclaim his own identity.

An unusual relationship

Poole agreed to answer questions from Business Insider by email and wrote that joining Google is a continuation of an important journey — "a chance to have entirely new and formative experiences, and grow in ways one simply cannot on their own."

After all, he'd been at it alone for a long time. Poole created 4chan in 2003, modeling it after his favorite Japanese anime site and going by the moniker "moot." Poole's parents had no idea it even existed for the first several years. His identity wasn’t public until his first press profiles in 2009. At that point, 4chan already had 5 million monthly users, with Poole as the sole admin.

Browsers of the site's more controversial boards or anyone aware only of 4chan's headline-grabbing hijinks (like attacking Scientology through Anonymous, the hacktivist group it spawned, or rigging a Time magazine poll), would picture Poole as this maniacal caricature of a human being.

"Once you meet him, Chris is the last guy you’d expect to have been the dude that founded 4chan,” says Drew Curtis, the founder of another early message board, Fark. Curtis considers himself a friend and adviser to Poole — the two met at a TED conference where Poole spoke in 2010.

Those who know him, including Curtis, describe Poole as kind, funny, incredibly bright, intensely private, and as someone who asks thoughtful questions.

Many 4chan users, on the other hand, would describe Poole a bit more … colorfully. Over the years, the shifting community’s relationship to Poole has bucked and dipped. They’ve sent him artwork, obsessed over his love life (he’s even dated a few 4channers), and playfully meme-fied any photo they can get their digital hands on.

>But any change to the site would spur insults and death threats, lewd comments on everything from his sexuality to his physical appearance, with a fair number of complex theories on how he was in cahoots with the FBI or, after he banned GamerGate discussions, was in bed with "social justice warriors." Poole has said that their constant assault didn't make him angry (he makes it a point not to get angry at strangers on the internet), but could be draining.

"Sometimes he’d get really frustrated with us. It was a love-hate relationship with users,” Brett, an early 4channer, says. In the spirit of the site, he asked for his full name to remain anonymous. He’s the same age as Poole and joined the site back in 2004. He still visits it nearly every single day.

The face of 4chan

Chris Poole

Whether 4chan's users appreciated it or not, Poole was a fierce defender of the community he created. And ironically, his protection of the anonymity of his users tied his own identity more closely to their exploits.

Even though he couldn’t really control the site beyond banning certain topics and reporting illegal content to authorities, he was the only one with any modicum of authority

Poole himself describes 4Chan with pride, and a hint of ambivalence.

He can calmly describe some of the site’s more NSFW images and antics, adding that he’s not easily offended, and can clinically discuss how he fielded countless legal threats from actresses during the massive celebrity leak dubbed on 4chan as “The Fappening.”

“As much as we’ve had our detractors over the years as a community and as a site, I think 4chan has done far, far, far, far more good than bad,” he said during a final, eight-hour Q&A session with his community. “Hundreds of millions of people have used 4chan in some capacity, in some fashion, whether it’s minutes, hours, days, or whatever. There have at least been 100 million dedicated users over the past ten years. For a lot of people it kind of functions as their ‘Place.’”

Keeping that ‘Place’ open never made him money — in fact it almost bankrupted him. Its racy content made mainstream advertisers shrink away while servers and the occasional legal fee drained his bank account to the point where he was once $20,000 in debt.

Ultimately, he said in his final Q&A, he sees 4chan's upkeep over the years as a hobby and a labor of love, and that he did“truly feel very warmly about the community and everything that’s happened” despite “being a punching bag for millions and millions of people."

Although most associate Poole with 4chan, he's actually taken a stab at another projects.

He founded Canvas in 2011 as a network for remixing images, ultimately raising about $3 million from investors like USV and Andreessen Horowitz. In some ways, Canvas felt like a nicer version of 4chan: It enabled a similar kind of creative piggy-backing, without veering into the obscene. 

In search of a business model, the app pivoted and its second iteration, DrawQuest, gave users daily illustration prompts. But Poole still couldn’t figure out how to make money. In 2014, Poole wrote a frank blog post declaring that it had to shut down. He describes the next few months as an “emotional roller coaster” and a “burden that took a few months to decompress from.”

Going Google

bradley horowitz

After selling the site last year, Poole fell off the map. No blog posts, few tweets.

“I spent just over two years away from the tech world. I used the time and distance to catch my bearings and recharge after four years of building Canvas and DrawQuest—but more importantly—to seek out new experiences and learn more about myself and the world,” he tells Business Insider.

He traveled, read, wrote. Ultimately, he reconnected with Google’s VP of Photos and Streams, Bradley Horowitz, whom he had met several years before.

4chan’s reputation didn’t faze Horowitz — the longtime Google executive, who once headed up Google's Apps business, had never been a frequent 4chan visitor. Impressions of Chris were based on their relationship, not 4chan's history.

“I've had the good fortune to work with some of the most creative and talented people in the industry. Yet even against that backdrop Chris stands out as a particularly gifted and astute thinker,” he says. “He has an uncanny ability to see through apparent complexities and simplify. It's a rare and valuable gift.”

When Horowitz started working on a new in-house startup incubator, dubbed Area 120, Poole was top of mind.

“I’d always hoped to work with Chris, but was waiting for the right circumstances to arise (both for us and for him), took a bit of patience,” he says. “We stayed in touch, and when Area 120 began to take shape, he was practically the first call I made. And fortunately, I caught him at the perfect moment.”

For Poole, joining Google, helping other people form their own businesses inside a huge company instead of launching out again on his own, feels like the right fit.

It’s been almost exactly one year since he set his churlish, beloved child free, and the 4chan site seems to be whirling along just fine without him. While he’s still best known for 4chan and as “moot,” the identity he picked at 15, those days are falling farther and farther behind him.

“I think 4chan will be a footnote in his biography,” Curtis says. “One day we’ll say, ‘Oh, of course he did this next thing. Look at what he was doing when he was 15.’ I think that’s what 4chan will be for him: just the beginning.”

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NOW WATCH: Facebook And Google 'Degrade Our Humanity,' Says 4chan Founder

Hackers tried to take down pro-Clinton phone banks the day before the election, but inadvertently hit Republican calls too

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clinton phone bank

Hackers tried to knock out political call centers on Monday in an effort to "harm Clinton's chances of winning," but they may have done equal damage to Republican phone lines, according to the company that was targeted.

TCN, a company that provides political phone banking services, has a number of conservative clients in addition to pro-Clinton ones, the firm's chief technology officer Jesse Bird told Wired.

"The ironic thing is that they were probably impacting Republican calls just as much as Democrat calls," Bird said.

Workers at NextGen Climate, a pro-Clinton super PAC, reportedly began noticing problems with their dialer software Monday morning, the final day of its get-out-the-vote campaign, the Verge reported

According to NextGen's press secretary Suzanne Henkels, the attack intermittently slowed their dialer program throughout the day, and occasionally went down for hours at a time.

The attacks may have been linked to a 4chan user by the name Sparky, who announced imminent distributed denial-of-service attacks — which slow or shut down systems by overloading them with connection requests — on pro-Clinton services and asked for a list of potential targets.

"Clinton's current Nevada phone lines are hosted on tcnp3 … all phone lines taken out," Sparky posted on 4chan, although the archive link has been taken down.

"List targets here that if taken out could harm Clinton's chances of winning and I will pounce on them like a wild animal. Not sleeping until after this election is over."

Bird, TCN's CTO, said that although the attack didn't shut down the company's services, it made things "difficult."

"They found the spot where they might be able to hurt us, and they pushed hard," he said.

Hackers also attempted to hit both Trump and Clinton's official campaign websites with similar denial-of-service attacks on Monday, but no outages were reported on either site, according to the security firm Flashpoint.

SEE ALSO: Don't fall for these online voting scams circulating the internet

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Right-wing militias recruit young soldiers on 4Chan

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Confederate flag KKK

(Mic) — On small hill in Boston Common, a crowd of black-masked anti-fascists shouted taunts down the grassy slope toward hundreds of far-right demonstrators gathered before a stage.

Inside the bandstand, guarded by burly veterans, 17-year-old Steven Verrette hung back quietly with his young friends, checking his phone for new threads on 4chan about the rally.

Though an unassuming youth, Verrette had been the lead organizer of the event.

The veterans who stood guard over Verrette — and the rest of the mid-May rally  — were from a group called the Oath Keepers, one of the largest right-wing organizations in the militia movement. The Oath Keepers had shown up in Ferguson, Missouri, during the riots, and they'd been at the Battle of Berkeley, a streetbrawl between far-right and far-left demonstrators in mid-April in California. Now, they were watching over a younger, stranger clutch of radical conservatives, ready to retaliate for the first punch if things grow violent.

Verrette, who's from the nearby town of Peabody, seemed pleased to have the brute force of the Oath Keepers there, but unsure of their ideological motivations for showing up in Boston.

"They're passing down their beliefs," he said. "I don't know their full views, but..."

"Well, they're pro-constitutionalists," his friend Kevin Crowley, another kid from the Boston suburbs, jumped in.

"Yeah," Verrette affirmed. "I agree with them on that."

The Oath Keepers, for their part, were more than clear on why they were there.

"What's happening now is what I call the uniting of the American warrior class," E. Stewart Rhodes, the group's founder, had said earlier in the afternoon from the makeshift pulpit. 

Rhodes was addressing a crowd bearing American flags set on weighted poles that doubled as weapons, shields and Pepe the Frog masks. The scene could have easily been mistaken for bizarre medieval cosplay, if not for the Oath Keepers scattered along the perimeter, decked out in modern military fatigues.

Far-right protesters walk during the annual far-right march, which coincides with Poland's National Independence Day in Warsaw November 11, 2013. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

A far-right mass movement

Two generations of right-wing soldiers came together in Boston — the embittered young alt-righters hopped up on memes and looking for a fight, and the old guard of anti-government radicals wanting to pass the torch to a younger, more goofy generation of far-right activists. It doesn't matter if the New Right doesn't have politics of their own. They have their anger, their anxiety and, most importantly, a common enemy: the liberals that attendees in Boston so delighted in "triggering."

Verrette set off the Boston rally with a post on 4chan's /pol/ message board, a forum where the lines between sincere hate speech and provocation are intentionally obscured through irony and trolling. It was only a few days after the far-right's last big "free speech rally" exploded into a massive street brawl in Berkeley, and the call to action was clear.

Dos: Bring pepper spray, weighted gloves, heavy flagpoles, body armor and other gear for a fight. Don'ts: start the fight before anti-fascist activists, dress like a skinhead or bring deadly weapons like knives. "Boston is saturated with antifa," Verrette's original post said. "Expect a shitload to be there. They WILL be violent."

After Verrette's note, it wasn't just 4chan trolls who answered the call. Soon, an A-list of modern neo-reactionaries and militia groups had signed on, all spoiling for a fight. That fight didn't materialize in Boston — police kept the sides apart.

A projection of cyber code on a hooded man is pictured in this illustration picture taken on May 13,  2017. Capitalizing on spying tools believed to have been developed by the U.S. National Security Agency, hackers staged a cyber assault with a self-spreading malware that has infected tens of thousands of computers in nearly 100 countries. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Fighting, though, isn't the sole purpose of the rallies. While the absence of violence in Boston meant there wasn't much splashy news coverage, the rally nonetheless accomplished a far-right goal of coalition building. There are bonds being forged in battle preparations — even absent the battle — that are bringing together activists with profiles ranging from middle-aged combat veterans to couch-addled teenage gamers.

In this, the alt-right is borrowing from the organization of its very foils on the left. Liberals and progressives have been busy organizing mass protest movements that can spring quickly into action. The Women's March on Washington built a rapid response network that led to the mobilization at airports across the country during the so-called Muslim ban.

And the People's Climate March included a week's worth of programming on movement building and training candidates. United by the banner of opposing President Donald Trump's agenda, disparate progressive interest groups are showing solidarity and working together.

So, too, is the American far-right uniting. Factional divides are set aside in favor of shows of force. It's ultimately a practical tack. "If you're so far to the right that you've been excluded from mainstream American political discourse, you'll take whatever you can get to get your message back into the mainstream," said Alice Marwick, who recently co-published a study from the Data & Society Research Institute on the emergence of the new far-right.

The rallies like the one in Boston represent the dawn of a new and frightening mass movement.

"My goal is to get the younger generation, born well after me, to get them back in."

The organizing was evident on the dais at Boston Common. During the afternoon, a 4channer who goes by the name "John Rasmussen" took to the dais to give rapid-fire talking points on gaining political power — identifying central causes, sending out letters for a campaign, building roots with influential members of the community, participating in local meetings, finding local allies and, eventually, getting into local government. Rasmussen, who says he has served on his local school board in Maine, wants his fellow reactionaries to get off the internet and into local office.

"You need to be ask to be appointed to the planning board, ask to be appointed to the board of appeals, all of these boards municipalities create to make bureaucratic work for us," he said. "And once you're in it, you can get rid of it. You really can. It's remarkable."

Computer hacker

Rasmussen was an organizer with Occupy Maine before being becoming a self-professed millennial "/pol/ack"— or a devotee of 4chan's politics message board. He spent time throughout the rally with the small group of teenage organizers he sees as the next big opportunity to put reactionaries into power.

"My generation's been so cast aside by the political system by the elite who are trying to maintain their generation's control over everything, they didn't bring my generation in," Rasmussen said. "My goal is to get the younger generation, born well after me, to get them back in."

It's not entirely clear the younger generations want in — or what they want into. While Rasmussen spoke, the younger crowd, bearing the flag of Kekistan, a fictionalized right-wing country born out of gamers' imaginations, stood taunting the antifa on the front lines.

The Kekistanis, however, delighted in the speech delivered by Kyle Chapman, or "Based Stick Man," an alt-right celebrity brawler famous for bloodying anti-fascists in the Battle of Berkeley. Chapman had flown into Boston thanks to a last-minute $1,500 flight; a girl who appeared to be no older than 12 wandered the common collecting donations to make up his cost.

From the dais, Chapman gave a growling sermon about demolishing what he called the George Soros-funded threat of antifa, the apparent foot soldiers of the communistic Democrats. "We need to put our foot down and make sure these sons of bitches don't have a foothold here like they have in Europe," Chapman shouted. "We need to crush them, destroy them. We need to demoralize them."

Behind the bandstand, a group called the Proud Boys, a traditionalist "neo-masculine" fraternity for adults, was initiating prospective members in a loose huddle. In matching black Fred Perry polo shirts, they have each prospective member recite the mantra, "I am a Proud Boy, I am a Western chauvinist and I refuse to apologize for creating the modern world." And then there's the beat-in: A handful of Proud Boys punch the initiate repeatedly until he shouts the names of five breakfast cereals.

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Each group had its own competing chants. The Proud Boys yelled "Commie faggots" in unison while the 4chan trolls preferred "Normies out!"

Militiamen, libertarians, bona fide white supremacists, "classical liberals" and men's-rights reactionaries were all brought together against a common enemy. Strange bedfellows, but necessary allies.

"Antifa, in a way, is a godsend."

Even if these disparate coalition members can't articulate a cohesive politics, they are united in what they feel is under assault: traditional values, whites, masculinity, the West, free speech and the Constitution.

"They're saying we need to hate white people, hate the people that make it great, hate all of our presidents," Liam (last name withheld), a 15-year-old wearing a pin that said "free speech is lit," told Mic. "If you stand for nationalism you stand for the Constitution, you're a bad guy. So what's being given to me, what am I inheriting? I don't know anymore. It's all going away. It's scary."

And now, these embattled, politically underdeveloped kids have a black-masked crusade to go to war with. Pro-Trump media has spent monthspainting anti-fascist violence as a new terroristic threat unknown to American politics for half a decade, paving the way for the radicalization of embittered young men who are told they're the only line of martial defense against a literal communistic threat to the country.

Rhodes, the Oath Keepers founder, remembers meeting with other veterans throughout the Obama era. He and the other old hounds of the militia movement lamented the lack of youth leadership. Rhodes wondered why his membership didn't bring along their sons and grandsons.

The Oath Keepers had been premised on preparing for violence, but it came sparingly. The looming specter of political correctness and multiculturalism didn't need to be fought with assault rifles; memes, harassment campaigns and vicious pranks were enough.

 

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With the emergence of anarchist black blocs, however, the militias have a more tangible foe to fight with in the streets.

"Antifa is now helping to galvanize and keep alive the patriot movement," Rhodes said in an interview. "The movement tends to die off during Republican administrations. Antifa, in a way, is a godsend."

The escalation is predictable. Throughout the history of anti-fascist violence, leftist resistance has been used as an excuse for building a unified, militarized front.

"Violence from opponents of fascist regimes usually gives more intense, overt power to that regime," Nitzan Lebovic, the chair on Holocaust Studies and Ethical Values at Lehigh University, told Mic shortly after Trump was elected. "In any of the cases I know, it plays right into the hands of the regime, and is used as an excuse to harshen the punitive measures against critics. It doesn't benefit those who are interested in democracy."

"Juvenility and hyper masculinity"

As the rally reached its end, the far-right activists marched together through the streets of Boston. They shouted a hodgepodge of right-wing slogans; "Blue Lives Matter,""All Lives Matter,""USA!" and "Lock her up" among them. Upon the group's return to Boston Common, the crowd of antifa had largely dispersed. "Let's take the hill!" someone shouted.

The makeshift coalition gathered for a group photo, a victory over an enemy that literally wasn't present, and was never confronted. The Oath Keepers were happy to keep things safe, but the 4channers needed to pose in costume without having worn the uniform, to take valor never won, to protect oaths they never swore.

For kids with abhorrent personal politics, the far right gives a sense of belonging. For the more mature — aging, even — militia movement, the young alt-righters provide a new energy. Along with its often wacky aesthetics, though, the alt-right brings little in the way of substance; the grizzled veterans of the Oath Keepers may yet be disappointed in their younger comrades. The two factions have the preparedness to turn toward violence in common, but even there the younger generation has a shallow approach.

Donald Trump

"The juvenility and hyper masculinity are things you see in the Chan world," Heidi Beirich, an expert on extremism with the Southern Poverty Law Center. "It seems more like a childish attempt to re-enact fight club under the banner of free speech."

"I don't know if it's a phase, or what it is."

After the rally, Verrette and his young friends were grinning from ear to ear, excited organize more events. But Verrette is not sure what's next. "I don't know," he muttered when asked. Few in the movement seem to have grappled with what comes next.

Verrette's mother Melissa, for her part, knows what she wants: for her son to grow out of the alt-right and its juvenile trolling.

"I don't know if it's a phase, or what it is," she said. "But I'm fully against it."

Not all parents are so weary. Over where the Proud Boys were initiating new recruits, somebody asked if there was an age requirement for getting beat-in. When another Proud Boy shouted "18," a tall kid with a mop of curly hair and an American flag looked back to the edge of the crowd to his father, who gave him a coy smile and nod of approval.

SEE ALSO: How the human 'punching bag’ who created one of the internet's most controversial websites is leading an unlikely second act at Google

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Starbucks shoots down viral rumor that it's giving away free coffee to undocumented immigrants (SBUX)

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Fake Starbucks news

Starbucks has shot down rumors that the coffee giant was planning to offer discounts to undocumented American immigrants.

"All undocumented Americans will receive any item on the Starbucks menu 40% off," reads a fake coupon that claimed to promote "Starbucks DREAMer Day" that has been being shared online over the last week.

Starbucks debunked rumors about a #BorderFreeCoffee promotion on Twitter over the weekend. 

"We're sorry but you've been misinformed," the company tweeted in response to a tweet accusing the chain of "pandering" to immigrants. "Starbucks is not sponsoring any such event."

The image promoting the fake promotion seems to have spread from a post on 4chan's Politically Incorrect message board.

Starbucks

The message board gained a degree of notoriety during the 2016 presidential election for spreading pro-Trump memes and fake news, such as encouraging Clinton supporters to vote via text message. 

Starbucks is known its progressive politics, including support of DACA, a program that allows undocumented students to entered the US as minors to avoid deportation. 

In January, Starbucks pledged to hire 10,000 refugees after Trump issued an executive order barring refugees from entering the US, sparking conservative boycott threats. Last year, long-time CEO and the current chairman of Starbucks' board, Howard Schultz, endorsed Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton for president.

SEE ALSO: Amazon is the new Walmart: the e-commerce giant is increasingly becoming a symbol for everything wrong with big business

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Google is touting 4Chan threads which incorrectly name the Las Vegas shooter (GOOG)

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Geary Danley

Google is touting threads from controversial message board site 4Chan as people look to find out who is behind the Las Vegas shooting massacre.

At least six threads on 4Chan wrongly named democrat Geary Danley as the shooter and Google showed them in people's search results.

Google typically shows news stories from credible sources. The company announced on Monday that it plans to make some changes to the types of stories it chooses to surface in its results.  

At least 59 people have died and 527 are injured after the deadliest mass shooting in US history took place on Sunday night in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The gunman has been identified by the authorities as Stephen Paddock. Paddock opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Casino, aiming into a close-packed crowd of many thousands of people below, who were watching a country music festival.

One publication, The Gateway Pundit, ran a now-deleted story where it said Danley murdered at least 20 concertgoers.

Danley's name is also being circulated by far-right Twitter accounts. He is being called a "neo-liberal" and "alt-left".

Google did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

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Internet trolls are spreading fake Starbucks coupons exclusively for black customers after the chain announced it would close all stores for 'racial-bias education' (SBUX)

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Starbucks

  • Fake free Starbucks coupons for customers of "African-American heritage" are circulating on social media.
  • Controversial website 4chan seems to be the source of the hoax, with coupons containing hidden racial slurs and white-supremacist messages. 
  • Starbucks told Business Insider that the coupons are "completely false." 
  • Starbucks is closing all US stores on May 29 to "conduct racial-bias education" for workers after two black men were arrested in a Philadelphia location. 

 

Internet trolls are distributing fake coupons for black people to get free coffee at Starbucks. 

On Tuesday, Starbucks announced plans to close all its stores nationwide in the wake of an incident in which two black men were arrested at a Philadelphia location.

Soon after, fake coupons began circulating on social media, promising free drinks for "people of color" or customers of "African-American heritage." 

"This is completely false and in no way associated with Starbucks," a Starbucks representative told Business Insider in an email. 

Screen Shot 2018 04 18 at 8.58.41 AM

"The best dialogue starts over a cup of coffee and we'd like to buy you one," reads one fake flyer, with the coupon stating it is limited "to persons of African American heritage and/or identity at time of exchange." 

Screen Shot 2018 04 18 at 9.05.03 AM

Baristas are instructed to use discount code 1488, the combination of two numbers that have become symbols of white supremacy. The QR code for the coupon links to a website page that translates the code as the n-word.

Among the accounts sharing the fake coupon were Gab, a social network known for its popularity among far-right figures that have been banned from other platforms, and Daryush "Roosh V" Valizadeh, a controversial pick-up artist and blogger. 

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The hoax seems to have originated from 4chan's Politically Incorrect message board, /pol/. The website gained a degree of notoriety during the 2016 presidential election for spreading pro-Trump memes and fake news, including messages that encouraged Hillary Clinton supporters to vote via text message.

Screen Shot 2018 04 18 at 9.06.32 AM

This isn't the first time 4chan has targeted Starbucks for a viral hoax. In 2017, the website created fake coupons that claimed to promote "Starbucks DREAMer Day" by giving discounts to undocumented immigrants.

On Tuesday, Starbucks announced it plans to close its more than 8,000 locations in the US for the afternoon of May 29 to "conduct racial-bias education geared toward preventing discrimination in our stores." The training will cover topics such as "implicit bias" and "conscious inclusion."

The decision to close stores for a training comes after footage of two black men being arrested at a Philadelphia location of the coffee chain went viral. Employees called the police when the men refused to leave the Starbucks after asking to use the restroom without having purchased any drinks.

SEE ALSO: Starbucks is closing all locations in response to the arrest of 2 black men who tried to use a store's bathroom — and it's sparking a culture war on all sides

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'Fortnite' is finally coming to the Nintendo Switch

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  • The world's most popular game, "Fortnite," looks to be headed to Nintendo's Switch console.
  • The game showed up as rated by the Korean Game Rating and Administration Committee — one of the final steps before launch.
  • Epic Games, the maker of "Fortnite," has yet to officially confirm the Switch version of the game.


"Fortnite" is on pretty much every platform except for Nintendo Switch — and it looks like that's about to change. 

The world's most popular game popped up on the Korean Game Rating and Administration Committee database overnight, specifically listed for the Nintendo Switch. The game's rating applicant is listed as "Epic Games Korea," and Nintendo Switch is the only platform it's being rated on.

Though "Fortnite" hasn't been announced as coming to Switch, the rating is as close as it gets to an official reveal without Epic Games just announcing it.

Games tend to pass through ratings boards like the ESRB in North America, PEGI in Europe, and the GRAC in South Korea as one of the last certifications before launch. That could mean that "Fortnite" is coming to the Nintendo Switch sooner than later.

Fortnite on Switch

The certification is further backed up by an image that popped up on 4chan overnight that spells out some of Nintendo's plans for E3 2018. 

The image points to "Fortnite" and a slew of other unannounced games as headed to the Switch, including known quantities like "Mario Tennis Aces" and unknowns like "Dragon Ball FighterZ." Neither Nintendo nor Epic Games responded to request for comment as of publishing.

SEE ALSO: Why isn't Fortnite, the world's most popular game, on Nintendo's Switch?

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'OriginalGuy': The Full Story Of The iCloud Hacker Who Leaked Those Naked Celebrity Photos

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After private photographs of some of the most famous women in the world were posted online, journalists, PR representatives, and curious internet users scrambled to figure out how a nameless hacker had gained access to the cellphones of the rich and famous.

When shocked internet users on underground forums tracked down the person believed to be behind the leak, his explanation was startlingly simple: iCloud. 

After hundreds of private photographs were posted online, many commenters struggled to believe that someone had gained access to Apple's online service. The tech giant's online storage and backup service is praised by the company for its simplicity, that it "just works." And the hack could not have come at a worse time for Apple, which on Tuesday will stage its biggest event of the year: the launch of iPhone 6, a smartwatch, and a new operating system for its Macs, all of which are likely to have new features linked to iCloud.

As leaked photographs continued to be posted online, theories emerged regarding their source. Some suggested that a "brute force" hack recently unveiled by Russian security researchers was to blame, while some internet commenters wondered whether venue Wi-Fi at the Emmy Awards had been compromised. But the truth is far more disturbing: The leaked celebrity photos don't originate from a single hack but instead from a collector who gradually added to his haul over months before suddenly deciding to post it online. 

This is the story of that collector, who goes by the screen name "OriginalGuy."

AnonIB: The Offshoot Hacker Community

The anonymous online forum AnonIB launched in May 2006 as an offshoot of the notorious image board 4chan. By mid-2006, 4chan's infamous /b/ forum had become a hostile mess of child pornography, Anonymous hackers, and online trolls. On Aug. 23, 4chan came under a DDoS attack launched by its own users, and many frequent posters left the site to seek alternative message boards. A group of longtime 4chan posters arrived at AnonIB, which offered a near-identical service.

As AnonIB grew in popularity, the site's administrators relaxed the rules. Child pornography and other illegal content were frequently posted on AnonIB, which eventually led to a series of FBI raids on the forum's servers and administrators. After years of upheaval, the site reappeared earlier this year, and the users returned to posting.

iCloud Hacking Ring

As well as hosting vast amounts of pornography, AnonIB also plays host to a ring of skilled hackers who have learned how to obtain naked photographs of women by breaking into iCloud accounts. 

The /stol/ board on AnonIB (short for "Stolen" or "Obtained Photos") serves as a global meeting hub for iCloud hackers. Using specialist password-cracking tools and guessing targets' security questions through Apple's iForgot password reset form, AnonIB hackers are consistently able to gain access to iCloud accounts with only an email address.

anonIB iCloud hacker screenshot

Once inside, the hackers get to work to extract photographs as quickly as possible, using file-retrieval software to download photo backups.

Data retrieval tool for iCloud

'OriginalGuy' The Porn Collector

The leaked celebrity photos weren't the result of a single hack but were instead hoarded over a period of months by one well-connected figure in underworld porn forums. As the Daily Mail reports, AnonIB user "OriginalGuy" has been identified as the source of the leaks, and posts seen by Business Insider on both AnonIB and 4Chan indicate that he has regularly contributed to celebrity porn threads on both sites. But despite knowing the user who leaked the trove of images, we still don't know the identities behind the hackers. 

In a post on AnonIB shortly after the main leak of celebrity photos, OriginalGuy explained to other users how he had built up a collection of photos so explosive that image boards were struggling to keep up with page views.

AnonIB screenshotThe post above makes it clear that the naked celebrity photographs were assembled over a period of months by a team of collectors who specialized in valuable celebrity pornography.

On Tuesday, Apple released a statement that appears to confirm that the exploit favored by users of AnonIB was used to hack into celebrity iCloud accounts. Within the statement, Apple blames "a very targeted attack on user names, passwords, and security questions, a practice that has become all too common on the Internet."

AnonIB hackers use email addresses, password-cracking software, and weak security questions to hack accounts, making it quite likely that the tactics of the hackers at AnonIB were used to gain access to the celebrity photos. 

The Nuclear Option

One of the most puzzling parts of the celebrity photo leak is why OriginalGuy decided to share his collection at all. With a haul built up over months, the collector claimed to have spent his own money on images of big-name celebrities. Why, then, were photos posted online on a quiet Sunday afternoon before Labor Day? 

Pornography hoarders often do not possess skills or talents that they can use online, like an ability to hack. Instead, hoarders are defined by the content they keep. One of the internet's most legendary digital hoarders was "Freezer," a poster on invite-only torrent networks who repeatedly taunted other users with details about the rare music he owned. After his death, it was discovered that Freezer had taken his collection to the grave, asking his family in his will to destroy all the tapes. Whether pornography or music, the knowledge that you possess content nobody else does can be a powerful intoxicant.

So if porn collections are so valuable, why did OriginalGuy post his? It seems that OriginalGuy had a sudden realization that his collection wasn't so valuable after all.

anonIB screenshot
Rumors of "major win" had circulated online for weeks before the leak. "Win" is a term used to refer to naked or sexual images of women found through hacking their online accounts. It's possible that part of OriginalGuy's collection had, against his knowledge, been sold to somebody else.

OriginalGuy admitted to paying "a lot via bitcoin" for a portion of the images when they were being traded between celebrity porn collectors on Friday and Saturday. As Deadspin reports, photographs had been shared online for weeks before OriginalGuy purchased them, potentially rendering his collection of little value.

Hours before the photos emerged, posters on AnonIB caught wind of a coming leak of celebrity images. While you might expect pornography fans to react with excitement over such news, many were terrified of what would happen next.

anonIB screenshotOriginalGuy knew that leaking his collection would have dire consequences for the iCloud hackers at /stol/ and the celebrity porn fans at 4chan. Whether he was angry over discovering that his collection was already online, or disappointed to learn that about 30% of his images were fake, OriginalGuy took to AnonIB on the afternoon before Labor Day to begin sharing his collection.

The Leak

The first site that OriginalGuy visited was AnonIB, his online "home." Censored versions of the leaked photographs were posted first to persuade users to donate bitcoin to see the full versions. 

AnonIB
OriginalGuy seemed aware that his actions were going to bring down the iCloud hackers and celebrity photo-trading ring, remarking that the "bubble" was "going to burst soon." His posts became increasingly frantic as he either expressed frustration over a lack of bitcoin donations, or thanked users for sending him the digital currency. 

After posting photos of Jennifer Lawrence on AnonIB, it seems that OriginalGuy has trouble connecting to the site. Commenting after the hack, OriginalGuy gave insight into what happened as he was leaking the images:

I didn't take the money and run. Shit got weird once I started posting samples. AnonIB must have IP blocked me. I was spending all of my time trying to find proxies, and then when I could get on the site, was being hammered by everyone and I couldn't even post. I got some private requests through email, but none ever came through. People wanted shit for free. Sure, I got $120 with my Bitcoin address, but when you consider how much time was spent acquiring this stuff (I'm not the hacker, just a collector), and the money (I paid a lot via Bitcoin as well to get certain sets when this stuff was being privately traded on Friday/Saturday) I really didn't get close to what I was hoping for. Mainly because of the extra Bitcoin spammers spamming their own address ... I proved I had shit, but people wanted more and more for free ... When I posted samples, someone was tracking me, trying to find me. My ISP kept cutting out. Weird emails were coming in. It kinda freaked me out and I had to leave for a couple of hours.

It's unclear whether OriginalGuy then visited 4chan to continue posting his images, or whether someone else with access to the collection, sensing that OriginalGuy had decided to cash in, began posting instead. Either way, once the images appeared on the more popular message board, the leak quickly attracted thousands of internet users. A Reddit live thread was created to catalogue and archive the images as they appeared, although it later buckled under the traffic it received.

The Aftermath

After OriginalGuy "dumped" his collection, many experienced iCloud hackers and celebrity photo traders declared the industry over. Following the hack, posters on AnonIB discussed the repercussions for their industry.

AnonIB screenshot While iCloud hackers might believe that their exploit will be closed, Apple has yet to make changes to the iForgot password reset system. OriginalGuy never returned to leak more of his collection, perhaps realizing that his postings on underground web forums were attracting widespread attention. And as for AnonIB, the site remains live, and iCloud hackers are continuing to advertise their skills to users looking to steal naked photographs of women on the internet.


NOW WATCH: Facebook And Google 'Degrade Our Humanity,' Says 4chan Founder

 

SEE ALSO: Inside The iCloud-Hacking Ring That Leaked Those Naked Celebrity Photos

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New Zealand's Internet Crashed After Users Clicked Infected Links To Jennifer Lawrence's Nude Photos

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New Zealand's main internet provider, Spark, suffered a major nationwide failure this weekend after a handful of users found themselves installing malware on their computers when they clicked on links promising nude photos of celebrities. 

On Aug. 31, a massive hack led to a leak of tons of nude photos of major celebrities. Jennifer Lawrence, Ariana Grande, and Kim Kardashian were all victims of the breach after their private images were taken out of their iCloud storage systems and posted to online communities within Reddit and 4chan.

New Zealand residents looking to see the photos for themselves ended up turning Spark on its head, causing 600,000 users to be down and out of an internet connection for over 24 hours.

The New Zealand Herald reports "Spark said it was aware that when people clicked on some celebrity nude snaps, they've inadvertently installed the kind of software that created distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks such as this weekend's," but said it wasn't entirely clear that the frenzy for nude images was what caused the unusual failure.

But security experts TrendMicro tells Stuff.Co.NZ that they traced the malignant links back to Twitter, where a user tweeted a link with "hashtags that contain the name of one of the leak's victims - Jennifer Lawrence."

Spark spokesman Conor Roberts said the internet was back to normal a day later, warning users to "not click on 'dodgy' emails and files if they did not know what was in them or where they came from."

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4chan Hackers Are Threatening To Post Naked Photographs Of Emma Watson

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Emma Watson

A 4chan user has created an ominous countdown site that hints at the release of leaked naked photographs of the actress Emma Watson in just over four days. 

"Emma You Are Next" features a photograph of Emma Watson wiping away a tear, as well as a countdown timer, the 4chan logo, and a message that reads "Never forget, the biggest to come thus far."

It is never explicitly stated what the site is counting down to, but it follows a wave of new leaked photographs posted on 4chan of Jennifer Lawrence, Rihanna, and other stars who were included on the original list of celebrities affected by the iCloud hack.

Emma You Are Next 4chan countdown page to new iCloud leak

However, while it's not outlandish to claim that Emma Watson may have fallen victim to the same iCloud security exploit that has affected other female celebrities, it's likely that the countdown site is nothing more than a prank designed to increase the notoriety of anonymous message board 4chan.

4chan is a notorious online messageboard and was blamed for the original set of leaked iCloud photos. The site's anonymous users often launch pranks and hoaxes to laugh at other internet users and also to further worsen the site's reputation. In the past, 4chan users have tried to persuade people to microwave their iPhones, break their Xbox consoles, #EndFathersDay, and self-harm for Justin Bieber.

Fake countdown sites are a classic tactic for internet pranksters. In 2013, a prankster created a countdown site promising to reveal a message from Brian, the dog who died in the TV show Family Guy. 20th Century Fox denied that the site was authentic. Again in 2013, a cryptic site was revealed that seemed to hint at a new game in the blockbuster "Fallout" series. The site's creator eventually owned up to the prank, remarking "I'm a douche," after thousands of internet users investigated the countdown's origins.


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SEE ALSO: New Nude Photos Of Jennifer Lawrence Appear On Reddit After Another Round Of Hacking

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The Emma Watson Naked Photo Countdown Was The Work Of Serial Internet Hoaxers

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emma watson

A mysterious countdown website emerged on Monday that hinted at the imminent reveal of naked photographs of the actress Emma Watson, stolen using the same iCloud vulnerability that hackers used to steal photographs of stars like Kate Upton and Jennifer Lawrence. 

As Business Insider reported on Monday, it's highly unlikely that anyone has naked photographs of Emma Watson (we probably would have seen them by now, because she's a top target for iCloud hackers). Instead the site seemed like an obvious prank designed to discredit 4chan users. 

Sure enough, when the countdown came to an end, the site redirected to the website of a company named Rantic Marketing, which appears to be a viral marketing agency. But here's where this gets really interesting: Rantic Marketing doesn't exist. This wasn't a marketing stunt at all, but a social experiment run by the most notorious gang of pranksters on the internet.

Visitors to the homepage of fake company Rantic Marketing are met with a striking message calling on the US government to shut down anonymous message board 4chan, the site widely blamed for spreading the leaked celebrity photographs that emerged after the iCloud hack. 

Fake Rantic Marketing 4chan screenshot

The smartly designed website goes on to plead with readers to join them in shutting down 4chan, stating that "together we can make a change." Rantic Marketing's website also features a strongly worded open letter, addressing President Barack Obama, that claims the company was hired by celebrity publicists in an effort to limit the damage caused by the iCloud photo leak.

What news sites around the world have failed to realize is that Rantic Marketing itself is yet another viral stunt. The rantic.com website is another prank, just like the fake Emma Watson countdown timer fooled the internet. One obvious clue can be found at the bottom of the open letter to Obama. In the description of the company that follows the impassioned plea, the CEO is named "Brad Cockingham." 

Rantic Marketing is a fake company run by a gang of prolific internet spammers used to quickly capitalize on internet trends for page views. The group goes by a variety of different names. Collectively, they're known as SocialVEVO, but as the Daily Dot reports, their names are alleged to include Jacob Povolotski, Yasha Swag, Swenzy, and Joey B. The only known video footage of the group is a rap song about pickles that they used dubious spam techniques to make incredibly popular. The song used to have more than eight million views on YouTube.

 

Previously, Rantic Marketing was the source of rumors that the video game Grand Theft Auto V's release for the PC had been canceled. The fake company then changed its website to make it seem it had been hacked by 4chan. There's no evidence to suggest that 4chan ever hacked the Rantic Marketing website, and instead it appears that the fake company modified the site itself for publicity.

Fake Rantic Marketing 4chan hack screenshot

Another "victory" for the internet hoax squad was a fake countdown site that promised to reveal a message from Brian, the cartoon dog who died on the TV show Family Guy. The countdown site went live in December 2013, just as the show ran a plot line that temporarily killed off the character. Distraught fans, anxious to hear about the fate of the beloved character, fell for the countdown.

Brain Family Guy fake countdown

So how does a fake marketing company manage to fool the internet so consistently? It's all thanks to its secret weapon: Fox Weekly. Don't worry if you've never heard of that particular Fox vertical, because it's not real. As the Daily Dot reported back in May, Fox Weekly is a fake news site that the internet pranksters use to steal articles and share stories about their fake sites. 

The fake Emma Watson countdown site was first written about by, you guessed it, the fake news site Fox Weekly. In a now-deleted article, the site asks whether 4chan hackers are about to reveal naked photographs of the actress. Of course, the author of that article knew at the time that there weren't any photographs, because they had also created the countdown site itself.

Fox Weekly fake article on Emma Watson countdown


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SEE ALSO: 4chan Hackers Are Threatening To Post Naked Photographs Of Emma Watson

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Here's Why 4Chan Can Host Nude Images Without People's Permission

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jennifer lawrence oscars academy awards winter's bone

The news Friday that hackers released at least 100,000 Snapshot photos, including underage nude photos, onto the infamous chat forum 4chan raises the question of who will be punished for this latest violation.

The release comes after hackers stole celebrities' nude photos, which were reposted on a Reddit thread called "The Fappening." Reddit and 4chan are both providing a forum for hackers to violate the privacy of celebrities, and now, private individuals through the hack known as "the Snappening."

But there's a US law that may protect Reddit and 4chan from getting sued over some of these images, as Esquire has noted. Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act provides immunity from liability for websites that publish information that's provided by other parties. (Hunter Moore, the man behind a notorious "revenge porn" website, has said Section 230 protected his enterprise.)

The 1996 law, passed as the internet was rapidly growing, has been credited with helping social websites like Craigslist and Reddit flourish because they don't have to worry about getting sued over content that other people post on their sites.

"Websites enjoy wide immunity for publishing user-generated content," law professors Danielle Citron and Neil Richards wrote in Forbes last month. "Although courts disagree on how to interpret it, a few have held that even deliberate decisions to republish content knowing it may violate the law enjoys immunity from liability." 

However, there are exceptions to Section 230's immunity. For one thing, nothing in Section 230 protects online publishers of third-party content from criminal prosecution for the sexual exploitation of children. That exception suggests 4chan could be prosecuted for pictures of underage people included in "The Snappening," which could technically qualify as child porn. Indeed, Reddit has removed underage photos from the site, including pictures of the gymnast McKayla Maroney.

Another big exception is copyright law. If Jennifer Lawrence (the most high-profile celebrity hacking victim) took nude photos of herself, she might be able to file a successful copyright suit against websites that posted her nude images. As an apparent move to avoid such lawsuits, in the wake of the celebrity photo hack 4chan agreed to remove content when notified of "bona fide infringement,"Ars Technica has reported


NOW WATCH: Scientists Say This Is Why You Hate The Sound Of Your Own Voice

SEE ALSO: Hackers Access At Least 100,000 Snapchat Photos And Prepare To Leak Them, Including Underage Nude Pictures

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