Anonymous ID: e8331d July 22, 2020, 11:19 a.m. No.10046124   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6126

The meme warehouse is updated.

 

Meme Ammo Depository

Through tempest, storm,

And darkest night,

Anons don't rest

'Til things are right.

 

PUT memes into QResearch's current memes bread (Memes59 >>>/qresearch/9786152 ,

https://8kun.top/qresearch/res/9786152.html , Memes60 >>>/qresearch/10031965 ,

https://8kun.top/qresearch/res/10031965.html )

if you want them warehoused for sharing with the commUnity

GET memes from the Meme Warehouse--the latest, greatest, tagged, indexed, reformatted, compacted memes created by our memers and/or gathered by scouts

USE the Meme Warehouse CATALOG to access over 77,000 indexed memes:

https://mega.nz/folder/VcZBSQpA#QyzqtX6hyKeUbNI6Nv2noA

This new system became effective July 10th. As the commUnity grows, we are sharing the Meme Warehouse with keyboard warriors beyond QResearch.

 

>>10045404

Anonymous ID: e8331d July 22, 2020, 11:19 a.m. No.10046126   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>10046124

>>3220

From Memefarmer's Tao of Memes

 

If social media start banning accounts because they recognize certain memes, we may be able to foil this, least temporarily, by subtly altering our images.

Software generally uses a hash function (a special kind of cryptographic sum) to recognize that an image is the same as another image.

To change the hash of an image: you just need to cause one byte (or more) in the file to change. And that is easy. A skilled memer can change the image in a way that no one can recognize visually.

But anybody can do it. It's not difficult at all.

Open the image in your art program. (MS Paint, Inkscape, gimp, photoshop, etc.)

Any of the following changes will make it a completely different image, from the standpoint of software that compares images by comparing their hash function.

 

Change a pixel

Resize / scale / crop

Add text or marking

Blur

Sharpen

Change color: contrast, grayscale, saturation, lightness

Save the image in a different format: .jpg, .png, .gif

etc.

If it comes to that, we can make a tool (using e.g. ImageMagick command line) to batch-process existing images into "new" images.

 

Notice that Q's last post showed a GRAYSCALE version of a qmap.pub screencap. That's EXACTLY what I'm talking about.