Anonymous ID: 560388 Jan. 27, 2019, 1:17 a.m. No.4925913   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6494 >>6603

>>4924167 lb

>>4924218 lb

>>4921315 lb

>>4924220 lb

>>4925010 lb

 

Has anyone come up with any proof of Buzzfeed's story that

4chan is shutting down? I searched several ways on DDG and CNN with no luck. I suspect StacyGoldberg488 is trolling in response to the story below.

 

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https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/4chan-trolls-flood-laid-huffpost-buzzfeed-reporters-death-threats-n963001

 

4chan trolls flood laid off HuffPost, BuzzFeed reporters with death threats

 

The threats are part of a coordinated campaign organized on the far-right message board.

By Ben Collins

Jan. 25, 2019, 4:43 PM EST

 

Shortly after he tweeted the news of his own layoff, Nick Wing checked his inbox at HuffPost and saw an email with a few pictures from a troll.

 

One was an image of President Trump, and another was a Photoshopped meme of Fox News’ Tucker Carlson. The edited image shows two bodies hanging from a tree next to the words “Day of the Rope,” a far-right meme about their desire to execute journalists. Underneath Carlson, where the scrolling cable news ticker would usually appear, it reads “JUST KILL THEM. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN.”

 

Wing was one of many journalists who were let go by BuzzFeed and HuffPost this week and were sent death threats from trolls organizing their efforts on the far-right message board 4chan. Many of those targeted by the harassment campaign did not cover the far-right, including Wing, whose beat focused on inequality and guns.

 

“It really is upsetting to see such outright animus toward the entire journalism profession, to the point where trolls are openly reveling in people’s misfortune or even working to make it worse. But ultimately I think it says more about their character than anything,” Wing told NBC News.

 

“What sort of sad and pathetic human being do you have to be to do that?”

 

Tweets sent from trolls to Wing that included everything from threats to racial slurs to images of swastikas remained visible on Twitter hours after they were posted.

 

BuzzFeed and HuffPost both laid off substantial portions of its newsrooms this week. BuzzFeed said it would cut about 15 percent of its workforce, and layoffs began Friday. HuffPost’s parent company, Verizon, promised to cut 7 percent of workers from its media division, and those layoffs began Thursday.

 

Talia Lavin, a freelance writer whose primary income was a political column for HuffPost before her editors were laid off this week, found 4chan threads with users bragging about “taunting them with my sock puppet Twitter.”

 

“I’m gonna burn so many sock (puppet accounts), I can not help, but gloat to the max,” one user wrote. Another user implored others to “hammer these [expletive] hard and tell them to learn to code.”

 

Lavin was inundated with sexist and anti-semitic slurs, including one calling her “oven-ready,” and outright threats on Twitter and Instagram, both as replies to tweets and direct messages. One troll even sent a taunting message to her PayPal account.

 

Lavin said she was able to identify the origins of the campaign because of the “uniformity of the responses,” noting they all began with tweets of the same memes before using varied racial slurs and threats. She said she believes the social media companies could be more proactive in finding and taking down these accounts.

 

“It's particularly hard to police when it comes from other sites and migrates to another platform,” said Lavin. “But use of the same phrase, lots of blocks (from users) in a short amount of time—these are clues.”

 

A Twitter spokesperson told NBC News it’s taking steps to prevent brigading, the process of coordinating a hate campaign on one site that is later deployed on targets on another site, that are targeting journalists on its platform.

 

"We are disheartened about the layoffs many journalists are facing right now and are working to prevent people coordinating on other services from making the situation worse. We are taking action on content that violates our rules and will continue to do so,” the Twitter spokesperson said.

 

The death threat using Carlson’s Photoshopped meme that was sent to Wing, for example, remains prevalent on troll sites like 4chan and on pages hosted by social media giants like Twitter and YouTube. The image was created by an account that frequently posts images about killing journalists on Gab, a social network that attracts mostly far-right users.

 

One YouTube video using the image as a thumbnail has over 17,000 views. Others linger in the replies of journalists’ Twitter accounts.

 

“You never know how seriously to take these sorts of things, but it’s not like attacks against the press are unprecedented,” Wing said. “It hasn’t even been that long since a gunman killed five journalists at a Maryland newsroom. The president continues to constantly attack the media, using language that these sorts of trolls now parrot ad infinitum."

 

[Moar at website]

Anonymous ID: 560388 Jan. 27, 2019, 1:31 a.m. No.4925968   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6494 >>6603

Thought I'd post some info about how Hiroyuki Nishimura fits into the 4chan scheme of things.

 

https://www.reddit.com/r/4chan/comments/3lt1gv/4chan_is_now_owned_by_hiroyuki_nishimura_founder/

 

———————-

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4chan

(and, for good measure, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8chan)

———————-

 

https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurenorsini/2015/09/23/4chan-sold-hiroyuki-nishimura-qa-christoper-poole-moot-new-owner/#5480c4ca55f5

 

'Welcome To 4chan, B***h': Site's Users Greet Their New Overlord

Lauren Orsini

22,808 views|Sep 23, 2015, 01:11pm

 

On Tuesday, new 4chan owner Hiroyuki Nishimura held a Q&A for his community. Naturally, 4chan users treated it as a hazing ritual.

 

Nishimura gave as good as he got, indicating he knew exactly what he was getting into. The founder of 2Channel, the anonymous Japanese culture message board that inspired Christopher Poole to build 4chan, he’s the man Poole called “the great-grandfather of all of this.”

 

4chan usernames are both anonymous and temporary, so the original Q&A is already gone from the boards. However, the 8 p.m. ET session is preserved for posterity on an unofficial 4chan archiving site and in a 41-page Google Document, racial slurs, swearwords, and all. If that’s a bit racy or lengthy for you, I’ve collected some of the highlights.

 

4chan’s new owner is pretty hard to troll.

 

Nishimura opened the conversation with an open poll asking users to pick his next username. Just as Poole went by “moot” on 4chan, Nishimura plans to have a moniker, too.

 

Not surprisingly, 4chan users outdid themselves, submitting outlandishly obnoxious suggestions for Nishimura, from the culturally offensive “Hiroshima Nagasaki” to the obligatory 4chan stab at his sexuality, “Faglord” to Asian (albeit inaccurate) slurs such as “gook.”. Nishimura, unfazed, responded in kind, answering the question, “How small is your penis?” with, “Same as yours.”

 

Nishimura’s English is good and his 4chan literacy is even better.

 

A Japanese citizen, Nishimura learned English while studying at Central Arkansas University as an exchange student. When a 4chan user asked him whether it was easy to learn English, Nishimura replied, “easier than French.”

 

Nishimura told users that he’s spent time lurking 4chan “since [he] met moot.’” When asked if he would be making any major changes to 4chan, Nishimura responded, “What is significant other than [a link to “Never Gonna Give You Up” by Rick Astley].” (This is a 4chan-born meme called Rick Rolling that users are more than familiar with.)

 

He’s been planning to buy 4chan for a while.

 

Nishimura and Poole have been friends since they met at South By Southwest in 2011 and meet up to go drinking every time Poole visits Tokyo.

 

It was during one of these outings when Nishimura decided to buy the site. “Moot came to tokyo and we [got] drunk,” Nishimura recalled. “Then he said he wanted to quit. But he and I want 4chan survive,” and that’s when Nishimura offered to buy the site. “Someone has to continue 4chan,” he said, adding that “I borrowed money” to make the purchase.

 

Nishimura says he doesn’t sell user data.

 

Several users repeatedly asked Nishimura about accusations that he mined 2Channel for user data to sell to marketers, a practice which Nishimura has repeatedly spoken out against. This is reportedly why Nishimura is no longer involved with the messageboard he founded.

 

Nishimura repeatedly stated that the data was stolen from 2Channel. “Actually, I have sued them in Japan. The lawsuit starts [in] Nov. If I do illegal things, why wouldn’t they sue me?

 

Instead of that, I have sued them because they are liars.”

 

Users continued to bring the topic up during the interview, and each subsequent time, Nishimura simply stated: “I'm happy that there is no stupid 4chan users who easily are deceived without any evidence.”

 

He watches a lot of anime.

 

This shouldn’t be any surprise, given that Nishimura founded and ran an anime and Japanese culture messageboard for years. Nishimura responded to user questions with references to anime like Gurren Lagann and noted his hopes for the anime industry’s future.

 

4chan users repeatedly asked Nishimura if he preferred “Asuka or Rei,” referencing two female characters on Neon Genesis Evangelion, a ‘90s Japanese cartoon show. Nishimura showed his fan cred by noting the show was old news to him: “I don't know why you guy like EVA so much. It was 20 years ago?” (After continued prodding, however, he admitted “Asuka.”)

 

[Moar at website]