Register a SA Forums Account here!
JOINING THE SA FORUMS WILL REMOVE THIS BIG AD, THE ANNOYING UNDERLINED ADS, AND STUPID INTERSTITIAL ADS!!!

You can: log in, read the tech support FAQ, or request your lost password. This dumb message (and those ads) will appear on every screen until you register! Get rid of this crap by registering your own SA Forums Account and joining roughly 150,000 Goons, for the one-time price of $9.95! We charge money because it costs us money per month for bills, and since we don't believe in showing ads to our users, we try to make the money back through forum registrations.
 
  • Locked thread
Rocko Bonaparte
Mar 12, 2002

Every day is Friday!
My wife caught this on Twitter and found it to, well, be a poor summary of what all went down. Or rather, it is insufficient to describe the human (mis)behavior that has gotten us to right here, right now. She commented on it and started to get questions from, well, serious people.

People want to know what the hell happened over a decade ago that got the world to alt-right Internet troll Pepe :barf:.

So here's part of the article. In particular, the part at the beginning about the Something Awful/4chan thing.

"Some dude on the Internet published: posted:

1. Born from Something Awful
Around 2005 or so a strange link started showing up in my old webcomic’s referral logs. This new site I didn’t understand. It was a bulletin board, but its system of navigation was opaque. Counter intuitively, you had to hit “reply” to read a thread. Moreover, the content was bizarre nonsense.

The site, if you hadn’t guessed, was 4chan.org. It was an offshoot of a different message board which I also knew from my referral logs, “Something Awful”, at the time, an online community of a few hundred nerds who liked comics, video games, and well, nerds things. But unlike boards with similar content, Something Awful skewed toward dark jokes. I had an account at Something Awful, which I used sometimes to post in threads about my comic.

4chan had been created by a 15 year old Something Awful user named Christopher Poole (whose 4chan mod name was “m00t”). Poole had adapted a type of Japanese bulletin board software which was difficult to understand at first, but once learned, was far more fun to post in than the traditional American format used by S.A., as a result the site became popular very quickly.

These days, 4chan appears in the news almost weekly. This past week, there were riots at Berkeley in the wake of the scheduled lecture by their most prominent supporter, Milo Yiannopoulos. The week before that neo-Nazi Richard Spencer pointed to his 4chan inspired Pepe the Frog pin, about to explain the significance when an anti-fascist protester punched him in the face. The week before that, 4chan claimed (falsely) it had fabricated the so called Trump “Kompromat”. And the week before that, in the wake of the fire at Ghost Ship, 4chan decided to make war on “liberal safe spaces” and DIY venues across the country.

How did we get here? What is 4chan exactly? And how did a website about anime become the avant garde of the far right? Mixed up with fascist movements, international intrigue, and Trump iconography? How do we interpret it all?
At the very beginning, 4chan met once a year in only one place in the world: Baltimore, Maryland at the anime convention, Otakon. As a nerdy teen growing up in Baltimore in the 90s, I had wandered into Otakon much like I had later wandered into 4chan, just when it was starting. I also attended Otakon in the mid-aughts when 4chan met there, likewise to promote my webcomic.

As someone who has witnessed 4chan grow from a group of adolescent boys who could fit into a single room at my local anime convention to a worldwide coalition of right wing extremists (which is still somehow also a message board about anime), I feel I have some obligation to explain.

This essay is an attempt to untangle the threads of 4chan and the far right.

Now there is where I'd say some stuff to all the young whippersnappers, but I have seen much better details of things from others on here than I ever saw. Hell, I vaguely recall 4chan starting around 2005, when it really started in 2003. God drat! So I'm more asking than telling to figure out what the evolution was.

My executive's-abridged understanding of all this is:
1. Once upon a time, Something Awful really did have lots and lots of assholes. We like to joke, but yes, real assholes. Forum invasions were a sanctioned event that would leak over into doxxing. It was considered funny. Anybody who called it out was told, "it's called Something Awful. What did you expect?"
2. During that time, FYAD was it's own wonderful world of animated hello.jpgs among other things. Some (apparently very left-winging) people would blow steam by assuming personas of angry racist assholes. Some other people saw this, loved the hate, but didn't get the joke. I wouldn't have been able to tell the difference at the time, but some people within D&D and subforums seem to know a lot more about individual users and what they do now.
3. ADTRW was scaring the rest of the site with pictures of 40-story tall anime women shooting lasers out of their vaginas--among other things. Actually, IIRC posting anime torrents--and any files and porn for that matter--was getting shut down.
4. 4chan shows up. It's like that crazy Japanese 2chan message board. You can post all your torrents and laser vagina waifus in there. The assholes that were getting banned from SA for being actually racist had a place to go to save :10bux:, and when invading and doxxing fell out of vogue, the assholes found their new home.

I guess it just happened to be around 2005 when there was a more tangible schism, although no particular event to which to point that I know about. The demographic split had happened. Although people will still peruse both forums, I think by the late 2000s that they definitely had different crowds, and different histories.

This isn't to say that SA is now some benign place of high moral standing or anything.

Adbot
ADBOT LOVES YOU

  • Locked thread