Complete Story
04/25/2025
4chan is Dead
However, its toxic legacy Is everywhere
My earliest memory of 4chan was sitting up late at night, typing its URL into my browser and scrolling through a thread of LOLcat memes, which, at the time, were brand-new.
Back then, a photoshop of a cat saying "I can has cheezburger" or an image of an owl saying "ORLY?" was, without question, the funniest thing my 14-year-old brain had ever laid eyes on. So much so, I woke my dad up by laughing too hard and had to tell him that I was scrolling through pictures of cats at 2 in the morning. Later, I would become intimately familiar with the site’s much more nefarious tendencies.
It's strange to look back at 4chan, apparently wiped off the internet entirely last week by hackers from a rival message board, and think about how many different websites it was over its more than two decades online. What began as a hub for internet culture and an anonymous way station for the internet's anarchic true believers devolved over the years into a fan club for mass shooters, the central node of Gamergate, and the beating heart of far-right fascism around the world—a virus that infected every facet of our lives, from the slang we use to the politicians for whom we vote. But the site itself had been frozen in amber since the George W. Bush administration.
Please select this link to read the complete article from WIRED.