Antisocial Network, The: Memes to Mayhem (2024)

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Antisocial Network, The: Memes to Mayhem (2024)

Post by bunniefuu »

[somber music playing]

[mouse clicking and scrolling]

[man 1] You can fix code.

You can't fix people.

I always like to say

that the weakest part of any system

is the people that put it together.

Fifteen years ago,

we were just dumbass kids

having a good time

- sharing jokes and memes on the internet.

- [sound distorting]

Do we even know?

Who is this 4chan person or website?

[Alex Trebek] 4chan.org

is a collaborative community

known for posting these on the net. Tom?

- What are photographs?

- [Trebek] Yes.

[man 1] We were using subversive humor

to make fun of the world.

[newscaster 1] Their name comes

from their secret website.

[man 1] Not understanding

that the jokes we made

would turn into conspiracy theories.

[creepy, distorted music]

[man 1] And next thing you know,

the entire world

turned into this disinformation-pumping

gigantic chanosphere.

[newscaster 2] Conspiracy theories

saturate the internet.

[newscaster 3] This misinformation

has reshaped our society.

[man 1] We started something and

never intended for it to end up this way.

[people shouting]

[protestors chanting] USA!

[man 1] And now I'm just trying to

clean up what I see as my old mistakes.

[music ends]

[digital distortion rises and fades out]

[wind gusting]

[purring]

[man 2] I was about ten years old

when I first got into computers.

- [pensive synthesizer music playing]

- I would start playing sick at home

to get out of school.

The only phone line in the house

was in the living room,

but my computer was upstairs.

I would take one of my parent's checks,

open up an AOL account,

and go online on AOL all day.

[modem dialing, staticky burst]

And then an hour before my mom and dad

were gonna be coming home from work,

I would get on the phone

with AOL to cancel the account.

[staticky burst]

[Fuxnet] I felt like

the coolest criminal child in the world.

I think I was 12

when we first got the internet.

I definitely was super curious,

looking up stuff

I probably should not have been.

I specifically remember one instance,

my stepdad approached me

after dinner one night.

He's like, "Why did you look up sex.com?"

[laughing]

- And I got in so much trouble.

- [erotic moaning]

I wasn't allowed online

for like a week after that. [chuckles]

[cell door slamming]

From my perspective, as a kid, you know,

there was always just internet.

- Chat rooms, forums, bulletin boards.

- [pensive synthesizer music continues]

Having an online persona

as a way to get outside myself.

Kirtaner is loud, brash,

take-no-prisoners.

It was an inverse

of how I was in real life.

[crying echoing]

[Fuxnet] I didn't understand that

I had anxiety, but I knew that I felt

strange being in groups of people.

So, the internet became a place for me to

be comfortable.

I would just go online,

see what other people were talking about,

attempt to join in.

There was this whole other world

of people that I could talk to.

[upbeat synthesizer music]

I would talk to people

about video games, anime.

At the time, Japanese anime

was blowing up in a big way.

American children's entertainment,

it's pretty lame for the most part.

The Japanese stuff was just cooler than

all the other stuff on TV at the time.

[all] Power Rangers!

[Kirtaner] Throughout the '90s,

it felt like Japanese culture

was taking over the world.

- [crowd cheering faintly]

- [music fades out]

[passersby chattering]

[man] I'd always wanted to live in Japan.

To us Gen-Xers,

Japan was the place that made all the cool

stuff that we so desperately wanted.

- [ambient digital music playing]

- In the '90s and early 2000s,

Japan was a Petri dish for all sorts

of technological innovations.

[crowd cheering]

[Alt] Most Japanese accessed

the internet not off of PCs,

but on cell phones,

which had really limited bandwidth.

It starts to create strange new systems

for communication, like the emoji.

And 2channel

was yet another example of this.

2channel is an anonymous

bulletin board system.

Being totally anonymous gave young people

the opportunity to vent

their thoughts and opinions

without fear of being judged for it.

It was pretty primitive looking,

but, you know, connecting people,

being able to find your tribe,

it was absolutely revolutionary.

[high-pitched tinkling]

[Alt] And it was

instantly popular with otaku.

Otaku are adults who had no interest

in any of the traditional trappings

of adulthood.

2channel let them

dive deeper into their fantasy lives.

The visual aspect also made it

a lot easier for Westerners to access.

One of them was a mysterious figure

who went by the handle "moot."

[ominous synth music playing]

[Alt] He downloaded

a copy of 2chan's software

and then he launched it

under the name 4chan.

4chan.net,

an English version of 2chan.net.

[distorted digital burst]

[Kirtaner] First time I saw 4chan

was the first day it was online.

- [lighter flicking, bong bubbling]

- [Kirtaner] If I'm remembering correctly.

[giggling, coughing]

It was like a hodgepodge

of anything you could think of.

[meowing]

[Amanda] Things that you would not see

anywhere else online except for there.

There was definitely a lot

of stuff that was... super edgy.

[straw sucking]

[Fuxnet] To my young brain...

- [8-bit video game sounds]

- ...it was really cool. [chuckling]

[Kirtaner] You could say whatever you want

and it was not associated with you.

Nobody knew who you were,

you were anonymous.

[8-bit video game music playing]

Being able to post things anonymously,

with an image, didn't exist

anywhere else on the internet.

During the summer of 2004,

a friend hits me up and is like,

"Hey, do you want to

come on as a programmer?"

And I'm like, "Okay."

I like programming. So, why not?

Moot was very mysterious.

No one knew what he looked like.

No one knew his real name,

or where he lived.

But he created something we all wanted.

Like, this is what the internet should be.

You can communicate with anyone all over

the world, in any way you want.

[upbeat music playing]

[Kirtaner] It was a glorious time,

those early first few years.

Like, we ate, breathed, slept that sh*t.

We formed our own language, our own lingo.

[dog barking]

Most of it, not exactly culturally

acceptable in this day and age.

- [mouse clicking]

- [chiming]

[The Fonz, distorted] Ey.

4chan loved making these inside jokes

that people outside

the community wouldn't get.

"For the Lulz" was a term.

[Fuxnet] "The lulz" is a bastardization

of "laugh out loud."

You would make a funny meme,

post it, you refresh,

all of a sudden, you've got 100 replies.

Everybody's laughing,

joking, modifying it.

You've got that dopamine rush.

You just wanted another hit,

another taste.

Viral imagery blasting in your eyeballs.

You didn't want the party to stop.

[chaotic overlapping sounds]

The site worked in this Darwinian way,

where the most interesting posts,

the posts that got the most replies,

would be bumped to the top of the site,

and all the other ones

would fall away and die.

[man screaming]

[Beran] The game was

to post something interesting,

that was funny,

that people would reply to,

that would essentially survive

on the site more than a second.

[Fuxnet] You're constantly getting

new content, and it just keeps you hooked.

That was the beginning of the format

of what became social media nowadays,

what they call the endless scroll.

[digital whooshing]

[Kirtaner] We were just watching

this thing grow and evolve

and slowly take over all of our minds.

[dark, distorted music playing]

[Alt] What the 4chan users didn't know

was that 2channel's effect

on Japanese society was profound.

2channel spawned

all sorts of extreme behavior.

[dark music continues]

[Alt] Like the Neomugicha incident,

where a kid who had been egged on

by 2channel users

h*jacked a city bus,

and he actually k*lled

one of the passengers with a Kn*fe.

It sparked a whole lot of debate

about the impact of having

a totally anonymous website.

[speaking Japanese] Undoubtedly,

the internet is a hotbed of crimes.

People are posting irresponsible comments

because it's anonymous.

[Alt, in English] The things

that we saw happening in Japan

were about to come to the West,

but we just didn't know it

yet at the time.

- [upbeat music playing]

- [crowd cheering]

Ladies and gentlemen,

boys and girls, otaku of all ages,

welcome to the 2005 Otakon show.

[crowd cheering]

[man 1] Otakon is an anime convention

that started in Baltimore.

At the time, it was one

of the largest in the country,

and where the very first

official 4chan panel happened.

Going from spending so much time on 4chan

to being in a physical space with

thousands of people was pretty surreal.

Growing up, I lived a very sheltered life.

I was bullied in grade school,

my parents weren't supportive,

no one cared about what I was

interested in and what I was into.

And I'm just like, I gotta

find some way of dealing with this.

And so, going into the anime scene

was kind of an escape for me.

I can drop the pretense. I don't have

to pretend. I can be who I am.

[crowd cheering]

[Will] And I actually did

this whole comedy skit,

but as soon as it was over,

walked all the way downstairs,

and I sat in the front row

of the first 4chan panel in 2005.

[man 2] This will be

on BitTorrent tomorrow.

[man 3 laughing]

[Alt] Up at the front of the room

you have the 4chan guys,

who are giving this

PowerPoint presentation, or trying to...

about this new website that they'd made.

[Amanda] Despite everyone

being completely anonymous,

it felt like there were these people

that were kind of celebrities.

It was funny because we hadn't

even posted our photos before,

no one knew what we looked like.

People didn't really think

moot was actually a person.

Come up here.

Moot is in this room,

and he's coming up on stage right now.

Oh my God!

[man 4] That's not moot.

Bullshit.

Hi. I'm known as moot.

- [crowd cheering]

- [man 4 boos]

[Snacks] Moot was this teenage boy wearing

a blue Polo shirt, with chubby cheeks,

and a New York Yankees hat.

I don't know what I was expecting,

but moot definitely wasn't

what anyone was expecting.

[upbeat synthesizer music playing]

[Fuxnet] There was a little bit

of a celebrity to it, you know?

This was moot, the guy who created 4chan.

And then we browsed over three million

pages a day, and that's a lot of p*rn.

- [crowd laughing]

- [moot] Elsewhere...

[Snacks] I think the most exciting thing

about doing a panel with our users

was realizing that this is bigger

than we thought it was.

- [crowd chattering]

- [man 5] Wrong way!

You can see thousands of posts

per day from all over the world,

but not realize

how you are affecting these people.

We weren't really seeing ourselves

as anything special.

We were just a bunch of kids having fun

that somehow made something

that was bigger than us.

[distorted laughter]

[Beran] 4chan establishes itself

as this goofy, creative place,

and these jokes they're creating,

they start to make

their way outside of 4chan.

An early popular meme was linked to

something someone really wanted to see.

["Never Gonna Give You Up" playing]

And instead, it would link to Rick Astley

singing "Never Gonna Give You Up."

- People got "Rickrolled."

- [song distorting, ending]

[newscaster] A friend sends you a link,

but when you click on the link,

up pops this instead.

["Never Gonna Give You Up" playing]

You've been Rickrolled.

[whimsical music playing]

[Fuxnet] We were

essentially trolling people.

Trolling is like performance art.

The idea is to digitally pants someone

and have everyone point and laugh.

At least, that's the fun spirit of it.

[creepy laughter]

So, they got together and wanted

to do these collective pranks,

and they would all say,

"Let's go mess with this person."

"Let's go and ruin other websites."

[whimsical music continues]

[Fuxnet] Habbo Hotel was

an online browser-based game.

It was a chatroom essentially,

but you could go

to different virtual spaces.

There was a rumor that Habbo Hotel

was removing users

who were using Black avatars.

The 4chan users decided,

hey, we're going to create

Black characters with Afros and suits,

and we're going to go en masse

onto Habbo Hotel

and just block access to entire areas.

[Kirtaner] We were blocking

the entrances to the pool.

The infamous phrase

"Pool is closed due to AIDS."

Other hijinks. We would take all of

our characters and form a swastika.

- Yeah, I know. We were dumb kids.

- [music ends]

Maybe, looking back on it,

it probably was not as innocent as

people catching onto it

might have assumed,

but it didn't feel like that.

It felt like people

were just being stupid.

But then it did start to shift to people

actually, like, trolling in real life.

[woman] My six-year-old and eight-year-old

half-Black grandchildren

are not welcome in my subdivision's pool.

[newscaster] Some try to explain it away

as part of an internet phenomenon,

and those who don't know of it

are left out of the joke.

Didn't feel inherently mean.

It just felt like, okay,

everyone's doing this. This is funny.

[somber music playing]

[woman] A joke is when two people laugh.

I'm not laughing.

[newscaster] During our interview,

Altorfer learned

of a second flyer at the pool.

It's a picture of me with an afro?

And I tell myself it's just a bunch

of r*cist, h*m* geeks.

[Fuxnet] People started recreating

Habbo Hotel in person

and this culture spawned out of it.

We were growing up online together,

figuring things out.

We didn't know necessarily

what was right or wrong.

We didn't know what kind

of culture we were building.

We weren't really aware of those things,

but we were building them.

[somber music continues]

[Fuxnet] And that became a problem

for the people who ran 4chan.

So moot banned raids.

[Kirtaner] We were all having

so much fun, and

it got clamped down on really quickly.

And we weren't having any of that.

[Snacks] I think the Otakon meetup

really inspired moot

to try and make 4chan

more of a social thing,

like Facebook or something,

than like the anonymous culture

that he began with.

I disagreed,

we argued about it, and then I did have

my server access removed by moot.

That was that. I was gone.

Moot ain't the boss of us.

We want to do what we want,

and we're going to have some fun.

And in that moment

an identity started to form.

We all collectively started

referring to ourselves,

and our merry band of chaos-stirrers...

Anonymous.

[ominous music playing]

It coalesced into an identity, ironically.

You know, you think "anonymous,"

you don't think of an identity,

but an identity formed

around this one single word.

[ominous music continues,

overlaid with distorted digital sounds]

[creepy high-pitched giggling]

[childlike voice] Ah-ahh.

[screaming]

[digital distortion effects]

[echoing, distorted laughter]

[music fades out]

[Kirtaner] Habbo Hotel showed

that you could enact retribution

towards someone or something

that we felt deserved it.

And this obviously attracted people

that wanted to join in the fun and chaos.

The big breakout raid.

There was a neo-n*zi radio show host.

His name was Hal Turner.

- Welcome to The Hal Turner Show.

- [intense music playing]

For some reason or another,

all these lower cultures and lower races

are more important.

And I find that disgusting.

[Kirtaner] He made himself a target

just by being who he is.

He had a phone number you could call.

[Turner] Where you calling from?

[Kirtaner] We did a lot of prank calls...

[Turner] Thomas, you're on air.

[Thomas] Well, I was born

and raised in West Philadelphia,

- played b-ball outside the school and all.

- [Turner] Right.

[Thomas] Just one little fight

and my mom got scared,

sent me to live with some

relatives down in Bel-Air.

[Turner] And he's out

of here too! Another assh*le.

...and drove him into an absolute frenzy.

[Turner] "Hal Turner was right.

I should've paid attention,

but I was too busy being

a f*cking moron on the radio!"

Hal Turner Show.

Who are you? Where you calling from?

He would always react and escalate things.

[Turner] You sit there

like a stupid m*therf*cking assh*le...

I don't want to imply that all the people

that were trolling Hal Turner

were anti-racists.

A lot of them

just wanted to f*ck with people.

We trolled him mercilessly for months.

- Hello, this is Kirt. I run 420chan.

- [Turner] You've had a lot of fun with me.

[Kirtaner] We kept

his show offline for 10 weeks.

[Turner] You are not going

to kick me off my own server.

We hacked into his email account, found

emails between him and his FBI handler,

outed him as an informant.

He got ostracized from

the white supremacist community,

- his wife filed for divorce...

- [intense music ends]

...and in the end

he was the one that went to jail.

[Turner] I'm in Essex County jail.

Internet tough guy and all,

but I got to tell you,

I am not cut out for where I am.

[music restarts]

If something drew the ire of Anonymous,

it suffered.

- [clicking]

- [music ends]

[keyboard clacking]

[dog barking in distance]

[man] A lot of times when

you do something groundbreaking,

you only know it was groundbreaking

when you look back at it.

But while you're doing it,

it's just the thing that's happening.

[gentle music playing]

[man] During the Hal Turner raids,

I did some of the phone calls.

The content of them,

I'm not proud of anymore,

but at the end of the raid,

you look back, and you start questioning.

We put a white nationalist in jail.

Well, that was a good thing.

What... What else can we do?

[Beran] So, they looked for someone

they can test their strength against,

and they settle

on the Church of Scientology.

[distorted digital effects]

[Fuxnet] Scientology

was a relatively new religion.

It was started by a science fiction

author, L. Ron Hubbard.

And they used celebrities to make

the church into a global powerhouse.

[mysterious music playing]

[Fuxnet] There was an internal

Church of Scientology video

that leaked to the internet

of Tom Cruise being over-the-top.

[laser blast effects]

[narrator] There is a worldwide arena

where the game is played

for the fate of whole populations,

but there's someone advancing

Scientology on a fully epic scale.

[in increasingly dramatic voice] He is IAS

Freedom Medal of Valor winner Tom Cruise!

[electronic music playing]

There's nothing part of the way for me.

- [laughing]

- [rock music playing]

It's just... [mimicking blast off]

[music fades out]

Watching this video,

it's hilarious how crazy he sounds.

It was supposed to only exist in a way

where it gets shown to Scientologists.

So, it's internal,

and they do not want the world to see it.

[Fuxnet] And then, all of a sudden,

the Church of Scientology

got it removed from all over the internet.

Oh, they're trying to control

the flow of information on the internet?

Oh, we can't have that.

[mysterious music playing]

[Housh] But Scientology

was not an easy target.

Back in, I believe, 1991,

they sued Time magazine for a article

that was titled "Cult of Greed."

And so most media were not

talking about Scientology,

no matter what Scientology did wrong.

[Fuxnet] There were rumors

of people leaving the church

who were then being harassed,

or mysteriously committing su1c1de.

Secrecy surrounded Scientology.

[Housh] So, what if we, as a group,

could make this so outlandish

and so large of a thing

that the media would have

no choice but to cover it?

That would be a win.

[music ends]

[distorted electronic voice speaking]

[Housh] So, we uploaded

the message onto YouTube,

and went to sleep not expecting

it to do too terribly much.

[phone ringing]

[Housh] I wake up the next morning

to a phone call from my girlfriend,

and she's like, "It's on CNN."

So, I turn on the damn TV, and they play

the video twice while I'm watching.

[distorted electronic voice]

We are Anonymous. We are legion.

We do not forgive. We do not forget.

[Housh] Suddenly, everyone online

was expecting direction.

[rhythmic electronica playing]

[Housh] We came up with

the name Operation Chanology.

The idea was, they've got buildings

in every major city on this planet,

hundreds of them, so what would

the internet look like if it went outside?

[Kirtaner] But we also needed

an image that sticks with people.

[in robotic voice] This g*dd*mn guy.

[wheezing laughter]

[in regular voice] V for Vendetta

was a hot film at the time.

These masks were everywhere.

The aesthetic that was defined

by the Habbo Hotel raids,

the suit and the tie, and the afro,

then melded with the Guy Fawkes mask.

[rhythmic electronica rising]

We assumed that worldwide

200 people would show up outside.

We start watching Sydney,

the first city to go live.

And within an hour,

there's 200 people on the ground there.

Then Perth and Adelaide and Melbourne,

and all them start going.

We thought, 'cause they were smaller than

Sydney, we would end up with 20 people.

No, they all get hundreds.

By the time we get to Germany,

we're up over like 4,000 people.

So, we're just losing our minds.

We're here with a protester.

He's known as...

Anonymous.

A web-based group called Anonymous

has been picketing and protesting

in front of the Church of Scientology

in Boston and elsewhere.

[newscaster] The virtual protest came

to life in cities around the world.

And today, dozens of those people

put on masks in downtown Toronto

in an unusual standoff.

Their goal is to shut down what they call

a cult of misinformation and greed.

We are Anonymous.

We are legion. Expect us!

- [protestors] Expect us!

- [rhythmic electronica continues]

[Housh] By the end of the day, we're

counting somewhere near 10,000 people

have shown up worldwide to our protests.

[protestors] Never gonna give you up

Never gonna let you down

[Kirtaner] Anonymous was,

from that point forward,

a globally recognized force for good.

[mysterious music playing]

[Beran] That's absurd, right?

Like, this weird anime website

that kind of morphs into this other thing

decided to have a semi-ironic street

protest against, like,

a celebrity science-fiction cult.

Chanology really showed

an entire generation of people that

you could organize something anonymously

that would have a real-world effect.

[dark, distorted effects]

[Kirtaner] Putting forward an idea online,

having it manifest in the world,

- it's a powerful feeling.

- [creepy distorted laughter]

[Kirtaner] You start to enjoy the feeling

of inflicting that pain

that you feel on others.

It's a way to escape it,

to take control of it.

It's ultimately harmful to everyone.

- [dark, distorted effects end]

- Things started out very centralized,

and then after Chanology

it became a formless, shapeless beast.

For a while, in the invasion community,

I was perhaps one of the only voices who

would chime in every now and then and go...

[reading]

[Kirtaner] We were just trying

to have fun, have our kicks.

All these rah-rah good guys and stuff.

No, we are not good f*cking people.

We are g*dd*mn monsters...

[reading]

So, at the same time that they're

doing these very earnest protests,

they're still spinning these

crazy nihilistic pranks on the world.

They post on Oprah's message board.

Let me read you something

that was posted on our message boards

from someone who claims to be a member

of a known pedophile network.

Oprah reads that to her entire audience

of seven million moms.

He doesn't forgive.

He does not forget.

His group has over 9,000 penises,

and they're all raping children.

[Beran] It's grotesque, right?

[Fuxnet] People were

just being shitty, being mean,

just for the fun of it,

and trying to take it to its limits.

I will readily admit

I was one of those people.

[growling]

[Kirtaner] It's just jokes.

It's just edgy, subversive humor.

[electronic warbling]

If you were in on the joke,

you were just laughing your ass off.

[Beran] So, Anonymous really kind

of splits in these two directions.

Half the group goes off

and becomes genuine activists,

and the irony melts away there.

And there's a section of Anonymous

that wants to be trolls still.

["Never Gonna Give You Up"

playing on car stereo]

- [driver] Ooh.

- [singing] Give you up

[Amanda] Otakon felt so different.

The community was so much bigger.

- [woman 1] The best day of my life.

- [woman 2] Look at all these costumes.

[Beran] Instead of anime characters, you

had people dressed up as memes from 4chan.

[man 1] 4chan's where it's at, man.

[all] f*ck you!

[Will] I was asked to host a panel.

I'm friends with moot.

I just was folded into the entourage.

- [Will] Any last words?

- We're gonna have a great time today.

- All right, we'll take another question.

- [man 2] Hi, come on up here.

I'm looking around, and I'm like,

yeah, these are my people,

but there's something wrong with this.

["1st of May" by Der Blaue Reiter playing]

[woman 3] Aw!

[scattered laughter]

[music fades out]

[Housh] Kids literally started throwing

Sig Heils, like, in real life.

For the most part,

we just kind of brushed it off.

These are the few.

Maybe, they don't necessarily represent

all of us.

[somber music playing]

People felt more comfortable doing

or saying stuff than they had previously.

Saying racially charged things,

just incredibly offensive stuff.

Because they feel comfortable

with their little group,

they feel like

maybe there's no consequence.

[crowd chanting]

[Beran] If I could go back in time,

and if you had told me that,

"You're walking through

this anime convention,

and this is a pivot point

upon which history will turn."

Now, looking back at it,

it feels like a premonition.

[Fuxnet] It was very stark contrast

to all the goodness that you saw,

the community, the friendship

you saw at the convention.

It made it more apparent that

there was some bad things happening

and it was leaking over

into the real world.

On the first day,

- moot created 4chan...

- [crowd whooping]

...and said,

"Lo, this is 4chan, bringer of pain."

[woman 4] Hallelujah!

[crowd cheering]

On the second day, moot created Anonymous.

[crowd cheering]

[Will] I had to make a decision as to

whether I was going to participate or not.

And me being part of this is endorsing it,

it's making it okay,

and I don't want it to be okay.

Thank you, Will.

[man 3] I stopped going to conventions.

I stopped cosplaying.

The long and short of this

is that I had to grow up.

[Amanda] There was a huge shift in,

like, the greater part of the community

felt more like it was...

just trolling.

r*pe train! r*pe train!

It started to kind of

outweigh the funny stuff.

It was kind of scary, honestly.

[keyboard clacking]

[Fuxnet] The older I got,

the more mature I got,

I became interested in

disturbing the balance of power.

You know, my hope was that

this force would be able to be wielded

for good.

[distorted digital droning]

[ambient music playing]

[Beran] As this sort of decentralized,

anti-establishment collective is growing,

the political landscape is changing.

Obama came in promising hope and change,

but he didn't really deliver on that.

So, that expectation that wars would end,

that Wall Street would get punished,

that something would happen,

melts into resentment.

That's the moment people say,

"Now we have to go outside the system."

[ripping]

[Fuxnet] You started to see

a lot more people support the idea

of vigilante justice online.

[Housh] We could actually get some

change done if we wanted it.

We had a hand to play in this.

[shattering]

[creepy digital warbling]

[Housh] The hand we thought we had

was destructive.

We thought we were going to just start

laying waste to the things that existed

in order to force them to

build something else up in the ruins.

[Fuxnet] And Occupy Wall Street

seemed like a vehicle for that.

[music fades out]

Occupy Wall Street was being pushed

by a group out of New York,

and it wasn't going anywhere.

They were gathering

in Zuccotti Park to protest.

They wanted to take on

the financial industry,

and get some of these

people arrested who deserved it.

We stepped up with the large megaphone

that we had and said

Anonymous is standing behind these people.

We started putting out material for it.

The media were like, "Great, Anonymous

is involved. Now we'll talk about it."

We begin this morning with the protest

movement that began near Wall Street

- and is gaining strength.

- [newscaster 1] Anonymous.

Now, they're evolving into this

movement of social change.

A real driving force

behind the Wall Street occupiers.

- [man] Tell me what democracy looks like!

- [all] This is what democracy looks like!

[Fuxnet] Right off the rip, Occupy

Wall Street was a big hit with Anonymous.

It was regular

people occupying public space.

[mysterious music playing]

It's an attractive story for the media

to see a vigilante group

that can't be identified,

can't be tracked down,

but anyone can be in Anonymous.

[man 2] People have had it.

They know that their country

is headed in the wrong direction.

[Beran] It felt like there was no way to

say what Occupy Wall Street was saying.

That these big power structures

that are over people's heads,

that no one really likes,

there are actually ways to att*ck them.

Maybe there's ways to dismantle them.

Anonymous was part of that.

[newscaster 2] Today thousands of union

workers marched in solidarity.

[newscaster 3] It's in every US state

and more than 100 cities.

It was a global effort, and a lot

of people were riding that wave.

[protestors chanting] We are the 99%!

I was watching

the live streams constantly.

Tax the rich!

[Fuxnet] The energy around Occupy

definitely made people feel like

a change could be around the corner.

[distant police sirens]

And the response by the state

was as aggressive as possible.

[protestors chanting] Shame on you!

Shame on you! Shame on you!

If you refuse to leave the park,

you'll be subject to arrest.

[Beran] The state felt

they had to destroy them,

and really rip apart that idea,

which they perceived as a thr*at.

They're treating us like we're

some kind of violent people.

- This is so sad. This is America.

- [protestors screaming]

[somber music playing]

[man] It was a period of time when

I think the world was in uproar.

I'd heard about it

and the things Anonymous had done.

And so I wanted to be there

to offer my experience and skills.

But I was just kind of attracted to

hacking 'cause it was anti-authoritarian,

and those ideals kind of spoke to me.

[people clamoring]

Because the police brutally repressed

these protest movements in the streets,

I escalated things a little bit

by going after the police and government.

A group of online pranksters has

embarked on a type of hacking payback.

[newscaster 4] Retaliation

for what it called brutality

against Occupy Wall Street protesters.

[Hammond] To be honest,

there's a point in time when I had

more targets than the time to work with.

[reporter 5] Hacking

the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office...

DPS breached by a group of hackers...

A notorious hacking group has targeted

Rupert Murdoch's newspapers.

They were just having a good time

doing these high-profile crimes.

The CIA's website,

for the US Senate's website...

[newscaster 6] Law enforcement websites

in Birmingham, Boston, were also hacked.

[Hammond] There was kind of,

like, "I have nothing to lose."

They were able to take down

FBI.gov for a brief period of time.

[newscaster 7] Now Anonymous

is taking a victory lap.

I was hacking at night, and then waking up

and going to work and school.

We had the momentum and the power.

We were in control.

[newscaster 8] The agents didn't know

there was a third party on the line.

The target of the call,

Anonymous, was listening in.

[Housh] I would be happy

taking down the entire system.

Burn it all to the ground.

It seems that a week doesn't go by

without a significant story

about hacking or cyberattacks.

And the Pentagon is now

singling out Anonymous

as an example of the serious

new cyber threats facing the country.

[Fuxnet] This one night,

it's like 3:00 in the morning.

[suspenseful music playing]

[Fuxnet] And all of a sudden,

I got a private message...

from an alias of Jeremy Hammond.

He had a sense of urgency.

He needed help with hacks

and was literally giving me

specific targets to go after

and giving me all the information

I needed to compromise those targets.

Which is kind of unheard of.

It's like somebody

giving you the keys to a car

and saying,

"Hey, can you steal this car for me?"

[car tires screeching in distance]

[Fuxnet] It was unlike

any kind of conversation that we had

prior to this point.

That left me feeling very uneasy.

[suspenseful music continues]

[Fuxnet] The next morning,

I had an opening shift at my job,

and I get a text message from

a friend of mine.

A news story had just dropped.

[newscaster 1] Some members

of the computer-hacking organization

known as Anonymous

are no longer anonymous.

[newscaster 2] Jeremy Hammond

is one of five suspected hackers

arrested by the FBI.

[camera clicking]

They had been watching me, like,

come and go out of my apartment.

[camera clicking]

[newscaster 3] Hammond was arrested

at his Bridgeport home.

He remembers smoking

marijuana with friends

when heavily armed federal agents

tossed in a flashbang grenade.

[man shouting]

They are already in the front door.

They were also busting in my window.

The cops were

definitely looking for my laptop.

They wanted to seize

my laptop while it was running,

and I had it set up to where

if you close the lid of the laptop,

it would require a password.

So that would deter them from being

able to recover

the contents of my hard drive.

So, I walked two steps towards my computer

and shut the laptop just in time.

[Fuxnet] I was scared for myself.

I realized that it wasn't

Jeremy that was messaging me,

it was the FBI,

and they were trying to entrap me.

[sirens sounding]

[Fuxnet] When I got home, I immediately

started wiping all of my hard drives.

And left the next day.

[Kirtaner] I have nothing to do

with any of this, but I freaked out,

and anything that I could find on

the first five to ten pages of Google,

I blew it all away.

If there was a Wiki article

that named me, I wiped it.

That's the moment

that I made myself disappear.

Tried to bury the past as much as I could.

Just completely exited that world.

For a long, long, long time.

[music fades out]

[digital distortion effects]

[Beran] The FBI

effectively broke up that group.

And when they did that,

the Anonymous bubble collapsed.

[dot-matrix printer printing]

[Hammond] Unfortunately, they brute forced

the password to my laptop.

It took them six months.

My password was named after my cat.

Chewy12345. It was at least 10 characters.

[cell door closing]

[Hammond] In the end, I was sentenced

to 10 years, the statutory maximum.

Those who wrote letters,

visited, attended court dates,

- I appreciate you.

- [melancholy music playing]

[Fuxnet] There was definitely

this feeling of disappointment.

You know? I mean, I think a lot of us

had high hopes for Anonymous

and what could come next.

I spent the next months, uh, on trains,

Greyhound buses,

taxis going all over the country.

I was afraid to talk to my friends and

family because that might lead to me

being compromised in some way.

It was one of the loneliest experiences

I've had in my life.

[melancholy music continues]

After Anonymous left 4chan,

the people who were left there

were a great deal of young people

who were more despairing than ever.

[distorted digital burst]

[man] 4chan was appealing because

I was very angry at my living situation.

It was a place where there were a lot

of very angry kids, for many reasons,

and angry adults too.

And the board became,

like, depression central.

We're all kind of losers, right?

- [pensive music playing]

- That doesn't have to be such a bad thing

and you can kind of make

a community out of that.

You started to see users

one-upping each other

in terms of who has it worse in life.

I felt like I could usually win those,

even though I was pretty young,

because I have this crippling disease.

[whooshing]

[Beran] That feeling of powerlessness

that launched Occupy Wall Street,

that didn't go away.

It just sunk into this new, dark,

nihilistic place.

[ominous music playing]

[music fades out]

One of the things that I really liked

about going on 4chan was that

I was not supposed to be there.

Both culturally,

it was sort of designed to repel me,

and, literally, they said there

were no women there.

[apprehensive music playing]

[Alexander] These young men

were experiencing

this profound mass alienation,

and coping with it through extreme humor

and sexual and violent imagery.

It became really clear that

there was a desire to cultivate

a space that was hostile to women.

At the time, I was a full-time journalist

writing about the world of video games.

A game developer called Zo Quinn

had made an independent game

on living with depression.

Depression Quest.

It was a text-based game that didn't

have conventional production values.

The game made Zo controversial as

a developer because Zo was, like,

bringing new voices and new subject matter

to the world of video games.

A little while later, Zo had

a disgruntled ex-boyfriend

publish a blog post

about Zo having a relationship

with a games journalist.

I thought that

can't possibly be controversial.

But some gamers seized on this blog post

as evidence of a conspiracy

that women and gender minorities

were ruining the video games industry.

[man] Depression Quest. [laughing]

It's developed by

some dumb bitch named Zo Quinn,

who had to f*ck five guys in gaming media

to get positive reviews.

Hey, there's plenty

of stupid b*tches like her.

[Alexander] That games journalist

had never covered Zo's work.

This conspiracy became

a harassment campaign against Zo,

against female video games journalists,

and against anyone who spoke out

against the harassment.

They said, you know, "It's about

ethics in video games journalism,"

and it wasn't.

They were just trying to find a rationale

that explains their disenfranchisement.

Zo Quinn,

you are the stupidest person alive.

[Alexander] There was this sentiment that

women are coming to take our toys away.

This one place where it's supposed

to be safe to be a dork,

is now under att*ck by women.

GamerGate. It's a story about sexism

in the world of video gaming.

[newscaster 1] b*mb threats,

r*pe threats, even death threats.

It was nothing

but trying to get me to k*ll myself.

Trying to get people to hurt me.

GamerGate is a w*r

on women in this industry.

[journalist] Ethics in journalism is not

what's happening in any way.

It's actually men going after women

in really hostile, aggressive ways.

That's what GamerGate is about.

GamerGate established 4chan as this place

of extreme and misogynistic behavior.

And moot was

obviously very troubled by this.

He had sort of evolved

from that kid with the baseball cap

hiding behind his laptop at Otakon,

into a sort of internet celebrity.

[man] You still live at home, right?

I actually moved out recently.

That's very cool.

[Beran] Once GamerGate occurred

on the chans, moot decided to ban it.

Moot said to the GamerGate coalition,

"You're not allowed

to talk about this here."

[music ends]

[Brennan] Having seen

the Scientology movement,

movements that grow out of chan boards

tend to be right in the end.

It was like this

infallible belief that I had.

So, when GamerGate happened...

I was definitely a sympathetic audience.

[pensive music playing]

[Brennan] So, after Chris Poole

banned GamerGate,

there were a bunch of users

that wanted to still talk about it.

They searched on Google

"alternatives to 4chan."

They eventually got

to, like, page three, which had...

[reading]

8chan, before GamerGate,

only had like 100 posts a day.

But after, we had some days where

we were getting 7,000 posts in an hour.

[interviewer] Fredrick, you and 8chan

are being likened to a hate group.

How do you answer to that?

[Brennan] Someone made

a GamerGate board on 8chan,

but it was not founded

for the purpose of GamerGate,

and it will be around long

after GamerGate is over.

[Brennan] The only sources

that were taking GamerGate seriously

were very far right sources.

Like Breitbart.

[newscaster] Breitbart News,

a b*mb-throwing site

favored by the so-called alt-right.

A mixture of conservatives and populists,

white supremacists, and anti-Semites.

[Brennan] Milo Yiannopoulos wrote

a whole bunch of articles about GamerGate.

[Milo] Every community on the internet,

4chan, Reddit, or whatever,

has a dog in the fight in GamerGate.

Conservatives have missed

a huge cultural opportunity.

He knew he was writing this stuff

to, like, a 4chan audience.

[Alexander] These gamers

were being courted.

Like, "Yes, you are disenfranchised and,

yes, women are taking your toys away."

"And, you know, that's happening to us

at all levels of government as well."

[Beran] Steve Bannon,

the owner and publisher of Breitbart,

who later became part

of the Tr*mp administration,

now understands

this group of young, disenfranchised men,

who are angry, who are unhappy,

and he says,

"They come in through GamerGate,

then we get them turned on to Tr*mp."

That was his idea.

[crowd cheering]

I will never let you be

the forgotten people again.

We're the forgotten people.

[crowd cheering]

I will never let you down.

I promise.

I will never ever let you down.

[ominous distortion plays and fades out]

What would America look like

with an ascendant alt-right?

With a Tr*mp in the White House

and a Mr. Bannon

as the chief of staff, and...?

[Milo] It would be so much more fun.

It would be full of joy

and mischief and laughter and memes.

More spontaneous.

[Alt] Steve Bannon knew a good thing

when he saw it.

And by activating what he called

the "rootless white males,"

in his own words, of 4chan,

he turned them into a political force

to be reckoned with.

It played out this way

in Japan back in 2002,

with these politicized 2channel users

known as the Net Right,

who felt that their own country wasn't

doing enough to make Japan great again.

[Beran] What are 4chan and 8chan

doing to promote Tr*mp?

They're doing the same thing

Anonymous was doing.

Mass pranks, spinning misinformation

into the news cycle,

like rumors that Hillary Clinton is sick.

And they're making memes.

[mysterious synthesizer music playing]

[Beran] Which then spread off the chans

into the mainstream narrative.

These radicalized young men know

that they can poison that well

and spread all this stuff

downstream in the culture.

That's what 4chan was always doing,

but now it was getting

more toxic than ever.

[growling]

While this is happening, what is

happening on the rest of the internet?

Everyone's experience on the internet

is a monetized corporate form of 4chan.

But it's more dangerous than 4chan

because these newer sites are

better at boosting whatever content

will make people stay on the site longer.

[Brennan] What drives

user-base numbers and revenue is anger.

- [digital whooshing]

- [creepy giggling]

[Beran] So, Facebook or Twitter

is making more money

as users are getting angrier

and becoming glued to the screen.

And so, as the internet gets

4chan-ified, it's easier than ever

to make really dark, disgusting

or screwed up things,

and they can let it spawn in that

environment until it spreads everywhere.

Go ahead.

[crowd cheering]

[newscaster] The Fox News decision desk

has called Donald Tr*mp

the 45th president of the United States,

winning the most surreal election

we have ever seen.

[music fades out]

[Housh] With moot, I did find it really

funny that when we all started to leave

and all he was left with

was the Nazis... that he quit.

Having an angry mob of 25 million people

who disagree with

everything you do is never very fun.

It's not even that I'm burnt out.

It's that I've probably gone through

like five burnouts at this point.

[somber music playing]

[Alt] He had founded 4chan as this haven

for people who loved stuff from Japan,

and who loved internet hijinks.

He wasn't in it for politics.

[Beran] Moot is exasperated,

and he announces

that he's leaving the site.

His parting advice

is that you shouldn't actually be

on the internet that much.

He says, go out and live your life.

There's now a meme for it, "touch grass."

[moot] For people who are angry

on the internet, I really, truly hope that

you one day find the beauty

in not allowing strangers

and things outside

your control to rile you up.

I'm sure you'll add a few extra years to

your life by keeping your heart rate down.

[moaning]

[Beran] But the user base, I think, wanted

to drag the site in another direction.

[somber music continues]

[Beran] After Tr*mp wins the election,

the people on 4chan and 8chan spreading

viral misinformation feel empowered.

It worked, so they keep doing it.

[man 1] After it happened

and Tr*mp became president,

I was totally shocked.

I was reading the New York Times.

They projected Hillary at

90-something-percent to win.

No one thought this could

happen from the very beginning,

and it did.

At the time,

I was a freshman in New York City.

I did swing left. Really far left.

They were painting Tr*mp out

like he was going to be

some second coming of h*tler.

To someone as ignorant as I was at 18, 19,

believing that stuff was horrifying.

On Election Day, my friends are like,

"We're doing this march."

"We're going to Tr*mp Tower."

[protestors chanting] f*ck your wall!

[Isaac] It was all-out madness.

[protestors chanting] f*ck Donald Tr*mp!

f*ck Donald Tr*mp!

[Isaac] People yelling and screaming.

[protestors chanting] New York hates you!

New York hates you!

It was just total rage.

[man 2] Set it on fire!

[woman] Let it all burn!

[Isaac] Being in that mob,

it was so hateful,

and it sort of hit me

like a wrecking ball all at once,

realizing, like, hey,

this isn't what I signed up for.

- [man 3] Whose streets?

- [all] Our streets!

[Isaac] There was a shift,

and a lot of it had to do with

just being extremely curious.

When you're that young,

you want to change the world.

It's that same thing of,

like, this country is corrupt

and something needs to be done about it.

With Tr*mp, we have

this new guy in charge saying,

"We're going to drain the swamp."

We're gonna drain the swamp of Washington.

We're gonna have fun doing it.

We're all doing it together.

It gave people some sort of hope

that the world could change.

[upbeat music playing]

A lot of Tr*mp's mega fans felt

that when he was in the White House,

he would have some kind

of clandestine plan

to bring all these people to justice.

[Isaac] But that hope of a radical change

that had been promised repeatedly

never seemed to happen

or come into fruition.

That's when one of the early

Q posts came up on my radar.

Someone with the name Q put out a post,

and it would have the same phrase

Tr*mp would tweet ten minutes later.

Like, how did they predict

President Tr*mp's Twitter?

That's just, like, nuts.

So, it's like, "Let's just show

this to people. This is crazy."

This was posted in 4chan.

So, Q posted the triple-plus,

and Donald Tr*mp, seven minutes later,

tweeted the triple-plus.

So we know for a fact that Q is real.

[Isaac] And within,

you know, a day or two,

I have 20,000 views,

a flood of comments that are all positive.

- And it's just this whirlwind of, like...

- [music ends]

"What did I just do?"

You know? "What have I stumbled on?"

[mysterious music playing]

[Isaac] The whole idea was, like,

"There's this person on the inside

who's sort of leaving us breadcrumbs."

So, he's giving us breadcrumbs.

Breadcrumbs. Breadcrumbs.

I'm giving you all my breadcrumbs,

the whole entire way.

[Isaac] And it's like, you guys

aren't getting the real story.

Here's what's going on behind the scenes.

[Brennan] Tr*mp wanted people

to think that he had a plan.

He set people up to feel like

this kind of person would emerge.

[Isaac on YT] This is his team here.

I'm guessing Q is one of these people.

We have Kushner here,

but look at all the thumbs.

All the thumbs up,

they connect to make an actual Q.

So that was the first hint we got.

[Isaac] The YouTube channel

was growing like wildfire.

This never happened

in the history of the world,

and it's all happening

because of the internet.

Share the stream, tweet it out,

do whatever you want to do.

Spread the information,

that's what QAnon asks us to do.

[woman 1] Q is a patriot.

We know that for sure.

Many of the things that he has

given clues about and talked about

on 4chan and other forums,

um, have really proven to be true.

[newscaster 1] There was a curious sight

at last night's Tr*mp rally in Tampa.

The letter Q was everywhere.

[newscaster 2] What was once

a baseless conspiracy theory

has become a mainstream online cult.

Q is about getting to the truth.

[woman 2] He knows a lot of

the secrets that they have,

and that's why he's such a thr*at to them.

The information he has

given us has been extraordinary.

It was a very diverse group,

but ultimately,

they're just normal people.

You know? They have jobs,

they have kids, they have families.

They're... They're working people.

[Beran] When you talk to people

who support QAnon,

they need some way of expressing

that they got the short end of the stick.

You have an elite group of people getting

richer and richer using mainstream media

to say, "Everything's fine.

Don't worry about it."

"I know life is getting tougher for you."

"That's the truth.

We represent the truth."

Well, what happens is people

begin to hate the truth.

And they end up doing

the same thing that 4chan people did.

They start falling into the internet,

falling into fantasy.

Those smart people at the top,

they're using the truth

to b*at me over the head.

So, I'll invent my own truth.

It doesn't have to be true,

it just has to feel right.

And little by little, that quote,

unquote "truth" just sounded deranged.

If you're not familiar with the

conspiracy theory, it goes like this.

They think that President Tr*mp

is engaged in a secret w*r

against Satanic pedophiles

in the Democratic Party and Hollywood.

Hillary Clinton is a Luciferian,

Satanist, and so are the Rothschilds.

So are the rest of the cabal.

Open your eyes to what's really going on.

Oprah Winfrey?

You really think

we can trust Oprah Winfrey?

These people are trying to drink blood.

Why do they do it?

It's actually a drug,

it's called adrenochrome.

It gives them energy. It makes

them feel a little younger, right?

So it's not like

they're doing it for no reason.

This myth becomes a meme

as it grows in popularity,

as people begin to believe it,

but 4chan knows that what they're doing

is they're putting old 4chan jokes

in the thing that they're making up.

For example, CP,

that's a code for child p*rn.

So, anything that started

with those letters,

cheese pizza, Christopher Poole,

Captain Picard,

these were all old-school 4chan memes.

[man] Raise your hand

if you're a pedophile.

- Oh, right. Yes.

- [all laughing]

[Beran] It's, you know,

pure adolescent nonsense

that was far removed

from what they were joking about.

But it grows into

this outlandish horror story

- that a lot of people believe.

- [music ends]

[journalist] You are

secretly saving the world

from this Satanic cult of pedophiles

and cannibals.

Does that sound like something

you are behind?

Well, I haven't...

I haven't heard that, but, uh...

is that supposed

to be a bad thing or a good thing?

New York City, do not

let them normalize pedophilia.

Hollywood is trying

to normalize pedophilia.

QAnon started trying to absorb

the iconography, the lingo,

the messaging tactics of Anonymous.

And I took that personally.

[water bubbling]

[somber music playing]

[Kirtaner] You know? I was out of

the game a couple of years at that point.

And I tried to ignore them

as much as possible,

but it became a self-propagating troll.

Your great-grandma's knitting group

was all of a sudden talking

about Q and saving the children.

Q was just a whole bunch

of trolls who were, like,

"Look at all these fools. They believe it.

They actually honestly believe this,

and, God, ain't this funny, everybody?"

[Fuxnet] And the only way

that you can really get there

is if you're an assh*le that wants

to make people believe

that their thoughts,

their interpretations

of reality are not true,

and that's harmful. [chuckling]

That's harmful to everybody.

All of us who had built the culture

started seeing our work being used

by people we utterly despised.

And because we all left the chan culture,

there was no one there pushing back.

[purring]

We've all participated

in undermining reality

with our silly jokes

and the conspiracy theories.

But we never wanted things

to turn into a living cartoon.

[protestors clamoring]

And we have to understand we have

awoken in the midst of a nightmare!

But we can fight this!

- [no audible dialogue]

- [protestors shouting]

[Kirtaner] Unfortunately,

when you are that far gone,

there's nothing really you can do.

All you can do is cross your fingers

and hope that eventually

they will realize that...

"I've been conned."

[no audible dialogue]

[Isaac] I was convinced

that it was a real thing.

But eventually Q started

getting a couple things wrong.

[somber music continues]

There were, like, dates given,

and then it would never happen.

[Isaac on YT] Like I said, QAnon, right?

He said March 9th.

It's March 20th, guys. Okay?

Little things like that

kept happening again and again.

We know the storm is upon us.

What else do you want me to say?

These people are going to get arrested.

There was this big kind of powwow

live stream with all the Q influencers,

kind of like a sales pitch.

[man 1] It doesn't matter if it's real.

It's better than Game of Thrones.

It's better than House of Cards,

better than Walking Dead.

It is the most entertaining thing

on the internet.

[man 2] The content

he's discussing is real.

Whether Q himself is real or not,

the content he's discussing

is 100% genuine.

[man 1] Yeah.

[Isaac] Eventually I learned that many

of the individuals in that live stream

were actually behind the QAnon posts.

And they were just

some dudes in a basement

who gained legitimacy

by predicting those Tr*mp tweets.

[Beran] Q never predicted

any of Donald Tr*mp's tweets.

Trolls simply doctored the

timestamps to make it seem that way.

QAnon followers

saw what they wanted to see,

and they just ran with the lie.

[overlapping digital chatter]

[Isaac] I think it really

took advantage of people that

were looking for answers about themselves,

about the world around them.

- [creaking]

- [whooshing]

[Isaac] It just got

to a point where I was like,

"Okay, I have to tell

these people this is not real."

[Isaac on YT] So,

today's the day that Q dies.

The group behind QAnon is a bunch

of manipulative 8chan scammers.

They were using me

to push the Q narrative,

and it's not good to have this false hope,

and the truth needs to come out.

- [ominous music playing]

- [Isaac] It wasn't well-received at all.

It was a mountain of dislikes

and hate comments.

It was really like me talking to a wall.

There's nothing I could have said.

Once you really realize it's phony,

nothing's gonna happen,

you know, you kind of think like,

what is going to happen to these people?

[newscaster] The authorities in Nevada

say a man barricaded himself

in an armored vehicle

near the Hoover Dam bridge this afternoon,

demanding President Tr*mp release reports.

Reports about what, he did not say.

[newscaster 2] The man accused

of murdering reputed mob boss

Francesco "Franky Boy" Cali

appearing in court today.

[newscaster 3] Comello held up

his hand in court,

his palm filled with scribblings,

including a reference

to a conspiracy theory.

[newscaster 4] Parker Police said

she believed her child had been taken

by a Satanic pedophilia ring of Democrats.

[YouTuber] This is ridiculous.

What this is, folks,

this is Douglas County getting caught

being a child sex trafficking ring

and trying to go after

the person that's outing them.

[Beran] Things were

teetering on a precipice

and the 2020 election

pushed things over the edge.

[distorted digital burst]

Joseph R. Biden, Jr. is elected

the 46th president of the United States.

This is a major fraud on our nation.

We were getting ready

to win this election.

Frankly, we did win this election.

[audience cheering]

[newscaster 1] President Tr*mp appeared

in public and falsely claimed

that he won the 2020 election.

He is still showing no signs

of conceding any time soon.

[protestors chanting] Stop the steal!

Stop the steal!

We're here to tell them that they're not

stealing our republic from us!

[Beran] It was another denial of reality.

Reconciling Tr*mp's loss

with a win by creating a fantasy

that he, in fact, has won.

If we look into the way voter fraud

is being conducted,

the way people are throwing away ballots,

these people are going down, you guys,

because these people are cowards,

they're a bunch of child molesters.

[newscaster 2] "Stop the steal"

has swept across inboxes,

Facebook pages, and Twitter

like an out-of-control virus.

There was this moment that

I don't see written about a lot,

leading up to January 6th,

of incredible tension.

They need to stop the steal tomorrow!

Stop the steal!

[all chanting] Stop the steal!

Everyone felt it in the air. We didn't

know what was going to happen.

[all chanting] Stop the steal!

[Beran] Anything could happen.

[distorted digital humming]

[horns honking]

[woman on PA] Delta Airlines

is paging Fight For Tr*mp.

Fight For Tr*mp.

[passengers chanting] Fight for Tr*mp!

Fight for Tr*mp! Fight for Tr*mp!

[all cheering]

The most important day right now

in modern political history is upon us.

The power is in your hands.

[protestors] One, two, three, four.

USA! USA!

[Beran] It was

an internet-generated event.

What's up, people? Where you guys from?

Let me know. Please tag, people.

I'm gonna walk you guys...

I'm gonna walk you

all the way out to the crowds.

[Beran] It's people who love Christ,

people who love Tr*mp,

people who are just conservatives,

conspiracy theorists,

people who are totally deranged,

and they're all glomming together,

and the radical acceptance of all of that,

because they believed

in this mass delusion.

[man 1] They're storming the Capitol!

Hell yeah!

It was wild, you know?

We'd never seen anything like it.

There is no historical parallel

to the storming of the US Capitol.

[protestors clamoring]

But at the time,

I wasn't surprised at all.

[all shouting and cheering]

[Beran] I'm a reporter,

and I was actually there.

I wandered in the crowd,

like, up the Capitol Hill, to the...

part where the Capitol begins,

and it's shrouded in tear gas and smoke.

[tear gas f*ring]

[Beran] And I go around, and I'm like,

"Excuse me, sir.

Why are you invading the Capitol?"

[man 1] We all feel like,

you know, it was fraud,

and with the evidence and everything...

And everyone has a little different,

precious, deranged internet conspiracy.

[man 2] If you don't know what

an obelisk is, do some research.

It's Satan's penis, basically.

But, anyway, look it up.

Then you gotta ask yourself,

"Why is it in Washington, DC?"

Each one is different.

[man 3] The Great Reset?

[Beran] Yeah.

[man 3] That's when we go

to a digital currency

and a one-world government.

The next person

would be totally different.

[man 4] Governor Wolf, in Pennsylvania,

shuts my f*cking restaurant down.

f*ck you, Governor Wolf.

And I would ask them,

"What are you reading?"

[Beran] Is there a certain place where

you get your information on Tr*mp?

[man 5] Yeah, Facebook and Parler.

[Beran] There had not been

a revolution like this before.

It felt new.

It felt like a product of the internet.

A product of social media.

[man 6 on radio] I'm the guy

with the mask on. Where are you?

Cobra, over and out.

[man 7] Break through!

[all shouting and clamoring]

[glass shattering]

- [woman] Whoo!

- [protestors yelling]

- [protestors chanting] Stop the steal!

- [alarm beeping]

[Brennan] Once all of these Tr*mp people

raid the building, and they're all inside,

they don't just walk over the stanchion

or, like, over the velvet red rope.

They walk along it,

even though

they have to go into a little line.

A lot of them were acting like tourists.

They just...

"Whoa. We did it." You know?

Like, total just big-eyed deer

in headlights, a lot of them.

[unsettling music playing]

[Beran] They were surprised themselves.

It was as if

they were wanderers in a dream.

And to me, that spoke to their...

deep delusion.

They were enacting something

that was a fantasy on the internet.

And that it was far removed from

the reality of what they were doing.

They were filming themselves.

Putting themselves back on the internet

as they were doing this

from this closed loop. [chuckling]

Can I speak to Pelosi?

Yeah? We're coming, bitch!

[cameraman] Whose office is this?

Is it on the door? [laughing]

Oh, my God.

[unsettling music rising]

[music ends abruptly]

[mouse clicking]

[Fuxnet] Some of us who started this

whole long unfortunate series of events

had to sit there and watch it happen.

"No. This is where

this needs to f*cking stop."

[protestors chanting] USA!

[man] f*ck yeah!

[Kirtaner] All these people that were

emboldened in the moment,

they all tried to scrub what they could

from the internet.

[whirring]

[newscaster] The FBI spent

the past week trying to identify

and locate the people involved

in last week's v*olence and unrest.

So far, more than 70 people

are facing federal charges,

but many more walking around,

blending into our communities

and evading charges.

The FBI needs your help to find them.

[pensive music playing]

The first time I heard that Kirt

might be coming back,

my first thought was just...

It was utter joy.

This guy is an outright old-school troll

with the skill set needed

to cause some trouble.

[Kirtaner] So, myself

and a few other people got to work.

Parler was a social network

that was used during January 6th.

We were able to download the entirety

of all media that was posted that day.

And on top of that,

who they were communicating with,

where they went after the fact,

where they came from.

All of it was right there,

ripe for the taking,

and we pulled it all down

and released it to the public.

[digital whirring]

[Kirtaner] Anonymous

de-anonymized everybody.

[music fades out]

[Kirtaner] It was poetry in motion.

This is the environment that I thrive in.

I'm just like, who's next, right?

The hacking group Anonymous

stole tons of data

from a site that hosts extremist

and r*cist groups.

[Kirtaner] Epik hosting,

their client base includes InfoWars,

the Oath Keepers, the Proud Boys.

- It's a who's who of hate groups.

- [mysterious music playing]

[Kirtaner] All of their customer data,

their credit card numbers,

personal information,

was all released by Anonymous.

It was one of the biggest hacks

that people had seen in a decade.

Law enforcement's involved,

and we're going to find

exactly how it was moved.

No, I'm not in a state of denial.

Come on, bro.

[Kirtaner] When you get

on a good win streak,

you know, you're riding high, you know,

you kind of get carried away.

There's kind of an intoxicating aspect

to the attention

that you can get from hacking.

It can trick you into thinking

you're fighting for good.

But in reality, you're just high

off the feeling of having power.

[ominous music playing]

[Kirtaner] When you're behind a screen,

you could wake up one day and say,

"You know what?"

"Today, I'm gonna be the assh*le."

And you can just go out there,

and you could get it

out of your f*cking system,

and see what happens.

[Fuxnet] It happened with the FBI raids.

It happened with QAnon.

You can still see it today.

I did indeed discover

Donald Tr*mp's Twitter password,

which was Maga2020

with an exclamation mark.

And he changed a single digit to Maga2024.

That was the password for realDonaldTrump.

I had that sh*t.

I only know that was his Twitter password.

I don't know if it's his password anywhere

else. I did not go to check...

I would never, ever encourage people

to go do anything,

but minor variations

on that password work in a lot of places.

[Stephen Colbert] Former President Tr*mp

just launched his new social media app,

Truth Social.

The site was briefly accessible

to the public last night

and was immediately overrun by trolls

that posted a photo of a pig defecating

on its own scrotum.

[audience laughing]

It's pretty funny. We got

piggy poop balls on The Colbert Show.

[Fuxnet] Throughout the years,

there have been countless people

who tried to take the reins of Anonymous,

but they have not learned from

the mistakes that we made in the past.

Activism should come from

a place of understanding

more so than just anger or fear

or especially self-aggrandization.

We actually haven't heard Anonymous

in a while, to tell you the truth,

but what can you tell us about this hack?

[Fuxnet] Because of

the attention you can gain

through these tactics,

it can have a way of corrupting people.

[shouting] I am literally

in every mainstream media publication

for the things that I do!

I'm not an unknown actor!

I'm literally

a famous f*cking cyberterrorist!

And you think that you could scare me?

What are you gonna do?

What are you gonna do to me, huh?

[birds chirping]

[approaching footsteps]

[chatter on police radio]

[honking]

[Kirtaner] It was around

11:00 in the morning.

Couple of cops come around the corner.

They served me a warrant.

And, "We're here to search your premises."

"We're from the, uh,

Ontario Police Cyber Crimes Division."

I wasn't charged, I wasn't detained,

but now I'm being investigated for...

some alleged online activities.

[ominous music playing]

They're hauling out my computers, any

hard drive storage devices they can find.

And then towards the end, they're like,

"Does he have a Guy Fawkes mask in there?"

"Yeah."

"Oh, yeah. He's got a Guy Fawkes mask."

I am in a very similar situation

as Jeremy Hammond was.

And that's absolutely f*cking terrifying

because, well,

Hammond went to prison for a decade.

[Fuxnet] What's ironic about 4chan,

or any of these digital spaces,

is that people went there

to feel less alone,

but these spaces only simulate community.

[unsettling music playing]

[Fuxnet] It feels like you're fulfilling

your wildest fantasies, but in fact,

you're just experiencing

less and less of life.

You feel like you have it all,

when, in fact, you have nothing.

[thumping]

You're just alone together.

[roaring]

[melancholy music playing]

[music fades out]

[insects chittering]

[Fuxnet] This is the kind of place where,

like, you're walking around people,

they'll make eye contact with you.

They want that, "How you doing?"

[Hatesec] Yeah, that's nice.

[Fuxnet] As far as the FBI stuff went,

I got out of it unscathed,

with no charges or anything like that.

The people that I was staying with

when I was on my trip around the country

were people

that I've known since the '90s,

that I met in anime chat rooms,

and had not met them at all

until I left on the run.

Anonymous was never this mythical unicorn

of an organization

that could fix all of our problems.

People just believed that it was.

[all singing] Never gonna run around

And desert you

Never gonna make you cry

[Fuxnet] I think I have an understanding

of how some of our actions in the past,

whether we like it or not, have affected

the reality of things today.

[newscaster 1] Police say he posted

a document showing

support for r*cist conspiracy theories.

[newscaster 2] The Guardian reports

4chan has inspired

at least three other

mass casualty att*cks,

including a sh**ting

in D.C. just last month.

[man 1] There has been a string of

fake mass sh**t with crisis actors...

[man 2] The Jews want to replace

white people because they hate us.

[man 3] Do your own research

and find out for yourself.

[woman 1] Leaders

shape-shift into reptiles.

[woman 2] They're always

eating these children.

[woman 3] Of course it's not fake, okay?

[mystical music playing]

[Beran] We now know that if you spend

a lot of time on the screen,

you can create a mass delusion,

that reality parts from where you are,

and you can create

something elaborate in your mind

that is delicate and complicated,

and it can be

this really fascinating thing,

and you can spend all day

obsessing about it with other people.

It can feel real as anything else.

- [mystical music continues]

- [door slamming]

[Beran] But what we're doing is building

these elaborate grotesque fantasies

out of our own unhappiness.

[Alt] Our current moment

is really about us as humans.

And how we're only

just starting to learn the effects

of these tools that we all use.

We didn't evolve

to be online all the time.

This is an absolutely new moment

for the human animal.

- [unsettling digital effects]

- [distorted laughter]

[Alt] And figuring out

how we use these tools,

that's the question of the next century.

[bubbling]

[unsettling music playing]

[music distorting]

[music fades out]

[somber music playing]

[upbeat music playing]

[music fades out]
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