Plagued 4chan - the Internet hate machine

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Will the 4chan hack be the end of it?

  • Yes, goodbye forever 4chan

    Votes: 1,031 18.5%
  • No, they will rise from the ashes, stronger than ever

    Votes: 343 6.2%
  • This will rattle them but it will be forgotten about next week

    Votes: 2,322 41.6%
  • I am just here for the janny phonebooking

    Votes: 1,093 19.6%
  • What the fuck is 4chan

    Votes: 218 3.9%
  • Yotsuba&!

    Votes: 569 10.2%

  • Total voters
    5,576
Why are you so hateful towards less fortunate members of our society?
Their lack of good fortune was entirely self inflicted, and they are so desperate for validation that they systematically infiltrate every niche of human existence for the sole purpose of forcing their twisted worldview upon everyone else. It's entirely logical to hate anyone who behaves this way.

I am still shocked over how successfully they managed to infiltrate the moderation/janny team on the board. Nearly all of them were trannies. The level of pathological narcissism is dumbfounding.
 
Their lack of good fortune was entirely self inflicted, and they are so desperate for validation that they systematically infiltrate every niche of human existence for the sole purpose of forcing their twisted worldview upon everyone else. It's entirely logical to hate anyone who behaves this way.

I am still shocked over how successfully they managed to infiltrate the moderation/janny team on the board. Nearly all of them were trannies. The level of pathological narcissism is dumbfounding.
Idk why it's shocking. With how gay 4chan has been for the last few years. Anyone should have known its trannies all the way down.
 
Oh, right,
"pwease make a password containing at least 1 special character, 4 numbers, Ancient Sumerian script to make it incredibly hard for a human to remember but piss-easy for a computer to brute force, so you'll eventually throw your hands up in annoyance and use the same fucking password everywhere".

Shithead pick a random sentence from a book on your shelf and use it as a password. Easy to remember and easy to find if you forget.

Don't do this ever. Dictionary lists are usually the first to be used in brute-forcing and reverse cypher algos. Random letters, numbers, symbols, etc are better and unique. Bitwarden uses a password generation function that ensures your password is checked against breaches for matches as well iirc
 
ARCHETYPICAL post on /v/
woman enjoyer.webp
 
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While a standard brute force attack tries all possible combinations of characters, a dictionary attack tries combinations of words in for example the English language. More sophisticated dictionary attacks might also try quotation marks or parentheses in their combinations. So you should add something to your password that would not be in a normal sentence. But don't use leet speak, there are dictionary attacks which account for it. As always, the longer the password the harder it is to brute force.
Do dictionary attacks account for ebonics?
If I understand it right, with dictionary attacks each word counts as 1 character in a totally random gibberish password, so if it's a sentence of at least 16 words it should be good enough to not be worth spending processing time on cracking?
 
Idk why it's shocking. With how gay 4chan has been for the last few years. Anyone should have known its trannies all the way down.
I knew the board was infiltrated by people who hated us, I simply didn't realize that 99% of them were mtf trannies. The board had been fucked for at least 10 years, but it was still possible to sift through all the nonsense and find deeply thought provoking posts. This is why the board hung on for as long as it did. You could still find people who were honest truth seekers, instead of people who post things solely to impress invisible internet people.

April 15, 2025 was a dark day, frens. A day that will live in infamy. But it had to happen, I suppose.
 
Do dictionary attacks account for ebonics?
If I understand it right, with dictionary attacks each word counts as 1 character in a totally random gibberish password, so if it's a sentence of at least 16 words it should be good enough to not be worth spending processing time on cracking?

A few years ago I registered an account at a site that wouldn't accept passwords longer than 10 characters. Took me forever to realize why it wouldn't accept the password because they didn't tell you about the limit.
 
So?
Pick a sentence with a number and a quote or parenthesis.
How many words does the sentence need for this dictionary attack to not be an option?
This is some napkin math, correct me if I'm wrong:
If you're picking a sentence then it doesn't matter because the attacker could just brute force with sentences, assuming they're not doing markov chain related attacks.
Assuming an average book has 20000 sentences, taking a sentence out of the 1000 most popular books, you're looking at about ~24.3 bits of entropy, less than 6 randomly picked lowercase English characters.
 
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I knew the board was infiltrated by people who hated us, I simply didn't realize that 99% of them were mtf trannies. The board had been fucked for at least 10 years, but it was still possible to sift through all the nonsense and find deeply thought provoking posts. This is why the board hung on for as long as it did. You could still find people who were honest truth seekers, instead of people who post things solely to impress invisible internet people.

April 15, 2025 was a dark day, frens. A day that will live in infamy. But it had to happen, I suppose.
even disregarding the posts. Just looking at what the people running it did over time. Having an "anonymous" image board. requires an email to post, blocks vpns. those two alone. maybe if it was one, but not the other, it would be reasonable. but together. To me that is just a bad sign.
 
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