
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/one-on-one-christopher-poole-founder-of-4chan/?src=tptw
Last posted Mar 30, 2010 at 10:25AM EDT. Added Mar 20, 2010 at 03:55PM EDT
22 conversations with 16 participants

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/one-on-one-christopher-poole-founder-of-4chan/?src=tptw
he looked better than i imagined
i thogught of this geeky glasses pimply face
He’s pretty good-looking, IMHO.
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1. I don’t read the times, Liberal Propaganda
2. seeing moot IRL just makes me hate him more… although I wouldn’t wish to be little girl If I looked like that, If I cared about him I might say that he is rather dashing…
3. this is just here to make three points
One idea of his that I found interesting:
Q: Do you support anonymity online?
A: Someone I recently met at the TED conference told me “part of the magic of youth is that people are able to forgive and forget.” As kids, we say stupid things, and because there’s not a record of it, nobody is going to give you a hard time at 30 years old about something you said or did when you were 8 years old. Online, you have all these social networks that are moving to a state of persistent identity and in turn we’re sacrificing the ability to be youthful. In 10 years, everything you say and do will be visible online and I think it’s really unfortunate.
THis truly was a cool story
This is interesting to know that he’s working on an alternate “new” version of 4chan.
As well as Yatta quoted it from the interview, there are more and more strange things happening because of a constant online identity.
I’ve heard about people being fired from their job because their employer lurked and found out some photos of them a little drunk in parties, or practising “weird” fetishes for fun (cosplay being considered as one of them) posted on sites like Facebook.
This isn’t something I can comprehend. I thought people were hired because of their qualifications…
I agree that personnal information are things to be restricted when it can be easily viewed by others, but, in those cases, the employers HAVE to go to these websites on purpose. The main question would be “why ?”.
Oddly, I agree Tomberry
anonymity is a big deal because on one hand, if you do something illegal the police can track you. but on the other all information is pretty much public now
Anonymity is useful if you’re trying to get away with something illegal (bad), and it’s useful if you live under a repressive government (good), but for most of us, I think it allows us to say things that are socially unacceptable IRL, even if we don’t believe it. While I don’t doubt that some of the racist, homophobic, and misogynistic stuff you read on 4chan are somebody’s real thoughts, I wonder if much of it (if not most of it) is said just because it’s usually forbidden.
I still wonder why people think Christopher Poole is moot’s real name.
I do support anonymity, like moot. I don’t want people to know what I do, even if it’s legal.
Wow, this is a really interesting article
is he gay?
srsly, im not trolin’
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^
I like his eyes ;D
He kinda reminds me of a non Asian Brother Sharp…
:I mewt
I think 4chan is a pretty cool guy, eh gives interviews and doesn’t afraid of anything.
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Moot. Figured he’d be a dick. And he’s the queen of 4chan. Of course he’s gay.
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