Christopher Poole / moot
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About
moot is the online pseudonym used by Christopher Poole, the creator of English-language imageboard 4chan and media remixing web app Canvas.
Online History
Christopher Poole created 4chan in 2003 when he was 15 years old and living in New York City. According to a 2007 article in The Star[8], moot frequented the Something Awful forums prior to creating 4chan. The site was launched on October 1st, 2003 as a place to discuss Otaku culture, inspired by the Japanese image board Futaba Channel (2chan), with a primary focus on anime and manga. Poole remained somewhat anonymous until his name was revealed in a Wall Street Journal[1] article profiling 4chan on July 9th, 2008. His web presence remains fairly limited, but (outside of 4chan) he maintains an active Twitter account[21] and personal blog.[33]
Time Magazine Poll
In April 2009, a website was launched for the annual Time 100 poll to decide who would be given that year's title of World's Most Influential Person. After the link was posted on 4chan, Anons decided to work together to skew the results. Eventually they were able to vote moot to the top of the list, and also managed to vertically spell out “marblecake also the game,” a reference to the name of the IRC channel[5] used during Project Chanology raids, by arranging the first 21 nominees’ names in a particular order. Time[4] announced that Poole had won the title World's Most Influential Person with 16,794,368 votes on April 27th, 2009.
In a stunning result, the winner of the third annual TIME 100 poll and new owner of the title World's Most Influential Person is moot. The 21-year-old college student and founder of the online community 4chan.org, whose real name is Christopher Poole, received 16,794,368 votes and an average influence rating of 90 (out of a possible 100) to handily beat the likes of Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin and Oprah Winfrey. To put the magnitude of the upset in perspective, it's worth noting that everyone moot beat out actually has a job.
Canvas
Canvas is a social web application focused on remixing media (mostly images) using a built in image editing tools. On May 14th, 2010, TechCrunch[2] reported that Poole had managed to raise $625,000 in funding for the project. A private beta was launched on January 31st, 2011, with only 4,000 invites. On September 6th, 2011, Canvas announced on their official blog[3] that they were opening Canvas up to the public. After its initial launch, the site was featured on Business Insider[16], The Creator's Project[17] and Digital Trends.[18] In 2011, there were more than one million posts made on the site and by January 2012, there were an estimated 77,000 monthly users on the site.[14] Throughout 2012, the Daily Dot[15] published near-daily collections of the site's most popular content.
DrawQuest
DrawQuest is a mobile gaming app that allows users to participate in drawing challenges on their smart phones or tablets. In the game, users would be presented with quests, or prompts, that often involved a single doodle given to the user that they would have to draw a scene around. The app was originally launched for the iPad in February 2013 [26] and downloaded over 1 million times within the first two weeks of its release.[28] On November 21st, the app was released for iPhone OS, which was covered by several tech news sites such as Tech Crunch[29]and The Laughing Squid.[30] On February 22, 2013, DrawQuest launched the Tumblr blog bestofdrawquest[27] to showcase their users’ artwork (shown below).
Closure
On January 21st, 2014, Poole announced on his blog[23] that DrawQuest and Canvas had failed as business ventures and both products would be closing. In the blog post, he explained:
"I’m incredibly proud of an amazing team and all that they have accomplished. Our most recent product, DrawQuest, is by all accounts a success. In the past year it’s been downloaded more than 1.4 million times, and is currently used by about 25,000 people a day, and 400,000 last month alone. Retention and engagement are great. And yet we still failed. It may seem surprising that a seemingly successful product could fail, but it happens all the time. Although we arguably found product/market fit, we couldn’t quite crack the business side of things."
The same day, similar announcements were made on the official blogs of DrawQuest and Canv.as to notify all users that they would try to keep the service up for a few months, but they wouldn’t be able to provide a systems update after the upcoming v3.1.1.[24] In addition, e-mail newsletters were sent out to instruct users on how to save and back-up their contributions once the site shuts down.[25]
Chris Poole Announces Retirement
On January 21st, 2015, Poole published an update on the 4chan news blog[31] announcing his retirement as site administrator after eleven-and-a-half years, assuring that 4chan would continue in his absence.
Furthermore, Poole stated that he felt it was time to move on and that he needed "time away to decompress and reflect" from the pressures of being the site's sole administrator. In his closing remarks, Poole stated that "it was truly an honor to serve as 4chan's founding administrator" and "I look forward to one day returning to 4chan as its Admin Emeritus or just another Anonymous." Poole also pointed out that he would be using his personal blog[33] in the future to write more about his experiences running 4chan.
That foundation will now be put to the ultimate test, as today I'm retiring as 4chan's administrator. From a user's perspective, nothing should change. A few senior volunteers--including 4chan's lead developer, managing moderator, and server administrator--have stepped up to ensure a smooth transition over the coming weeks.
I'll need time away to decompress and reflect, but I look forward to one day returning to 4chan as its Admin Emeritus or just another Anonymous, and also writing more about my experience running 4chan on my personal blog.
The post was appended by a list of site statistics which was later tweeted[32] on the official 4chan feed (seen below).
Eleven and a half years of 4chan</a>, in numbers: <a href="https://t.co/YhzUy0XbvQ">pic.twitter.com/YhzUy0XbvQ</a></p>— 4chan (
4chan) January 21, 2015
That day, Redditor Smooch_The_Grooch submitted a screenshot of the announcement to the /r/4chan[12] subreddit, where it gained over 4,500 votes (97% upvoted) and 740 comments within in the first three hours.
Moot's Final 4chan Q&A
On January 23, 2015, Poole hosted a "goodbye" livestream on the official 4chan YouTube channel, during which he answered questions from the /qa/ board. The Q&A lasted 8 hours and reached 12 threads[34] during the stream, which averaged 40,000 viewers during it's length and had a view count of over 1.5 million after it finished rendering on YouTube.
During the stream, moot went through the first thread in full and made it through the first part of the second thread. Aside from laughing at his ridicule (being called a cuck for most of the thread), Poole reaffirmed that he did not "become rich" off of 4chan and that he lived a relatively poor aside from being able to afford rent in New York. Poole stated that his kept most of his team in the dark and that his decision to leave was only confided to a few the day prior to his departure announcement. Upon signing off, Poole's last words were:
"See ya later Space Cowboy…"
A reference to the 1998 anime Cowboy Bebop ending title cards.
Employment at Google
On March 7th, 2016, Poole published a post on his Tumblr[35] blog announcing he had accepted a position at Google and was looking forward to contributing his "experience from a dozen years of building online communities."
"When meeting with current and former Googlers, I continually find myself drawn to their intelligence, passion, and enthusiasm -- as well as a universal desire to share it with others. I’m also impressed by Google’s commitment to enabling these same talented people to tackle some of the world’s most interesting and important problems."
On March 7th, 2016, Google Plus' vice president of streams, photos and sharing Bradley Horowitz confirmed Poole would be joining his team at the company, leading many to speculate Poole would be involved in Google's social media efforts.[42]
In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the hiring, including The Guardian,[36] IBI Times,[37] The Next Web,[38] Fortune,[39] The Independent[40] and Gizmodo.[41]
Reputation
Poole has become a respected Internet entrepreneur, and has spoken at conferences at the Yale University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and South by Southwest. In 2008, he was referred to as "the most influential web entrepreneur you've never heard of" in an article in The Observer.[6]
Advocacy of Online Anonymity
Poole spoke during the TED2010 conference about the importance of online anonymity on February 10th, 2010 (shown below, left). He contrasted anonymous websites like 4chan to sites like Facebook and Twitter that encourage the sharing of personal information. Poole expressed a similar sentiment during his keynote presentation at South by Southwest Interactive on March 13th, 2011 (shown below, left) and specifically pointed out how he disagrees with Mark Zuckerberg's view of anonymity online. He stated: "Anonymity is authenticity. It allows you to share in a completely unvarnished, raw way."
Stature Within 4chan
On 4chan, specifically within the random "/b/" board, moot is regarded as a celebrity of sorts and is often featured in threads dedicated to posting various images of the site's creator. Several exploitables exist that use photos of moot. As of November 2012, there are more than 23,300 Chanarchive threads that mention moot.[19] Additionally, a Facebook fan page for moot[20] has more than 8635 likes as of November 2012.
Controversies
Dispute with Moot.It
In late November 2012, Christopher Poole's lawyers sent a formal letter (shown below) to Moot.It[10], a San Francisco-based startup company planning to release customizable commenting software. The letter states that "moot" is part of Poole's right of publicity under New York State law as well as a trademark of 4chan, arguing that since the name represents his online life and persona, people could mistakenly construe that Poole is associated with the company. Moot.It's founder, Courtney Couch, responded by saying that the company took their name from the word's definition "open to discuss or debate" and noting that they did not plan on changing the name. Couch's lawyer also released a statement dismissing the lawsuit as "frivolous" and arguing that any further inquiries would lead to "a lawsuit for malicious prosecution." The news of the legal discussion was featured on BetaBeat[11], BBC News[12], Ars Technica[22] and Softpedia.[13] As of 3:18 PM EST on November 20th, 2012, Moot.it was offline, but it is unknown whether or not it was related to the dispute.
Reaction to GamerGate
Originally 4chan allowed discussion of the Quinnspiracy / #GamerGate controversy. However after attending the XOXO convention (which has Anita Sarkeesian, as a guest speaker) he and the mods purged 4chan of all discussion of GamerGate, closing threads related to the topic and banning users.
On September 18th after a riot conducted by /sp/ and /v/ moot gave a response and reason for the deletions:
The reaction to moot's stance on GamerGate as well of the preceding censorship forced users to seek a new refuge for the discussion on MasterChan and the recently formed 8chan
Search Interest
Search queries for both "christopher poole" and "4chan moot" reached their highest volume in April of 2009, the same month Time Magazine announced Christopher Poole had won the annual Time 100 poll for World's Most Infuential Person.
External References
[1] Wall Street Journal – Modest Website is Behind a Bevy of Memes
[2] TechCrunch – 4chan Founder ‘Moot’ Raises $625K For Stealth Startup Canvas Networks
[3] Canvas Blog (via Wayback Machine) – Hey Canvas, We’re opening up the site to the public today!
[4] Time Magazine (via Wayback Machine) – The World's Most Influential Person Is…
[5] Music Machinery – Inside the Precision Hack
[6] The Observer – The 20-year-old at heart of web's most anarchic and influential site
[7] Time Magazine (via Wayback Machine) – The Master Of Memes
[8] The Star – Funny how `stupid' site is addictive
[9] Art Info – On the Creative Crucible of 4chan Where People are Free to be Horrible Assholes
[10] Muut (formerly Moot.It) – Home
[11] BetaBeat – 4Chan Founder Moot Sends Cease & Desist Letter to Startup Moot.It
[12] BBC News – Legal row over 4Chan founder Moots nickname
[13] Softpedia – 4chan Founder Asks Company to Give Up “Moot” Name
[14] Daily Dot – Five million stickers later, Canvas gets real
[15] Daily Dot – Search results for "canvas"
[16] Business Insider – REVEALED: Inside Canvas, 4chan Founder Moot's Secretive Startup
[17] The Creator's Project – Moot's Canvas Is Not The New 4chan
[18] Digital Trends – Canvas: 4chan founder Moot’s newest meme generator
[19] Chanarchive – Search results for moot
[22] Ars Technica – 4chan founder sics lawyers on startup for using the name "moot"
[23] Chrishateswriting – Today my startup failed
[24] DrawQuest (via Wayback Machine) – Sad news--an important message from Team DrawQuest
[25] Canvas (via Wayback Machine) – All good things must come to an end.
[26] Business Insider – 4Chan Creator Chris Poole Launches His Creativity App DrawQuest For The iPhone
[27] Tumblr – bestofdrawquest
[28] The Next Web – 4chan creator’s new iPad app, DrawQuest, passes half a million downloads in 2 weeks, over 1M drawings
[29] Tech Crunch- 4chan Founder’s ‘Drawquest’ Daily Drawing App Makes A Big Leap Onto Small Screens
[30] The Laughing Squid – DrawQuest Drawing App Launches for the iPhone and iPod Touch
[31] 4chan – News Post 118
[32] Twitter – @moot – 21 Jan 2015
[33] Chrishateswriting – Home Page
[34] 4chan – /qa/ – Moot's Final 4chan Q&A Thread #12
[35] Tumblr – Chris Hates Writing
[36] The Guardian – Google hires founder of 4chan
[37] IBI Times – Google Hires Christopher Poole Of Notorious Website 4chan
[38] The Next Web – 4chan founder Christopher
[39] Forbes – What Does Google Want With 4chan Founder Chris Poole
[40] The Independent – 4chan founder Moot joins Google
[41] Gizmodo – 4chan Creator Says he works at Google Now
[42] Google Plus – Bradley Horowitz
Top Comments
CRAIGGU4
Mar 09, 2016 at 06:37PM EST
g-rev
Jan 21, 2015 at 12:23PM EST