Anon V Stickam -
Today, you cannot visit Stickam. It redirects to a placeholder. You cannot find most of the raid videos, as they were deleted from YouTube for harassment. The “channers” who participated are now in their thirties and forties, working IT jobs or raising families.
"Anon v Stickam" represents a localized example of the broader shift of the "Anonymous" collective from 4chan-based trolling to, according to Cyberwar and Cyberwar , "activist actions" or, according to Reddit , "vigilante justice" against individuals seen as harmful (e.g., in pedophilia cases). Stickam, as a, according to New York Times and Los Angeles Times , "unfiltered" and "open" site, provided the perfect, dangerous playground for these interactions to take place. anon v stickam
Anons developed a playbook of attacks:
Anonymous operated on the principle of "lulz"—the pursuit of amusement through chaos—rejecting any form of censorship. Stickam attempted to impose traditional corporate order and safety standards on a medium that was still largely the "Wild West." The Power of the Swarm: Today, you cannot visit Stickam
The most infamous intersection of "Anon v Stickam" occurred in 2010 with an 11-year-old user known as . After Slaughter posted confrontational videos on Stickam and YouTube, the 4chan community launched a massive harassment campaign. The situation escalated when the child’s father appeared on a livestream to defend her, famously uttering the phrase "Consequences will never be the same," which immediately became a viral meme. The “channers” who participated are now in their