People from my Internet generation, those who came online in the mid-1990s, have rose-tinted memories of early Web “shock sites”—sites with unassuming URLs containing horrible pictures of awful things ...
Last night, I received an alarming email. It was from the people who now own goatse.cx. “BREAKING NEWS: YOU can now OWN a piece of GOATSE.CX in the Ethereum blockchain!” it exclaimed. Worrying. If you ...
The price of the infamous Goatse.cx auction is up to a staggering $159,600 — a pecuniary sum so large that, even in c-notes, it could scarcely be crammed up the Goatse.cx guy's gaping, bleeding anus.
The infamous Goatse.cx domain, once home to a shock site with a picture of a man stretching his anus to a seemingly-impossible diameter, has endorsed the virtual currency Dogecoin. Users brave enough ...
In November of last year, Gawker reported that the notorious gross-out site “Goatse.cx,” which showed an old man splaying open his anus for all to see, was being transitioned from a nostalgia-laden ...
The rise of the web's gross-out culture began, ironically, with a government crackdown on Internet obscenity. In 1996 the US Congress passed the Communications Decency Act, which criminalized the use ...
Here at Ars, we’ve seen time and again how simple web and/or mobile games can be cloned or outright stolen by unscrupulous developers aiming to cash in on someone else’s game concept. But developer ...
This short article is not for the faint of heart. It’s not for internet dabblers, or the recently-fed. Or maybe it is- maybe this article will give some insight into the world of the digital natives.
Goatse Security, the folks who exposed the AT&T iPad security flaw last week, are back with some new observations. First, they think AT&T is exceedingly lame for blaming THEM for the security flaw (we ...
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Q82RNlCRoFs#!] It was nigh on half a decade ago that I first met the fell demon they call Goatse.cx ...
AT&T has fleshed out its response about an Apple iPad flaw that exposed customer email addresses and may just make matters worse. On June 7 we learned that unauthorized computer “hackers” maliciously ...
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