all
a
/
b
/
c
/
f
/
h
/
jp
/
l
/
o
/
q
/
s
/
sw
/
lounge
cgi
up
wiki
Heyuri!
Bulletin Boards
2D Cute
2D Ero
2D Lolikon
3D Girls
Anime/Manga
Flash
日本語/Japan
Lounge
Oekaki
Off-Topic
Site Discussion
Strange World
Overboard
Heyuri★CGI
Heyuri★CGI
@PartyII
Battle Royale R
Chat
Chinsouki★
Dating
DevChat
Drama Club
Hakoniwa Islands PvE
Hakoniwa Islands PvP
Polls
Slime Breeder
Web Banana
Web Shiritori
Yumemiru Gambler
Kakiko Checker
Other
Anime Nominations
Banners
Cytube
Heyuri Calendar
Heyuri Wiki
MAL Club
Museum
Post Notifications
Steam Group
Uploader
[
Home
] [
Catalog
] [
Search
] [
Inbox
] [
Write PM
] [
Admin
]
Off-Topic@Heyuri
it's the place to be!
[
Return
]
Posting mode: Reply
Name
Email
Subject
Post
Comment
File
Animated GIF
Password
(for deletion, 8 chars max)
Allowed file types are: gif, jpg, jpeg, png, bmp, swf, webm, mp4
Maximum file size allowed is 50000 KB.
Images greater than 200 * 200 pixels will be thumbnailed.
25
unique users in the last 10 minutes (including lurkers)
Switch form position
|
BBCode reference
Read the
rules
before you post.
Protect your username, use a
tripcode!
日本のへゆり
2025/05/04
-
Heyuri Calendar
has been launched. Find out about upcoming Heyuri events!
2025/04/01
-
NEW GAME:
Slime Breeder
! Commit slimecest with your ancestors to create teh ultimate slime!
2024/09/12
-
NEW GAME:
Battle Royale R
! Make characters and see if they can win the Heyuri Cup!
2024/09/10
-
Tegaki function has been added
[
Show all
]
We will hold the 12th Townhall next Saturday (5th) 19:00 UTC [
Info
] [
Countdown
]
File:
1280px-Anonymous_Scientology_9_by_David_(…).jpg
(198 KB, 1280x960)
[
ImgOps
]
Project Chanology Explained in a Post
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)17:58:10
No.
127197
In January 2008, a promotional video of Tom Cruise discussing Scientology as a superior force destined to save humanity was leaked. This video quickly went viral, but the Church of Scientology, known for its aggressive stance against criticism and strict control of its image, attempted to remove it from the internet using legal threats and copyright claims.
Anonymous, a decentralized collective of users, mostly from forums like 4chan, saw this censorship as a direct affront to freedom of expression. In response, they launched Project Chanology, a campaign of resistance against the church.
### Phase 1: Online Operations
Initially, Anonymous' actions were confined to the digital realm. They used DDoS attacks to overload the church’s websites, sent thousands of black-ink faxes to drain their resources, and carried out email and phone campaigns filled with mocking messages. These efforts aimed to draw public attention to the church’s repressive tactics.
### Phase 2: Public Protests
The pivotal moment came on February 10, 2008, when Anonymous organized simultaneous protests in over 100 cities worldwide. Outside Church of Scientology locations, hundreds of people demonstrated wearing Guy Fawkes masks—borrowed from the movie *V for Vendetta*—as a symbol of anonymity and resistance. Banners and slogans denounced the church’s abusive practices, such as the economic exploitation of its members, psychological control, and harassment of critics.
### Why Target Scientology?
For decades, the church had been under suspicion for questionable practices, such as forcing members to pay exorbitant sums to "advance" within its hierarchy, silencing ex-members with legal threats, and aggressively pursuing any critics. Anonymous viewed these actions as violations of fundamental principles of freedom and transparency.
### The Impact of the Movement
Although Project Chanology did not dismantle the Church of Scientology, it successfully exposed many of its practices to public scrutiny. The protests received widespread media coverage, and the movement helped sow doubt about the church’s legitimacy. At the same time, Chanology marked a shift for Anonymous, evolving from being known for simple trolling to being seen as a group with more serious activist goals.
### The Legacy of Chanology
The project not only tarnished Scientology’s public image but also set a precedent for future hacktivism movements. It demonstrated how digital tools and real-world protests could be combined to challenge powerful institutions. While the momentum of the movement waned over time, Chanology remains an iconic example of organized resistance born from the internet.
Marked for deletion (Old)
>>
1
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)18:32:23
No.
127199
we should do something similar but for the UN since theyre trying to take our lolis (and shotas) away
>>
2
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)18:47:00
No.
127201
Project Heyurilogy:
We throw our cum jars and piss bottles at lobbyists and politicians who want to ban loli hentai
>>
3
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)18:49:26
No.
127202
heyuri should do something like this against localizers
>>
4
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)19:04:55
No.
127204
File:
engage.png
(4547 KB, 3260x928)
[
ImgOps
]
>>127202
This, have you seen the Fire Emblem Engage localization? Dreadful. They censored all romances that had teenagers in them, and I'm talking about almost-adult teens. And then when someone made a translation mod, all mod sites banned it for illegal content [even though it's literally just the translation of the original japanese game that is sold in Japan no problem
]
>>
5
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)19:07:20
No.
127205
we could unite all of heyuri and play trolls
>>
6
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)19:49:33
No.
127208
>>127201
Sounds like a plan!
>>
7
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)20:39:28
No.
127214
>>127197
Chanology was cancer
It turned 4chan into politics obsessed srs bsns
>>
8
Anonymous
2024/12/13(Fri)20:48:38
No.
127215
>>127197
This reads like my college political essay on the subject. I can't believe I wrote that shit
>>
9
Anonymous
2024/12/14(Sat)05:10:11
No.
127241
File:
080606_ROK_Protest_Against_US_Beef_Agree(…).jpg
(399 KB, 1600x1200)
[
ImgOps
]
>>127214
The more I think about it the more I feel like they were simply caught up in the zeitgeist. In hindsight, 2008 was a pivotal year for the politicization of the internet. Around the same time the Chanology protests were happening there were protests in Colombia against a local militia which started with a group on Facebook, There were also early minor protests fuelled by Facebook and Twitter in Egypt which would eventually lead to the Arab Spring, and 'candlelight protests' in Korea against the lifting of a ban on US meat, where, thanks to the influence of the Internet, school age girls were among the first to protest, and thus became a symbol of the movement.
2008 is also when divisive rhetoric kicked in in the West. People talk about how Trump made people crazy, but Obama made people crazy before that. On the one hand there was his personality cult who wouldn't countenance any criticism of him, and figured you were racist for doing so, and on the other hand there was the (admittedly small) violent opposition who were actually racist and believed he was a Muslim spy or whatever. I was on a number of small forums at this time, and the first political debates that made me want to tap out of politics were scuffles over Obama.
>>
10
Anonymous
2024/12/14(Sat)05:56:58
No.
127242
File:
Smart monkey uses mobile phone Xz5OaxWU_(…).webm
(1865 KB, 360x450)
>>127241
and in 2007 a device was invented that gives internet access to creatures not intelligent enough to use a computer.
>>
11
Anonymous
SAGE!
2025/02/13(Thu)05:04:12
No.
132707
>>127241
Don't forget also, a lot of this web-born activism was not truly organic. If I recall correctly, Twitter was used by democrat politicians for the 2008 elections, for instance; obviously they understood the power of normalfag SMS.
Delete post: [
File only
]
Password: