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The ''goatse.cx'' domain name was sold at auction to an unknown bidder on April 30, 2007. The first auction ended with fake bids, according to ''seobidding.com'', so the auction was reactivated. This time, fake bidders won, so ''Seobidding.com'' announced that the website would be sold for $500,000, and that legal action would be taken against the fake bidders. On November 25, 2007, the site was still for sale, asking for "''$50,200 minimum''".
The ''goatse.cx'' domain name was sold at auction to an unknown bidder on April 30, 2007. The first auction ended with fake bids, according to ''seobidding.com'', so the auction was reactivated. This time, fake bidders won, so ''Seobidding.com'' announced that the website would be sold for $500,000, and that legal action would be taken against the fake bidders. On November 25, 2007, the site was still for sale, asking for "''$50,200 minimum''".
[[File:Goatse.jpg|thumb|100px|Hackers successfully hijack the billboard to display the dreaded image.|293x293px]]
[[File:Goatse.jpg|thumb|100px|Hackers successfully hijack a billboard to display the dreaded image.|293x293px]]
In early December 2012, the site plans to launch its own e-mail system, named, Goatse Mail, claiming to be launched. However, the e-mail system has not been launched since. The website was then put back, after a new owner purchased the website for 8,000 euros in 2008, and is now planning to be a subdomain service on which you can host your own website. There were also plans for a cryptocurrency called ''Goatse Coin'', but there doesn't seem to be any progress.<ref>Pearson, Jordan; Koebler, Jason (2017-10-17). "The Current Owner of the 'Goatse' Website Wants It to Be a Household Name". Motherboard. Retrieved 2018-12-15. https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/evpj8a/owner-of-goatse-coin-website-wants-it-to-be-a-household-name-meme</ref>
In early December 2012, the site plans to launch its own e-mail system, named, Goatse Mail, claiming to be launched. However, the e-mail system has not been launched since. The website was then put back, after a new owner purchased the website for 8,000 euros in 2008, and is now planning to be a subdomain service on which you can host your own website. There were also plans for a cryptocurrency called ''Goatse Coin'', but there doesn't seem to be any progress.<ref>Pearson, Jordan; Koebler, Jason (2017-10-17). "The Current Owner of the 'Goatse' Website Wants It to Be a Household Name". Motherboard. Retrieved 2018-12-15. https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/evpj8a/owner-of-goatse-coin-website-wants-it-to-be-a-household-name-meme</ref>


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[[wikipedia:Gay Nigger Association of America|Gay Nigger Association of America]], the known creators for [[Last Measure]], created a group called "Goatse Security", which derives from the site's name, in December 2009. Goatse Security became known for leaking unsecured 114,000 iPad email address. Besides the group, [[wikipedia:Gay Nigger Association of America|Gay Nigger Association of America]] used the image as a way to troll users, such as adding the image to [[Last Measure]], a supposed "leaked" operating system that booted the image, and many more.
[[wikipedia:Gay Nigger Association of America|Gay Nigger Association of America]], the known creators for [[Last Measure]], created a group called "Goatse Security", which derives from the site's name, in December 2009. Goatse Security became known for leaking unsecured 114,000 iPad email address. Besides the group, [[wikipedia:Gay Nigger Association of America|Gay Nigger Association of America]] used the image as a way to troll users, such as adding the image to [[Last Measure]], a supposed "leaked" operating system that booted the image, and many more.
==References==
==References==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 07:07, 1 September 2021

Template:NSFW

Goatse's official logo.

Goatse.cx (/ˈɡoʊtsi dɒt ˌsiː ˈɛks/ GOHT-see-dot-see-EKS, /ˈɡoʊtˌsɛks/; "goat sex") or known as Goatse was a shock site registered in 1999. The website featured an image, as displayed in the center titled "Hello.jpg", showing a man stretching his anus with both hands. Because of its shock value, it's the first image to ever be used in bait-and-switch pranks, where the user "baits" another user into clicking the link. The site used the .cx domain because its pronunciation is similar to the word "sex", but it was filed by Christmas Island to shut down the website.

The image used on the site was originally named "gap3.jpg" from the Gap.zip file, a collection of shock images depicting the man, who was revealed to be gay porn-star Kirk Johnson, "using dildos and butt plugs to stretch his anus". Gap.zip might have been posted by Johnson himself, but it also may have been originated "in emails ftp servers, etc."[1]

The full website, as mentioned in the first half, shows the "hello.jpg" image under the "the receiver" section, and it also has a section, named "the giver", that shows a man with a large penis reaching up to his chest. The names suggest that a man is about to insert his huge penis into another man's anus. It also has dead links to websites like urinalpoop.org and dolphinsex.org, while older ones link to biganal.com.

Kirk Johnson has depicted in some shock sites, such as Detroithardcore.com, Bottleguy.com, Goatsee.com and many more.

History

Website's history

In 1999, the website was in its original state. Until June of the next year, it had the text "What are you doing here?" at the center before redirecting to index2.html after 10 seconds. The website goes back again with 2 other links to feedback.html and contrib.html and websites links to urinalpoop.org and dolphinsex.org, all of which are supposedly made by the original owner. In 2003, the website's owner added a note that there "are many merchandising attempts for goatse.cx", all of which "none of them are real". He then said, "The official goatse.cx merchandise is coming soon.".

On January 14, 2004, Goatse.cx was suspended by Christmas Island "for AUP violations in response to a complaint" after its residents filed a complaint to shut down the site, until Christmas Island put the domain in the available domain pool in January 2007. 

The goatse.cx domain name was sold at auction to an unknown bidder on April 30, 2007. The first auction ended with fake bids, according to seobidding.com, so the auction was reactivated. This time, fake bidders won, so Seobidding.com announced that the website would be sold for $500,000, and that legal action would be taken against the fake bidders. On November 25, 2007, the site was still for sale, asking for "$50,200 minimum".

Hackers successfully hijack a billboard to display the dreaded image.

In early December 2012, the site plans to launch its own e-mail system, named, Goatse Mail, claiming to be launched. However, the e-mail system has not been launched since. The website was then put back, after a new owner purchased the website for 8,000 euros in 2008, and is now planning to be a subdomain service on which you can host your own website. There were also plans for a cryptocurrency called Goatse Coin, but there doesn't seem to be any progress.[2]

The site now allows anyone to "purchase a patch of pixels in exchange for ether (the native token of the Ethereum blockchain) and fill it with an ad of their choice". With 6,000 pixels sold, the owner has already made $624 at .001 ETH (worth $104) per pixel in 2018, according to Vice.[3]

In Popular Culture

Website owners have used the goatse.cx image to discourage other sites from hotlinking to them. Images on the site, such as hello.jpg, have inspired parodies, mirrors, and tributes. Goatse is only well-known to a small Internet-using "subcultural tribe" who refer to it as a "shared context joke" or "secret membership code." In November 2000, A link to giver.html was added to "Stories of Oprah: The Oprahfication of American Culture" book, one of Oprah Winfrey's online message boards, but it was shut down after. In that year, an anonymous hacker hacked Yankees.com to display the Goatse image after the Yankees won the World Series in 2000.

In April 2011, it was reported that an Audi billboard displayed an image similar to the Goatse image. Pranksters put Goatse on a digital billboard in Buckhead, Atlanta, Georgia, in May 2015. Pranksters signed the PGP keys of Facebook and Adrian Lamo with ASCII art of Goatse. One article asks, "unintentionally hilarious or intentionally evil?".

Gay Nigger Association of America, the known creators for Last Measure, created a group called "Goatse Security", which derives from the site's name, in December 2009. Goatse Security became known for leaking unsecured 114,000 iPad email address. Besides the group, Gay Nigger Association of America used the image as a way to troll users, such as adding the image to Last Measure, a supposed "leaked" operating system that booted the image, and many more.

References

Links

NOTE: The following shock site contains graphic images!

  • goatse.cx
  • web.archive.org/web/19991008013724 19991008013724
  • web.archive.org/web/19991008013724/goatse.cx/
  • goatse.me
  • goatse.ru
  • goatse.fr
  • goatse.info
  • LOLShock mirror: goatse.bz
  • Shockchan mirror: shockchan.com/goatse/
  • Alternative link (Site down): collabvm.me
  • A site with a similar image of Kirk Johnson stretching out his anus web.archive.org/web/20110719010616/stretch.ragingfist.net/

=See Also


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