> The "fringe" alt-right movement using the politically incorrect board on 4chan have a "surprising level of influence" elsewhere.
> Gianluca Stringhini's team, which is based at University College London, has published two papers exploring how hate speech and fake news are spread around the internet. In an interview with the Nature journal, Dr Stringhini said the team focused on 4chan, which was founded in 2003 and has since "emerged as one of the most impactful generators of online culture" over the past decade.
> Dr Stringhini told Sky News that the paper, titled Keks, Cucks, and God Emperor Trump, showed that there was a limit to addressing hate speech online when occurrences were considered as isolated incidents. Instead, his team examined in detail the "raiding" behaviour of the /pol/ discussion board's users, and the continued growth of hate and extremism trends on social media, with mathematical models.
Sauce: http://news.sky.com/story/research-examines-fake-news-hate-speech-and-4chan-10910915
>implying we're alt-shite
Reddit needs to go
Daily reminder that you're racist if you say that Africa population grows by 733,000 people per week. 30 million per year.. and that even if all our countries took millions of just these African refugees we would be pretty fucked paying for it.. but that's racist. Shouldn't the left perhaps stop being emotional and give us some help understanding how we are supposed to pay for their bleeding hearts?
>>130452419
Childishness and insults were always part of the Internet culture, but there are some rare threads on /pol/, watch out for em. Normies and shills need to go back. Pretty sure this research will just end up being "muh hate speech muh white persons on the internet"
>>130452645
> ancap
> not reddit tier
kys
>>130453199
>not wanting your ideology to be a meme about cool shit like recreational nukes and fucking genetically engineered catgirls