>>7677
The sharty has raided /jp/, /b/, /v/, /lgbt/, /adv/, anon.cafe, endchan, Reddit, random streams, Wikipedia, dead imageboards and textboards, Discord servers... Female only IBs often get the short end of the stick but it's not like they're the only ones. Many of these raids failed because jannies were there on time to take care of it, banned certain IPs and VPNs (and if they posted CP, the jannies emailed some authority that so-and-so IP posted CP on specific time and date and then their ISPs will look into it), had backups of the site, implemented captchas (I have to applaud the sharty's captcha system because it's completely incomprehensible to those who aren't familiar with the culture), image recognition software that won't post NSFW images or will have them pending for manual approval. Or they failed plainly because they announced "let's raid X!" and X learned about it and took preventative measures.
The thing about those script kiddies (because that's what they are, they're all under 18 and when sharty added the rule "only users over 18 can post here" they malded and made a fuss) is that they're actually very stupid and they're only pretending to be LE EPIC L33T HAXXORS. There are a few who are actually skilled with technology, while the rest just vibe code a front end of an existing service, use tools to track people that are on their Wiki or pastebin dumps, or wait for someone else to do the hard work while they post soyjaks where they depict themselves as a God and their opponent as a frail little thing. If you shoot an email to their mommies/daddies and tell them their son does x or y thing on the internet, they'll stop.
They also tried to dox people and failed, only some lolcows got doxxed because they didn't practice decent OPSEC. And that often just means not posting pictures of where you are, using a VPN and, not liking social medias to your irl accounts, not oversharing or at least lying when oversharing, using multiple emails and different passwords. There's a huge problem with how little privacy Americans have online, because all OSINT sites I found only work for Anglos, governments of other countries try to obscure information of their citizens online, but that's another topic.
I dealt with these kinds of people excessively. Even on breachforums, because a website I had signed up for was in a databreach. Every post is hidden until you reply to it or give the administrators money. So you have pages upon pages of "thank you so much"s on each post by teenagers who couldn't give less of a fuck. Why are they even here? Do they know? These people are unfulfilled, empty. Edgy, annoying, trying to show their own self that they're strong and in control and smart, making fun of gays and women and pedos and troons and people of different ethnicities and religions... And they're empty.
The thing is that lots of women are unconfident. They are not confident about how to moderate an imageboard, they are not confident because they don't know how to code, they see all those struggles up ahead with men hating them and other women hating them and they're discouraged, or they simply don't have enough time in their lives to be a moderator because they have actual important shit to do. It's a job that no one pays you for, they think "why do it?". Decision-making might feel more mentally taxing, but that's because they're thoughtfully weighing the consequences and seeing myltiple sides, while those kiddies and some grown men act impulsively, think overly positively, don't evaluate risk/rewaward or make decisions based on insecurity and fear and anger and their ego. It's not that others are smarter or stronger, their approach is no better than asking a magic 8-ball. Trust me, most of these men are overconfident, they can't code for shit, they are just huge leeches. While many women have imposter syndrome when they're leeches. But you don't have to: https://start.me/p/b5Aow7/asint_collection
The thing about other women moralfagging is indeed an issue. For that, I would love to hear solutions from others. The containment threads seemed like a good idea to me.