Wykop.pl

Wykop.pl

wykop.pl is a Polish social networking internet service, founded on December 28, 2005. It is modeled after the American website digg.com (wykop in the Polish language means dig out). The basic idea behind wykop.pl is the collection of potentially interesting internet-based information and making them available to users.

Quick Facts Owner, Created by ...

ReadWriteWeb described wykop as a "clone" of Digg. As of 2006, Sebastian Kwiecień, owner of the blog web20.pl, said that it was probably Poland's most popular Web 2.0 website.[1]

Other part of service is a microblog[2] based on hashtag system, which can be subscribed.

Nicknames of users have different colors. After registration user's nick has green color, which after 30 days changes into orange color. Special colors are: claret for 1,000 users from the top of user ranking, blue for the sponsored users, black for the admins and silver for the banned users and users, which deleted their accounts.

Statistics

According to data from April 2008 the service was getting 650,000 users monthly, of which around 30,000 were registered users. By September 2008 the number of visitors rose to 900,000, of which 60,000 were registered users, and there were 13 million views. Currently Wykop.pl has more than 110,000 registered users, 3.1 million unique visitors and around 58 million views.

Trivia

Controversies

  • In September 2009 database containing nicknames and hashed passwords of around 100,000 users was leaked.[20][21]
  • In early 2010s dozens of short movies claiming that Pope John Paul II was a child molester were uploaded to YouTube. Some of those clips were described as originating from Wykop.pl. In early 2011, the Łódź Voivodeship website was defaced with offensive and pornographic pictures of the Pope. Attackers claimed to be from Wykop. Shortly after this incident users from Wykop discovered that movies and pictures containing anti-papal content might be created on local mutation of 4chan, Karachan. Michał Białek, chairman of Wykop.pl, notified prosecutors about the hate campaign targeting the Pope and Wykop.pl.[22][23][24][25][26]
  • In May 2013, some users of Wykop found and uploaded naked photos of a female administrator, nicknamed Elfik32. Pictures were taken in a field of wheat. Moderators of Wykop banned users posting said photos. In response users started uploading and upvoting articles connected to grain, eventually flooding the main page. The incident was named grain scandal (afera zbożowa).[27] A few days later, Elfik32 withdrew bans and apologized to banned users.[28]
  • A similar scandal happened in January 2015. Moderators removed heavily upvoted article about plans of privatization of National Forests by President of Poland, Bronisław Komorowski. Users reacted and for some time main page consisted of nothing but articles connected to forests. The protest was named forest scandal (afera leśna).[29][30]
  • In December 2018, PurePC.pl reported that anonymous users added child sexual abuse material to the website; Wykop.pl reported the content to authorities.[31]
  • The problem related to child sexual abuse materials has not been resolved for the next 3 years and users reporting it were either banned or ignored.[32]

References

  1. MacManus, Richard. "Top Polish Web 2.0 Apps (including Coke's 43Things!)." ReadWriteWeb. 1 August 2006. Retrieved on 8 August 2011.
  2. "Mikroblog".
  3. "Wykop.pl - newsy, aktualności, gry, wiadomości, muzyka, ciekawostki, filmiki". www.wykop.pl. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  4. "Nieznani sprawcy dodają na Wykop.pl treści z pornografią dziecięcą". PurePC.pl (in Polish). 2018-12-30. Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  5. "Pornografia dzięcięca na Wykop.pl". wykop.pl (in Polish). 2021-06-28. Retrieved 2021-06-29.

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