Zoo 8chan [hot] -

This "open-door" policy immediately attracted subcultures that had been exiled from more mainstream platforms. Among the first to migrate were the "zoos"—a community of individuals who identified as zoophiles. The "Zoo" Boards and Content

The Architecture of Anonymity and Radicalization: A Case Study of 8chan’s /zoo/ Board zoo 8chan

Following the Christchurch mosque shootings in 2019, 8chan was deplatformed by its infrastructure providers (Cloudflare, etc.). When the site rebranded as 8kun, a massive restructuring occurred. To appease payment processors and infrastructure providers, 8kun implemented a "whitelist" system. Boards like /zoo/, which were deemed too risky and repugnant, were not whitelisted. This marked the official end of the board on the clear web, forcing the remaining community into the dark web or decentralized file-sharing networks (like ZeroNet). When the site rebranded as 8kun, a massive

A unique and disturbing phenomenon on 8chan was the cross-pollination between the "porn boards" (like /zoo/, /hebe/, /hentai/) and the political boards (/pol/). This marked the official end of the board

The internet’s "dark corners" are often metaphorical, referring to subcultures that exist on mainstream platforms but utilize private or encrypted channels. However, 8chan represented a literal and structural fringe. Created in 2013 by Fredrick Brennan as a bastion of "free speech," 8chan allowed users to create and moderate their own boards. While /pol/ (Politically Incorrect) became the face of the site’s alt-right radicalization, boards like /zoo/ represented the site's commitment to "speech" without moral boundary.

This paper examines the obscure and controversial board known as /zoo/ on the imageboard website 8chan (now 8kun). While 8chan is infamously associated with political extremism, mass shooter manifestos, and the Gamergate controversy, its "NSFW" (Not Safe For Work) hidden services hosted communities dedicated to extreme paraphilias, specifically bestiality. This study analyzes /zoo/ not merely as a repository of illicit content, but as a sociotechnical ecosystem that thrived on the platform’s specific architectural affordances: immutable anonymity, lack of centralized moderation, and a libertarian adherence to "free speech" absolutism. By exploring the community dynamics, linguistic codes, and legal evasion tactics employed by /zoo/ users, this paper illustrates how unmoderated digital spaces become sanctuaries for "moral outlaws" and how the infrastructure of chan culture inevitably fosters radicalization and desensitization.