5 Most Disturbing Websites on the Internet

 

Bestgore.com



bestgore.com (stylized as BestGore.com and abbreviated BG) was a Canadian shock site owned by Mark Marek,which provided highly violent real-life news, photos and videos, with authored opinion and user comments. The site received media attention in 2012, following the hosting of a snuff film depicting the murder of Jun Lin. As a result, Marek was arrested and charged under Canada's obscenity law with corrupting public morals.

LINK:https://bestgore.fun/


Insecam.com



The website displays IP cameras where the user never bothered to reset the default password that the device shipped with. The home page offers this advice to have your camera removed: “The only thing you need to do is to set the password ofyour camera.”

LINK:http://www.insecam.org/


yyyyyy.info



(WARNING FOR PEOPLE WITH PHOTOSENSITIVE EPILEPSY) This site is a bizarre assault of flashing gifs, sounds, and comic sans text - all poorly formatted and seemingly random - that changes every time you refresh the page. It's a disaster area. Any sense I try to prescribe to it seems futile. But since everybody here watches Idea Channel, which is pretty much the poster child for 

LINK:http://ww1.yyyyyy.info/


thisman.org


tThis Man, according to a website created in 2008 by Italian marketer Andrea Natella named Ever Dream This Man?, refers to a person who was claimed to have been repeatedly seen in dreams worldwide since 2006, but was never found in the real world. Natella created the site in 2008, but it was not until October 2009 that it gained attention from the press and online internet users. This Man's notoriety spawned several internet memes that spoofed flyers of the website, references in films and television shows like The X-Files, and a manga series based on the hoax by Weekly Shonen Magazine.

LINK:https://www.thisman.org/oldsite/


Superbad.com

Superbad is a noted web art installation created by graphic designer Ben Benjamin in 1997.


Superbad.com received a 1999 Webby award in the "Weird" category,and was one of nine websites featured in the Whitney Museum Biennial in 2000. Superbad began as a test bed for Benjamin's web design for technology corporations; his clients ranged from E! Online to Nippon Telegraph and Telephone.The installation uses images from Japanese pop culture.


The website serves primarily as an artistic work that was produced using the tools and methods of web design. This genre of art is often referred to as web art.


The site consists of a veritable maze of inter-linked visual, conceptual "subprojects" ranging from two-tone and technical-looking to wacky, colorful, and even bizarre. Often a subproject will have clickable elements linked to other pages within that subproject, or to another, or that just provide visual richness (e.g., the "follow" subproject has a grid of circles with arrows that follow the mouse cursor; each circle is a link to a different page within the site). Some of the pages contain narrative elements. There are 143 different pages, with the main page serving as a hub to the subprojects. Clicking anywhere on the "bad" will link to somewhere within each subproject.


Time magazine cited "the very randomness of the electronic images" offered on the website that lures the viewer "deeper and deeper into its playful maze"

LINK:https://www.superbad.com/

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