24/7 Vacations Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the 24/7 Vacations Content Network
  2. Vault 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vault_7

    News reported that in 2017 in the wake of the Vault 7 leaks, the CIA considered kidnapping or assassinating Assange, spying on associates of WikiLeaks, sowing discord among its members, and stealing their electronic devices. After many months of deliberation, all proposed plans had been scrapped due to a combination of legal and moral objections.

  3. Tinychat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tinychat

    Tinychat is an online chat website that allows users to communicate via instant messaging, voice chat, and video chat.It offers instant opportunities for people to meet and the ability for users to create their own virtual chat room on any topic or category.

  4. List of Internet forums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_forums

    An Internet forum, or message board, is an online discussion site where people can hold conversations in the form of posted messages. [1] They are an element of social media technologies which take on many different forms including blogs, business networks, enterprise social networks, forums, microblogs, photo sharing, products/services review, social bookmarking, social gaming, social ...

  5. Popcat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popcat

    Popcat is an Internet meme originating in October 2020, in a series of videos which showcase two images of a domestic short-haired cat named 'Oatmeal', where one image has its mouth closed and the other has its mouth open, with the second image being edited to give its mouth an 'O' shape.

  6. Active Worlds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_Worlds

    Active Worlds is an online virtual world, developed by ActiveWorlds Inc., a company based in Newburyport, Massachusetts, and launched on June 28, 1995.Users assign themselves a name, log into the Active Worlds universe, and explore 3D virtual worlds and environments that others have built.

  7. MUSH - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUSH

    The source code for most widely used MUSH servers is open source and available from its current maintainers. [7] [8] A primary feature of MUSH codebases that tends to distinguish it from other multi-user environments is the ability, by default, of any player to extend the world by creating new rooms or objects and specifying their behavior in ...

  8. Midjourney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midjourney

    Users can use Midjourney through Discord either through their official Discord server, by directly messaging the bot, or by inviting the bot to a third-party server. To generate images, users use the /imagine command and type in a prompt; [ 22 ] the bot then returns a set of four images, which users are given the option to upscale .

  9. LulzSec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LulzSec

    Kayla/KMS – Ryan Ackroyd of London, and another unidentified individual known as "lol" or "Shock.ofgod" in LulzSec chat logs. Kayla owned a botnet used by the group in their distributed denial-of-service attacks. The botnet is reported to have consisted of about 800,000 infected computer servers. Kayla was involved in several high-profile ...