Anon V Stickam
Report: The “Anon vs. Stickam” Conflict – A Case Study in Early Raid Culture
1. Executive Summary
The “Anon vs. Stickam” refers to a series of coordinated online raids, harassment campaigns, and technical disruptions carried out by anonymous users (collectively self-identifying as “Anon”) from imageboards like 4chan’s /b/ (Random) against the live streaming platform Stickam (2005–2013). This conflict exemplified the raw, often cruel, power of decentralized internet mobs in the pre-social media era. Stickam’s unique combination of live video, public chat rooms, and minimal moderation made it a prime target. The raids resulted in psychological trauma for many victims, eventual platform decline, and became a foundational myth in raiding culture.
Then the feed snapped back. Vox was still there, trembling. “Oh,” she breathed. “Oh, you’re not anon. You’re everyone.” anon v stickam
5.2 “ItsKerry” / “Kerry Way” (2008–2009)
A popular Stickam streamer known for emotional outbursts. Anons raided her room daily, sending fake “I love you” messages then switching to abuse. One raid induced a panic attack on cam. Kerry later quit streaming permanently. Report: The “Anon vs
Part 4: The Iconic Battles – Case Studies
While thousands of small raids occurred, a few became legendary in 4chan lore. Stickam” refers to a series of coordinated online