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Remilia Launching Milady Social Media Network to Serve ‘4chan Diaspora’

by admin September 20, 2025



In brief

  • Remilia Corporation is launching a Milady-centric social network called RemiliaChat.
  • The rollout is beginning with RemiliaNET, a social identity layer launching Friday.
  • While aimed at fans of 4chan, RemiliaChat will have some level of content moderation.

The Milady gang thinks social media is broken, calling the community of fans the “diaspora of chan culture”—such as the notoriously edgy 4chan. To fix that, the NFT project’s creators are launching a social media network to rival X, with the first step coming via official Milady profiles.

RemiliaNET is an in-browser experience that will allow the community to track their Milady achievements and build up a “social credit score,” with a competitive leaderboard to boot. And the upcoming RemiliaChat, with no release date confirmed, looks to be a fully fledged social media platform with an algorithm-driven feed and chat function.

“Remilia’s goal has never been just to dominate crypto and NFTs. We plan to save the entire culture of the internet, and the world through it, in the same way we did for crypto. RemiliaChat is how we achieve this,” Remilia Corporation Chief of Staff Michael Dragovic told Decrypt. “RemiliaNET is the identity service layer of Remilia Chat. We’re launching it now prior to releasing full social features to begin the onboarding process.”

Two weeks ago, a mysterious countdown started on the Milady Cult website, sending its community into a frenzy of theories and self-referential memes—the latest being, “What did CULT mean by this?” As it ticked down to zero, an additional eight days were added to the clock in the wake of last week’s assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.

RemiliaNET profiles. Image: Remilia Corporation

On Friday, the clock finally finished, and it was revealed that what CULT meant was that RemiliaNET is now open for business.

Users of RemiliaNET will have the option of using one of the default Kagami-style profile pictures, or connecting their wallet to use an NFT profile picture from a wide array of Remilia and derivative collections—including Radbro, Aura, and Schizposters.

Most importantly, though, the platform will become the go-to spot for the Milady community to track their achievements, which translates to a “social credit score” used to place everyone upon a global leaderboard.

Achievements can already be unlocked via the Remilia Achievement Score page. Some of these can be collected by minting specific NFTs, playing on the Miladycraft Minecraft server, or participating in one of the project’s many alternate reality games.

The new system, Remilia Corporation says, however, will be much more seamless. Plus, the number of achievements is also set to expand with the launch of the site, with notifications prompting users when a new achievement is available.

In doing this, Dragovic—better known as Scorched Earth Policy—confirmed to Decrypt that RemiliaNET will act as a platform for users to “actively and knowingly” participate in “manipulation rounds.” This refers to periods where Milady’s CULT token is airdropped to users based on their achievements and rankings, although Dragovic added that rewards will not be limited to CULT tokens.

“RemiliaNET assigns a public ‘social credit score’ to every user that serves as multifactor sybil detection as well as cross-platform scoring, which will result in hidden incentive rewards,” Dragovic told Decrypt. “[It] will extend beyond direct token allocation into a general rewards ecosystem. These will be used to encourage user behaviors that maximize quality contribution and community distribution.”

Why RemiliaChat?

Friday’s launch of RemiliaNET is just the first step towards the creation of RemiliaChat, an ambitious Milady-infused attempt to disrupt the social media status quo. Remilia Corporation leader Charlotte Fang has been preparing the cult for this moment for years, forcing the core team to flicker through different platforms for communication.

“We’ve experimented with dozens of platforms in the past five years alone,” Dragovic said. “We’re definitely veterans of the internet, and we have quite a bit of experience with understanding what makes a platform work and what keeps that fire alive.”



As such, Dragovic said, the team has learned lessons from what they see as the downfall of Reddit, Discord, Twitter, and chan culture, especially 4chan. RemiliaChat will attempt to build on those failings to build a social media platform with a content feed, chat, and profiles. Specifically, RemiliaChat will look to reduce the pertinence of “slop” content via a custom algorithm, and emphasize anonymity and pseudonymity. 

It’s not just the team leading the Milady-sphere that is deeply rooted in internet culture; the entire community is a product of obsession with online spaces and disillusionment with the perceived degradation of society. 

“Remilia has been very much a product of the diaspora of chan culture,” Dragovic told Decrypt. “People are yearning for a new platform and a new space. RemeliaChat wants to be that. It wants to be the place where people go. It’s going to be one of the first and only platforms that’s designed around really hard online discourse principles.”

With a core community entrenched in online culture and a team dedicated to critiquing it, RemiliaChat hopes to become a new cultural hub for the cultivation of radical thought.

“Society’s most important discourse always occurs in iconic gathering places,” Dragovic said. “These places were our tribal campfires, our Athenian forums, our zones of intellectual exchange. And within them, always a core group of people coming together to develop the ideas of their time.”

“Our pivotal places now happen online,” he added. “Our iconic minds are anonymous posters.”

A free-for-all?

Milady, Remilia, and its surrounding communities have become a melting pot of ideas branching to the far corners of all wings of the political spectrum. However, many outsiders would likely characterize the group as far-right, with its tendencies to echo racist and other controversial sentiments.

In part, however, the group’s flirtation with fringe theories comes as part of Fang’s concept of “pre-cancelling” yourself. This has led to members leaning into shock humor or intentionally saying slurs under the intention of appearing punk, despite not necessarily agreeing with their own take.

As a result of this ethos, moderation on traditional social media platforms has become a problem for the community. RemiliaChat, to the dismay of its community, cannot be completely unmoderated as the spread of illegal and unethical content, such as child sexual abuse materials, may occur.

Remilia Corporation confirmed to Decrypt that it will have a moderation system in place, and claims to have been learning lessons on how to handle it through its previous projects.

“Our intention is to do as little moderation as possible in terms of content,” Dragovic told Decrypt. “Our belief is that 90% of moderation comes from the way you design the layout of your site. The site should itself steer the user into posting a certain way and creating a certain form of engagement.”

“We’ll intervene on the absolutely necessary parts,” he added, “like bad actors, illegal shit, and things that could get the FBI knocking on our door.”

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September 20, 2025 0 comments
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4Chan, Gab and Kiwi Farms want Trump’s help to dodge the Online Safety Act
Gaming Gear

4Chan, Gab and Kiwi Farms want Trump’s help to dodge the Online Safety Act

by admin August 24, 2025


After the United Kingdom began enforcing its sweeping Online Safety Act in April, British regulator Ofcom served violation notices to three notorious sites: 4chan, Gab, and Kiwi Farms, each of which risked multimillion-dollar fines. Late last week, Preston Byrne, a First Amendment lawyer representing them, struck back. Byrne announced he would sue Ofcom in US federal court and added an unusual request. He called on the Trump administration “to invoke all diplomatic and legal levers available to the United States” to protect his clients from the OSA’s reach.

Byrne’s request could put a trio of sites known as hotbeds of violence, harassment, and extremism at the vanguard of the Trump administration’s sweeping new diplomatic mandate: stop foreign countries from using their laws to stifle American speech — especially hate speech — on the internet.

In an interview with The Verge, Byrne said that he’d already been in communications with Congressional offices and administration officials who were following not just this case, but other enforcement incidents he’d flagged in Europe. While the Biden administration didn’t visibly intervene in European investigations into American websites, Byrne claimed that current members of the “U.S. Federal Government” were “very hungry for information, for solid, actionable information, about this… as a free speech activist, I’ve been impressed, I’ve been humbled, I’m immensely grateful to our government, and how they’re responding. I have nothing bad to say about how the government has handled this.”

International internet regulation has expanded as the US political right has gained force online, fueling a backlash against, in particular, the European Union’s Digital Services Act and the UK’s OSA. In February, Vice President J.D. Vance told a shocked crowd at the Munich Security Conference that “in Britain, and across Europe, free speech, I fear, is in retreat,” implicitly threatening to withdraw defense funding — an existential need for the E.U. as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continued — if they did not relent. Secretary of State Marco Rubio began restricting visas for foreign nationals who enforce laws against American companies for violating content moderation laws and recently began instructing its embassies to begin pushing back against their European counterparts, sending along talking points in a cable sent in August.

And the OSA has faced a rocky rollout in the UK. The law can penalize platforms for not verifying users’ ages before they access pornographic or otherwise “harmful” content, or for failing to remove illegal material. When it took effect in late July, several major U.S. companies — including Reddit, Bluesky, X, and Grindr — were forced to implement age verification systems that haphazardly blocked some or all access for users who didn’t want to hand over an ID or face scan. Wikipedia has expressed concerns it would have to expose anonymous editors and moderators to comply with the OSA, and is currently suing in UK court.

Byrne’s legal goal, if Trump doesn’t intervene, is more aggressive than Wikipedia’s: he wants a US federal court to declare that the OSA is not enforceable on American companies. “Reportedly, they [the U.S. government] have pushed back on the UK on this one issue, but ultimately, it doesn’t matter. Because one lawyer, a solo practitioner working in his free time, armed with the First Amendment, can bring the OSA to a grinding halt at the shoreline of the United States.”

But he and associates are also pushing hard for a backchannel deal, and Byrne told The Verge that he had begun reaching out to members of the administration on behalf of his clients after Trump was elected. “The relevant client and I looked at each other and I said, listen, I think we’ll have a lot easier time contacting some people in the DOJ and saying, ‘Hey, did you know that this is happening and it’s infringing on Americans’ free speech rights?’”

The Verge confirmed that Byrne had made contact with Congressional offices; the State Department did not return a request for comment regarding whether they were in contact with Byrne. Although Byrne said was not in active conversation with the White House or Congress regarding this case (“I wouldn’t call them ‘partners,’ the communication between our legal team and [the government] has been mostly one way”) his clients had been seeing quiet results. Previously, the Biden Administration had been serving notices from Germany to one of Byrne’s clients for violating the online safety law NetzDG, but Byrne argued that they had done so in a way that circumvented the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty. “When we made contact with the [Trump] government over Ofcom, we disclosed the misuse of the MLAT procedure to serve foreign censorship demands under the Biden Administration,” he continued. “The notices [from Germany] have since stopped.”

The Trump administration’s definition of a “diplomatic solution” might be more aggressive than a lawsuit. In July it raised tariffs on Brazil by 40 percent after Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Morales charged U.S.-based companies and U.S. citizens with legal violations for their social media content; earlier that month, Rumble and Trump Media, the Trump-founded company that owns Truth Social, filed a joint lawsuit alleging that Morales was targeting their users’ American rights to privacy. (Morales’s visa was also revoked by the State Department, as well as those of several other Brazilian judges.)

But Rumble and Truth Social — as well as more mainstream platforms like Reddit, Wikipedia and Bluesky — have less baggage than Byrne’s latest clients. Gab, Kiwi Farms, and 4Chan have reputations as cultivated sources of sexist, racist, and white nationalist content, linked to acts of fatal violence and harassment. Gab, a proudly and openly white nationalist social media site which has long refused to remove antisemitic content from their platform, went temporarily offline in 2018 after a mass shooter used it to announce his attack on the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Kiwi Farms community organizes harassment campaigns — with particular vitriol against transgender people — that have been tied to multiple suicides. 4Chan, the primordial soup of unsavory internet culture, has helped spawn, among other things, mass shootings, QAnon, and Gamergate.

These sites allow their users to post anonymously, and they’re unsurprising targets for Ofcom, whose initial complaint against 4Chan said that the site had failed to offer a risk assessment about its userbase and was not complying with Ofcom “safety duties.” The complaint said 4chan could be subject to the law’s general fine of either £18 million or 10 percent of qualifying worldwide revenue, whichever is greater. Ofcom declined to comment, citing the complaint’s status as an ongoing investigation. (A fourth site, which offers information about methods of suicide, was also targeted; Byrne says he’s been in contact but does not currently represent it.)

Byrne is no stranger to representing lighting-rod, right-wing tech companies in court. Parler, a platform founded as a conservative-friendly alternative to Facebook, was among his former clients. “I’ve been saying no to foreign governments for eight years, because I was willing to represent free speech websites,” he told The Verge, and from his perspective, these were simply three more sites whose First Amendment rights were being targeted by Europeans. “The First Amendment allows Americans to talk to foreigners, to grant anonymity to foreigners, and not censor foreigners,” he said. “The First Amendment does not disappear because there is a contrary foreign rule on foreign shores.”

The US government directly defending them, instead of sticking with a safer embattled platform as a poster child, would be a show of force — and if successful, a demonstration that the OSA is toothless against any service with Trump’s backing, no matter how extreme its content. The administration’s protection of American speech abroad would stand in stark contrast with its approach inside the country, where the same State Department that’s pushing back against Europe’s digital laws is also using social media posts to deny and revoke student visa applications, targeting them for posting pro-Palestine content online.

Murky battles over digital sovereignty date back to the dawn of the internet, said Milton Mueller, the head of the Internet Governance Project and a professor at Georgia Tech. In 2000, he notes, the French government sued Yahoo for hosting an auction site that sold Nazi artifacts and was globally accessible — including to users in France, where buying and selling Nazi memorabilia is criminalized. Yahoo, which is based in the U.S., argued that they and their users were protected under America’s First Amendment rights. Eventually, they came to an agreement to simply block the objectionable Nazi content in France, which soon became the prevailing solution to any issue of social media content infringing laws in other countries.

“It was an undermining of the global accessibility of information, and one of the first steps towards the fragmentation of internet content into the territorial jurisdictions of states,” he told The Verge.

In addition to seeking to avoid potential fines posed by the OSA, Byrne wants to break that detente. “None of my clients, including 4chan, will allow themselves to be deputized by a hostile foreign government which wants to censor its own people,” he wrote. “Ofcom has the power, if it wants, to get a court order and serve that order on UK-based ISPs to DNS block 4chan. That is entirely a domestic UK matter for Ofcom and the British courts to decide upon.”

If the suit — or Trump administration intervention — favors 4chan and other Ofcom targets, the result could be a blow against the DSA, OSA, and similar laws.

“I think what makes it most interesting in this case,” Mueller added, “is that the US government, apparently, [would be] backing 4Chan’s rights.”

Correction, August 23: a previous version of this article incorrectly stated that Rumble was a previous client of Byrne’s. He has not represented Rumble and currently does not.

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