DC Inside | |
Url: | http://dcinside.com (archived) |
Commercial: | Yes (partly) |
Type: | Internet forum |
Registration: | Optional |
Owner: | DCinside Corp. |
Author: | Kim Yu-sik |
Launch Date: | October 1999 |
Current Status: | Active |
DC Inside (Korean: 디시인사이드), also known as DC, is a South Korean internet forum that was founded in 1999. It is a prominent online platform in the country, allowing users to engage in discussions on a diverse range of subjects, such as entertainment, politics, and personal interests. The forum features user-generated content, including written posts, images, and videos, which are contributed by its active user base. DC Inside has established itself as a significant hub for online discussion in South Korea.
Initially established as a community of interest dedicated to digital cameras and photography in October 1999, it soon expanded continuously by the propagation of additional image boards. The vestige lies on the name (short for Digital Camera), and the fact that the term gallery refers to each imageboard.
The website was initially populated by early adopters of electronic devices, and was incorporated in 2000.[1]
By 2006, it had 500 active boards, and Kim anticipated the count to multiply to over 1000 by the latter half of 2007.[2] In 2009, it stopped providing information about digital cameras since it had transformed into a general imageboard website.
In 2013, it stopped using the remodeled version of Zeroboard, a popular Korean free-to-use script for bulletin board systems. Zeroboard was known to have security vulnerabilities and bandwidth issues, which many users expressed frustration about as early as 2006.
In 2015, its own Wiki was created. In 2016, a new update gave users the ability to request a new imageboard subject. These imageboards, called minor galleries, are separate from previous galleries.[3]
The early galleries were for uploading user-created camera pictures, which led to a rule requiring an image be uploaded for each post. This rule is no longer in effect.
Gallery topics range from generic categories such as politics, science, wiki, sports and video games, to particular subjects such as those devoted to individual celebrities and K-pop stars. New galleries are created if the new topic is acknowledged and deemed appropriate by the site administrator.
New minor galleries are created upon user request. The request message should explain the gallery topic, which should not be inappropriate, and should not overlap with existing galleries. Highly active minor galleries can be promoted into main galleries by administrators. In this case, administrators obtain the right to manage the galleries.
Galleries are controlled by site administrators, while minor galleries are controlled by dedicated user accounts, called managers, or more frequently ju-ttag, due to the fact that their usernames come with an orange badge. Manager roles are first assigned to the user who requested creation of that gallery, and the role can be handed over to other users. Sub-managers can be appointed by managers and get a blue badge, leading them to be called pa-ttag .
Site administrators choose posts from among the whole website to re-upload to the Hit gallery. There are no specific standards for choosing posts, but they are generally fun, useful posts. The user who created the original post can request it be deleted from the Hit gallery.
The culture varies between different galleries. One shared trait is that users call themselves x-bung-i (x-), where x is the gallery name's first syllable.[4]
Users have the option to be anonymous, which led to the forum's atmosphere being different from other major Korean forums.
Since 2007, you can choose to register, log-in and use your own account. Before that, it was a fully anonymous forum.
The anonymity led users to communicate casually, expressively, and with insults and abuses.[5]
The forum is a main source of popular jokes, buzzwords, and neologisms in South Korea. Parodies, satires and slang based on controversial social or political phenomena and public figures are shared, and are quickly spread to other online communities and eventually to news, advertisements and everyday life. Some popular slang is as follows:
Criticism of Hwang Woo-Suk was led by the Science gallery along with the gallery in 2005.[9] The Stock gallery found video evidence for the trial of, a central figure of the 2016 South Korean political scandal. The video was referenced in the parliamentary audit by congresswoman Park Young-sun.[10]
Initially a voice for left-wing politics, mainstream users turned to right-wing and conservative views as early as 2013.[11] [12] However, because there are so many galleries and each gallery has different history and major themes, there are also left-wing and neutral galleries, so it is hard to say that there is a representative specific political tendency of all DC Inside galleries.[13] [14]
Many galleries are accused of misogyny,[15] and the Baseball gallery has been called out for its "secondary abuse" toward high school teachers reporting sexual assaults.[16]
See main article: Megalia. The MERS gallery (short for Middle East respiratory syndrome outbreak) was created in the spring of 2015, and became a place for bashing two women who were falsely accused of contracting MERS, refusing quarantine and going shopping in Hong Kong. They were bashed as "kimchi women" (; gimchi-nyeo), a misogynist term for women who only have shopping on their minds.[17]
As this continued, an influx of feminists started using reactionary terms, coining gimchi-nam, a reclaimed term which mocks Korean men. DC Inside intervened by instituting a policy which forbade the usage of gimchi-nam. A portion of its users regarded the measure as discriminatory, which eventually led to the creation of a feminist website, Megalia.[18] [19]
On 4 July 2016, police raided DC Inside and Ilbe Storage, which spread rumors of Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee's death in an apparent bid to boost stock prices.[20]