Folks Are Intrigued By These 20 Mysteries From The Early Internet Days That Were Never Solved

Folks Are Intrigued By These 20 Mysteries From The Early Internet Days That Were Never Solved

Article Created by: Rūta Zumbrickaitė

Since the dawn of the internetit has evolved at an astonishing rate. We are so used to the world wide web of today that just picturing the early days after its birth is almost like a fantasy. One thing that remains constant, however, is that it was brimming with online mysteries, just like today!

When a netizen asked people to spill these unsolved online mysteries of that timethey didn’t hold back. If you are from that age, a few might be familiar to you, while others might be completely new. Some of these will leave you with an itch to solve them; that’s how compelling they are! Just scroll down to check them out.

More info: Reddit

Three figurines posed in front of a toy van, illustrating early internet days and unsolved mysteries intrigue. When The Simpsons did the Who Shot Mr. Burns cliffhanger, they had a contest to see if anyone could solve it. On the Simpsons usenet there was one commenter who solved it using the clues correctly (as opposed to just a lucky guess.)
The showrunners tried all that they could to find the person but never did…

Das_Goose , Omid Roshan Report

Curious kitten peeking over a soft blanket, symbolizing intrigue and mystery from early internet days unsolved cases. Back in the day there was a site called bonsai kitten claiming to sell real kittens grown in glass jars. It was a hoax website but people actually believed it.

anon , Francesco Ungaro Report

Dark angel figure kneeling in a foggy forest, representing early internet mysteries that were never solved by users. Grngecko.com/torment was crazy to me. I don’t remember how I found it but it started you out on this puzzle that wasn’t too difficult to solve, but it just kept giving more puzzles with increasing difficulty. I remember having a full notebook from writing stuff down trying to figure out how to solve them.

I eventually got stuck and went to some forums to find out there were people who put in some WORK trying to complete it but I don’t believe anyone ever reached the end. They eventually took it down and the creator put up a new series of puzzles that was solved within the first couple days.

I was always curious what was at the end of that grngecko puzzle. That website is what made me have a love for puzzles and riddles.

ThreePieces , soured sessions Report

Two large metallic faces with surreal eyes facing each other in a field, symbolizing early internet mysteries unsolved. The “Enigma” conspiracy theory about Pink Floyd’s album “The Division Bell” died with Usenet’s popularity before it ever led to either the treasure the band had allegedly hidden somewhere for fans to find or the identity of the person connected with the band who was contributing to the theories.

Zhirrrsh , rateyourmmusic.com Report

Who wrote SQL Slammer, an early internet worm. I work in cybersecurity; I remember at the time it was released it was crazy the damage it did: took down 90% of all infectable hosts within 10 minutes or so. Many believe it was an early cyberweapon test. If you get into the technical details of the thing it’s wild: so crazy efficient it’s entire source code sat in a single packet. More info: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_Slammer](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_Slammer).

best_ghost Report

Unsolved early internet mystery featuring a masked figure with sunglasses against a striped background. Not sure if this counts but the Max Headroom/Dr. Who incident has been discussed on the internet for decades without those involved ever being identified.

[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Headroom_broadcast_signal_intrusion](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Headroom_broadcast_signal_intrusion)

It’s a cool story because it’s the cliche where hackers do something harmless just because they can except this really happened and nobody is even sure of how. I’ve read that they would’ve needed to overpower the signal that the station was broadcasting but to do that they would’ve needed to be close to the station and using very expensive and powerful gear.

Achack , wikipedia Report

Statue of a man with a hat holding a walking stick in a park, illustrating mysteries from the early internet days. The leprechaun sighting in Crichton.

I want to know if an entire neighborhood came together to fake it, if something was in the water, a real leprechaun was seen, but most importantly, I want to know where the gold at.

JudgementalChair , Tim Wilson Report

Person standing near a waterfall surrounded by dense foliage, evoking the mystery of early internet days unsolved mysteries. I’ve always wondered about Ted the caver. I think his original posts was on geocities but he had this whole blog about going caving in some more unknown areas and hearing/smelling weird noises and deathly flesh similar to a wendingo.

anon , Mohd Hafiz Yahya Report

Young woman in a pink shirt in a bedroom, representing early internet days mysteries that were never solved. I can’t remember the name of the channel, but I remember the mistery being set around early Youtube days. There was this one girl doing vlogs in Youtube and she had quite a following. Then she started uploading stuff about being stalked and she was afraid someone was after her. After some time, she completely vanished and stopped uploading.

modern-era replied:
lonelygirl15. It was staged. I’ll admit, it had me for a minute.
There is still one mystery surrounding that, though. Two videos were posted on Youtube by cassieiswatching that used some of the same locations as LG15. No one has ever claimed responsibility

Thesoverign2181 , lonelygirl15 Report

Man with headphones speaking into a microphone in a studio, related to early internet mysteries never solved. Anybody remember cutoffmyfeet.com? A guy had terrible foot pain and wanted to amputate, so the website said. He was taking donations for entry into a contest to be the person who, via the internet, would be able to push a keyboard key that activated a home made guillotine to remove his affected feet. The whole thing was planned out with a scheduled date and audience. Ambulance would be already called. Never heard what happened.

Putnamtete , The Overlooked Hotel Report

Black and white line drawing of an abstract spherical shape representing early internet mysteries never solved. I remember the mystery surrounding John Titor, the time traveller.

He even has his own wikipedia article. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Titor](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Titor).

nathanosaurus84 , Wikipedia Report

Person wearing a Guy Fawkes mask at sunset representing early internet mysteries that remain unsolved and intriguing users. The identity of Bloodninja, the greatest internet troll of all time. Ahh, those were the days!

edit: [chat logs](http://www.megalomaniac.com/~andrew/funny/bloodcyber.html) for those of you unfamiliar with this legend.

valleyvictorian , Sam Ebanezer Report

Ancient pyramid ruins under a clear sky, symbolizing mysteries from the early internet days never solved. I was on Stumbleupon and I remember a story about a Russian (?) boy who had knowledge of ancient civilizations even though he was from a small town in Siberia. He claimed to be an alien who was sent down to earth and grew in his host (the mom). Can’t remember why he was sent to earth but I haven’t been able to find that story since.

paddler , Maciej Cisowski Report

Person placing a CD into a disc drive, symbolizing early internet days and unsolved digital mysteries. A long time ago I was chatting with someone over IM and he somehow managed to open my CD tray over the internet. To this day, I have no idea how tf he managed to do that.

jcggames1 , cottonbro studio Report

Young woman smiling in a casual indoor setting related to unsolved mysteries from the early internet days. I remember this random youtube video where a guy kidnaps a girl and after 10 years, he posted a video titled “happy anniversary” and laughed like hell with some mystery puzzle at the end.

cuppateafling replied:
That’s the disappearance of Maura Murray and the video was posted on the eighth year. Supposedly the video creator is not involved, just mentally ill and may enjoy the attention.

anon , mauramurray.com Report

Black and white sketch of a cicada insect, representing one of the early internet mysteries that remain unsolved. Not from the early days- but the stories and conspiracies of Cicada 3301 sound amazing, shame they havent posted a puzzle in years though (or figured out the last one).

anon , washingtontimes.com Report

Vintage Kutchie's steak and lobster house ad featuring menu items and mascot, part of early internet mysteries unsolved. All of those posts from a bunch of different accounts from a bunch of different social media sites that were all about Captain Kutchie’s Key Lime Pie. Captain Kutchies was a local restaurant that closed a long time ago. I seriously wonder what all that was about.

Triviess , thealterry Report

Young man with curly hair holding his head, appearing frustrated while thinking about early internet mysteries unsolved. There a was a site I found only once and have never been able to relocate.

The whole of it seemed to consist of cryptic text in various patterns, with links to other cryptic text in various patterns. The links would be on whole words or sometimes individual letters.

It’s hard to explain how, but going through the pages gave you the sense that you were going *somewhere*, that it wasn’t just endless randomness but some kind of puzzle to be solved.

I never solved it and neglected to bookmark it; now that (486) computer is a scrap heap.

quequotion , East Weber Report

Stack of folded newspapers representing mysteries from the early internet days that remain unsolved and intriguing to many. The Mayday mystery. There were a load of conspiracy theories like a cult, government recruiting, the illuminati, and etc. Basically, this guy found this weird crypric ad in his school paper, and turns out that they date back to the early 80s, possibly even further, and still continue to this day. The ads included the word Mayday, and a lot of ciphers and math. Apparently, the guy who discovered this was messaged by the mysterious group who made it, although im a little skeptical about that.

Iampenguin1234 , Pixabay Report

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