fkn0wned.com · Technology > Programming
Visual Basic 6 rapidshare drop
A user named laptops dumped a Visual Basic 6 download link and 'beginner tut' — cue two full pages of one-word 'unhide' replies chasing hidden content.
This Programming subforum thread was a classic download-share post: member 'laptops' posted a rapidshare link to Visual Basic 6 along with a beginner tutorial, likely hidden behind spoiler/hide tags as was standard practice on the site. The rest of the thread is filled almost entirely with short 'unhide'/'thanks' replies from members trying to reveal the hidden content, stretching across at least two pages over several months (Aug 2007 to May 2008). It's less a technical discussion and more a snapshot of forum culture around gated downloads and low-effort bumping.
yay first person, unhide beotchh— Tripn
cool tnx— Tundergun
unhizzle— IxPKxALL
"hacking tool set:)" — the classic hidden-download thread
Five pages of "unhide" and "ty" for a mystery toolset nobody remembers the contents of
This was a long-running Programming subforum thread offering some kind of 'hacking tool set' download, the kind of post that used forum hide-tags to force replies before revealing content. By the time this archived page picks up (posts #61-87, spanning January-February 2008), the thread had devolved into a wall of one-word 'unhide,' 'thx,' and 'nice' replies from members just trying to unlock the download. It captures the everyday texture of Fkn0wned's Technology > Programming board rather than any single dramatic event — low-effort bumping, a rotating cast of Noobs and low-post members, and the site's signature tagline changing between page loads ('We Moderate Your Fun!' vs the standard welcome banner).
UNHIDE ZZZ Thx— hacking4funlol
unhide (rolleyes.gif)— alice
unhide ;d— zxczxc
Ultra Hackers -153 In 1- (aio) thread
A 2008 grab-bag rapidshare dump of 153 late-2000s 'hacking tools' — nostalgia bait for anyone who remembers the wild-west Programming subforum.
A March 2008 post by user ThisIsSparta shared a RapidShare-hosted archive bundling over 150 assorted late-2000s utilities — password crackers, scanners, spam/flood tools, keygens, and other 'script kiddie' era software typical of mid-2000s cheat/hack forums. The thread drew a steady trickle of low-effort 'thanks' replies over the following weeks, a request to re-upload a dead/premium-only link, and one skeptical member noting the tools were likely outdated and non-functional by May 2008. It's a fairly typical snapshot of the forum's Technology > Programming section: casual tool-sharing culture, minimal moderation, and short-lived hype around aging AIO packs.
very n1 tools, but old. i guess, many of them doesn't work now.— JnZn558
I'm starting to think I [The Laughing Man] should start an online hacking organization.— DarkAvenger94
Just for premium members... not so good uploading site you have found =/— dirwir
TeamSpeak 2.0 Remote DoS Exploit Thread
The old TeamSpeak-killer thread everyone bumped just to say 'thx' and grab the hidden download link
A long-running Programming subforum thread on Fkn0wned.com sharing a remote denial-of-service exploit for the Windows release of TeamSpeak 2.0, with the actual content stashed behind an 'unhide' spoiler tag. Most of the multi-page thread is filler replies from members unlocking the hidden post, thanking the OP, or asking basic questions about how to run it via Perl. It's a classic mid-2000s cheat-forum artifact: a niche exploit release surrounded by low-effort bumps, Xfire tags, and noob member profiles rather than real technical discussion.
i know how to use perl but how to i use this exploit... ?— l3m0nz
This sounds like a must have— hunterbrute224
what is this— imani
Gametration.com Programming Forum (2008) + Fkn0wned 'Introduce Yourself' snapshot
Wall hacks, bat viruses, and a wide-eyed VB tutorial — the birthplace of a whole scene's programming corner.
This capture bundles the Gametration.com Programming subforum (early 2008) with a later snapshot of Fkn0wned's 'Introduce Yourself' board (2011), showing the lineage between the two communities. The Programming section was a grab-bag of amateur coding: pinned tutorial megathreads, Direct3D starter kits, CS 1.5/1.6 source dumps, compiler lists, 'virus collection' threads, and basic wall-hack write-ups sit alongside beginner posts about Python, Java, JavaScript, and Visual Basic. The Fkn0wned section is just the standard new-member welcome wagon, a steady stream of 'hey all' posts greeted by regulars, showing the community's more social, day-to-day side. Together they capture the classic 2000s-cheat-forum mix of low-level hacking curiosity, script kiddie tooling, and casual forum camaraderie.
first python script ;)— BEG!
Sup Niggas— Fliponanigga
Basic wall hack tut— Dragon13
Snagit Keygen!!!! (It Works!!!)
A five-page keygen thread that was really just a hundred noobs saying 'unhide' and 'thanks'
A long-running Programming subforum thread sharing a keygen for the screen-capture tool Snagit, originally posted by DeMeNt3d with a hidden reply-to-unlock component. By page 5 the thread had devolved into its natural late-life state: a stream of one-post-wonders and low-post noobs posting 'unhide', 'thanks', or 'muhahah' just to unlock the hidden content. It captures the classic fkn0wned dynamic of hide-content-behind-a-reply threads keeping old download threads alive years after the original post.
unhide what does that mean?— RedRumLoki
muhahah— ronald111
thanks ^^— pronob298
List Of Compilers (page 5 of 5)
The tail end of a long-running compiler roundup thread, mostly folks saying thanks and asking for reps
This is the final page of a multi-page thread in the Programming subforum of Fkn0wned.com's Technology section, apparently a resource list of compilers shared for members. By this point the substantive content has scrolled off and what remains is the thread's tail: users unhiding the linked content, thanking the OP, and one poster fishing for reputation points. A handful of low-post-count members (some brand new, joined just days before posting) pop in to mark the thread as helpful.
Would appreciate +REPS !— Exodus
unhide this helps.— liveregretgrate
first python script ;)
A brand-new Ubuntu user shares his first Python script — then admits a desktop shortcut would've done the same job.
A member with the handle BEG! posts about just installing Ubuntu and writing his first Python script, meant to shortcut a long remote desktop command on Linux. He immediately worries he posted in the wrong subforum, and after a slow reply from another member offering to check it out, BEG! circles back nearly two weeks later to sheepishly conclude the whole script was pointless since a simple desktop launcher would've worked just as well. A small, low-stakes, very early-programmer-era thread capturing the casual, self-deprecating tone of the Technology > Programming board.
hey just installed ubuntu...this is my first python script.— BEG!
wow this is really usless..you can just create a new launcher on your desktop..type the command arguments there...wow im a noob— BEG!
Black Security Tool Pack (RS Link Dump)
One RapidShare link, an entire 2007 script-kiddie toolbox — RATs, keyloggers, binders, brute forcers, and the odd Sasser worm thrown in.
A 2007 post in the Programming subforum by user .Smurf sharing a massive compiled archive of hacking/security tools via a RapidShare link — trojans, keyloggers, binders, brute forcers, CGI scanners, virus builders, MSN hack tools, port scanners, and nukers/flooders, listed out in exhaustive CODE-block fashion. Classic era-appropriate 'skid toolkit' dump, the kind of megapack that circulated widely across cheat/hacking forums at the time. .Smurf posts under the Xfire handle 'acidvipez' and signs off with swagger. Notable mainly as a snapshot of the mid-2000s script-kiddie tool culture rather than for any drama.
I am your god.— .Smurf
Powerful security and Hacking Tools box Enjoy.— .Smurf
CS:S Coder - Fkn0wned.Com
A guy named LoG1c wanted a private CS:S hack coded — and got mostly silence.
A short recruitment-style post in the Programming subforum where user LoG1c asks for a C++/C# coder willing to build a private cheat for Counter-Strike: Source, offering payment via PM. The thread is brief, with LoG1c bumping his own request the next day, and shows little to no visible response. It's a small, typical snapshot of the forum's cheat-scene commerce culture rather than a big event.
Im looking for a coder that knows C++/C# and can code fluently for CS:S....this is for private use of a hack....will pay....pm me.— LoG1c
Bots, helpppp
A lone Guild Wars player begs the forum for a bot and gets... nothing but silence.
A brand-new member, andy602, posted a quick request in the Programming subforum asking if anyone could point him to a Guild Wars bot download, having apparently struck out searching himself. It's a short, single-post thread with no visible replies captured, typical of the low-effort help requests that filled Fkn0wned's Technology section. A small window into the site's cheat/bot-hunting culture beyond its usual Counter-Source focus.
Can someone help me find a bot for Guild Wars i've searchd high and low an need help now— andy602