I've asked this 2 years ago, on CH, but I'll try my chance here again (especially because in the thread below, someone who seems to have seen the original thread has posted):
Is the thread in this screenshot the original thread (the first thread Cracky posted on 4chan with her photo attached), or is it a remake of it?
All the sources that I had read about the beginning of the "Cracky phenomenon" seemed to imply that Cracky was the name posters in her thread gave her, not the name she used herself. So I thought this could be a remake of the thread, but 6th of January seems to be quite an early date for the #sweet tripcode to be cracked and spread around for someone to create a remake of the first thread.
Or— is it a second or third thread that Cracky herself started with her new nickname, after she was christened Cracky-chan by some anon?
Or is this just some shopped image that distorts truth in every way? Would anyone care to share screenshots of Cracky threads from January 2005 if they have any?
London: Stalking has become a specific criminal offence in Britain where some 120,000 victims, mostly women, are harassed annually.
The new law is expected to provide greater clarity around the offence for the police in England and Wales to improve the safety of victims and bring perpetrators to justice. In Scotland, stalking was made an offence in 2010.
The government has introduced two offences, stalking and stalking involving a fear of violence, the BBC reported.
The new law of stalking carries a maximum six-month sentence and stalking involving a fear of violence or serious distress carries a maximum five years in prison.
Campaigners had long claimed dealing with stalking under existing harassment laws was inadequate.
A parliamentary inquiry earlier this year found that about 120,000 victims, mostly women, were stalked every year.
However only 53,000 incidents are recorded as crimes by police - and only one in 50 of these reports leads to an offender being jailed.
The inquiry called for a new offence to be introduced at once, saying harassment and intimidation could often turn into murder.
After meeting victims and campaigners at Downing Street earlier this year, Prime Minister David Cameron had described stalking as "an abhorrent crime" which "makes life a living hell for the victims".
The calls for reform came after a series of cases involving stalkers who went on to kill, including Clifford Mills, 49, who stalked his ex-girlfriend Lorna Smith on Facebook before stabbing her to death at his flat in Brixton, south London, in February last year.
He was jailed in February for life, with a minimum term of 21 years, after being found guilty of murder.
http://zeenews.india.com/news/world/uk-introduces-new-law-to-tackle-stalking_812807.html