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  1. 13 gru 2021 · Despite backlash from students and administrators, traffic swelled as school newspapers and the national media reported on Juicy Campus. Many students who were interviewed at the time claimed...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JuicyCampusJuicyCampus - Wikipedia

    JuicyCampus.com was a website focusing on gossip, rumors, and rants related to colleges and universities in the United States. As of February 5, 2009, it is out of business. JuicyCampus described itself as an enabler of "online anonymous free speech on college campuses".

  3. When Juicy Campus launched in 2007, women got the worst of it. The site held gossip boards for different college campuses, which allowed students to anonymously decide which female students...

  4. As a student at the most-active school on CollegeACB (CollegeACB was originally developed as a replacement for a LiveJournal-based board active at my school), I saw the good and the bad. It was terrible for some students, who were heaped with anonymous abuse.

  5. 10 mar 2009 · College ACB succeeds JuicyCampus, AKA the rose phenomenon. “That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet” — William Shakespeare. The day JuicyCampus shuttered, the website (juicycampus.com) began redirecting to College ACB (Anonymous Confession Board).

  6. JuicyCampus sues Tennessee State University. Bonus: Excellent editorial from Brandeis University's student newspaper on why Brandeis should not ban JuicyCampus. Excerpt: "Students encouraging administrative control of which pages students can and cannot view on Brandeis' network are encouraging a restriction of their First Amendment rights."

  7. 19 lis 2013 · Some Juicy Campus copycats popped up — first College ACB (Anonymous Communication Board), and later, Collegiate ACB , which is still around — but none managed to capture the novelty (or cruelty) of Juicy Campus.

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