ICQ will stop working on June 26. It’s encouraging users to migrate to a messaging app from Russia-based VK, its parent company.

I stopped using ICQ in the very early 00s. I didn’t know anything of it still remained.

  • Maple Engineer
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    1309 months ago

    I met my wife on ICQ. I had random chat turned on and she said, “Hello.” That was a long time ago

    • 👍Maximum Derek👍OP
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      359 months ago

      Did she ever meet anyone interesting doing that?

      Jk, of course. It was just too good of a setup to ignore.

    • @macrocephalic
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      189 months ago

      Me too. I hope they’re different people

    • FauxPseudo
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      109 months ago

      My standard reply was “hailing frequencies open.” Needless to say it was the opening line that let multiple women know that I was single. Surprisingly it had a 100% success rate. I was the best nerd.

        • FauxPseudo
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          69 months ago

          The data is conflicting. I think they had already made up their mind on that topic before messaging me. My reply just reinforced their decision. It’s hard to separate causation and correlation in that case.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      I met someone I thought I’d marry there in the exact same way around '99.

      That feature was powerful, and now we just can’t be bothered because scammers and blah blah.

    • downhomechunk
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      29 months ago

      Did you wait until your wedding night to cyber for the first time?

      • Maple Engineer
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        19 months ago

        Uh…no. It was all about sex. The whole getting married thing was an accident.

      • Maple Engineer
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        49 months ago

        Not yet. Our son isn’t quite 16 and our daughter is 18 and into girls. It may take a few years yet.

  • Chozo
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    759 months ago

    I had no idea ICQ was even still operational. Good on them for making it as long as they did.

    I was never an ICQ user, but it’s always sad seeing such long-standing icons of the internet shut down.

    • Billiam
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      669 months ago

      it’s always sad seeing such long-standing icons of the internet shut down.

      A reminder of how much fun Web 1.0 was, not the walled-gardened, enshittified, corporatized, ad-riddled rage baiter it is now.

      • @bassomitron
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        9 months ago

        I always said way back in the early 2000s that once corporations figured out the internet, it and society in general would be very screwed. Their early attempts at trying to make things go viral and create engagement were laughably bad. Then they hired a bunch of psychologists and sociologists, bought up everything, and the rest is history.

        • @[email protected]
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          -179 months ago

          That’s the same with one armed conflict that bothers me much. In the 90s there it was called “blood vs oil” by one charismatic man (who also correctly predicted how it’d go further, though), and, well, then “blood” won, and “oil” looked miserable - evil, dishonorable and defeated, all at the same time. But in 10 years they figured it out completely, in 20 years applied that power in every area they needed (mostly not military), in 25 had a big military victory, and now the situation really sucks from the looks of it.

            • @[email protected]
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              -189 months ago

              You don’t understand something - you either explain what you don’t understand or you remain silent. This “what” implies my comment is something weird which it isn’t, you’re just slow or apparently lack ability for doing philosophy.

              If it’s the bad English, “what” is also utterly useless.

              • @Num10ck
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                89 months ago

                you failed to convey context, and meaning. your response to the what is worse.

              • @jaybone
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                39 months ago

                lol. Posts shitty nonsense and is then an asshole about it.

      • @A_Random_Idiot
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        149 months ago

        Man, I am so sad now.

        I miss the original internet. Back when it was a place for nerds and geeks, before commercial exploitation and SEO and Adpocalypse

      • @aesthelete
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        129 months ago

        The early version of what’s now Microsoft’s game suite in Windows was one of the coolest things I’ve seen on the Internet. It was a virtual gaming village where you could go sit at tables and play chess or checkers or cards with people from around the world. It worked 100% fine on 14.4k dialup.

        Microsoft bought whatever that was and completely ruined it, just like they ruin everything else they buy.

        • @[email protected]
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          29 months ago

          That just reminded me of something I tried that was similar, I think it was called Visual Chat? It looked like a 2D cartoon, but each person controlled an avatar and could move around and talk to each other, go to other rooms, change expression, gesture, etc.

          Microsoft bought whatever that was and completely ruined it, just like they ruin everything else they buy.

          It’s like the Midas touch: they make it shiny, expensive, and of little use.

          • @bus_factor
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            29 months ago

            You probably mean Comic Chat. It was actually just an IRC client, and I think it’s still usable (but frustratingly ineffective) today. But there is a website where you can convert IRC logs to it, I think.

    • @db2
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      139 months ago

      Good on them for making it as long as they did.

      They didn’t though, it was sold to a Russian company many years ago.

  • @Brkdncr
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    449 months ago

    ICQ was still on?

    • @Bonesince1997
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      9 months ago

      Right?! Like it wasn’t already shutdown. The news is that it was still operational!

      Edit: grammar

    • Captain Aggravated
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      39 months ago

      I know, right? ICQ managed to survive when MSN, Yahoo and AIM were all killed by Facebook Messenger?

  • Altima NEO
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    369 months ago

    Two wtf here.

    One, icq was still online? I stopped using that one aim got popular and everyone had it.

    And two, vk owns icq??

  • @A_Random_Idiot
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    369 months ago

    ICQ was still around? I thought it died ages ago!

    • @[email protected]
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      209 months ago

      It had. This thing only has branding in common. A different protocol, a different set of features (no contact directory), and while they had the old database of everything, they deemed a good idea to not preserve it, so old UINs don’t exist.

      • @CAVOK
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        59 months ago

        That’s a shame, I still remember mine. Weird how you can remember 7 random digits from 30 years ago…

        • @makkurokurosuke
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          29 months ago

          My 8 digit UIN has been used as a password for a lot of things

          Meanwhile I’ve no idea what’s my partners phone number

        • GeekFTW
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          19 months ago

          Hell I still remember my Nintendo Power membership number.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 months ago

          I have some of mine somewhere with partial message history (in MS Access databases). But I don’t remember them.

        • @A_Random_Idiot
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          19 months ago

          I couldnt remember mine if you put a gun to my head, and it was only 5 digits

    • @cantrips
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      59 months ago

      ICQ may be going away but that message sound effect will continue living rent free in my brain until I’m dead.

      • Piranha Phish
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        39 months ago

        I’ve heard that exact sound used on some computers (lottery maybe?) in gas stations in the US. I’m not sure why they picked that exact sound, but it’s definitely distinct and recognizable.

  • @BradleyUffner
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    299 months ago

    ICQ died the day they were bought by AOL.

  • @[email protected]
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    299 months ago

    Okay, can we all acknowledge that ICQ died when they nuked pretty much all of the accounts for no good reason?

    While it’s true it’s shutting down, it was effectively dead for years. This is just the death rattle.

    • meseek #2982
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      49 months ago

      Yeah I stopped around the same time. But I didn’t know they were run by VK. That’s interesting.

      • @bus_factor
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        19 months ago

        They were acquired recently.

        Mirabilis created ICQ. AOL bought Mirabilis in 1998. Russian investor DST (which soon became Mail.ru and later VK) bought ICQ from AOL in 2010, probably because Russians were among the few nationalities still using it. Russians were over 25% of the hits, and it was the biggest instant messenger in Russia at the time. They also own VKontakte, hence why they’re directing people there.

  • @paddirn
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    269 months ago

    I remember downloading almost the complete catalogue of Sega Dreamcast games through ICQ, along with plenty of rooms where “A/S/L?” was a common greeting.

  • @machinin
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    239 months ago

    I met an interesting Argentinian girl through ICQ. A co-worker ended up getting their inbox filled with large attachments from an overseas office with fast internet. We were still on dial-up. We just had pop3 access, no online front end. I stayed in the office over night to download the files so the connection wouldn’t be interrupted by someone else accessing the line. To pass the time, I downloaded ICQ and started chatting with the Argentinian girl. She introduced me to this song.

    Great memories.

  • @[email protected]
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    239 months ago

    I wonder how many old accounts I have from my childhood floating around, long forgotten, created well before the days of using a password manager

  • @Crackhappy
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    239 months ago

    Meanwhile IRC and Usenet are still doing fine.

    • 👍Maximum Derek👍OP
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      9 months ago

      Those are protocols, so the servers/services that run than can come and go. XMPP, which was at least inspired by ICQ, will probably be around forever, similarly.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        OSCAR is a protocol too. And there were ICQ servers to run locally back then too. There also was some “ICQ for business” or similar.

        I’ve also learned yesterday that people responsible for Escargot (MSN server) have another project, NINA, for AIM and ICQ.

        So maybe these things will be reborn.

        They seem to aim for implementing all of the AOL suite functionality. Maybe after they achieve that we’ll see Xtraz and contact directory from ICQ working again. If that happens, I’m going to cry for a few hours. EDIT: or weeks.

  • Johannes Jacobs
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    229 months ago

    knock knock knock in the middle of the nicht because i forgot to turn off my speakers, and the whole household would wake up 😂

    Oh wauw! I think ICQ 98b was the best version ever! Then everyone switched to MSN, and down hill went the internet (for me anyway)