Internet mystery: How did swastika become ‘hot trend’?

Published 11:01 pm Sunday, July 13, 2008

The swastika, the symbol of Nazism, still provokes strong feelings of fear and anger. So it was something of a shock when the swastika recently hit the top of Google’s Hot Trends list, which tracks the 100 terms U.S. Google users are searching for most furiously.

After several hours, the swastika disappeared from the list.

It became the Web mystery du jour: How did the swastika get there, why did it become so popular and who, or what, caused its demise?

The tale began Thursday when Web users started to notice that one of Google’s most intensively searched terms that morning was not a term at all, but a symbol — the swastika. Often, the terms on the list reflect a burst of interest in some news or commerce related event, and readers can use the list as a kind of cultural heat map — for example, when the iPhone 3G went on sale on Friday.

Yet somehow the swastika had ascended to the top of the list without a single swastika-related news story or blog post.

Ideas on what happened

Various theories made their way around. A blogger named Dan at a site called “tdaxp” noticed the strange phenomenon. “The swastika is a traditional Chinese good-luck character, the Olympics are coming up, and good luck is on the Chinese mind.”

Also, the Chinese media had just reported on a scandal: the owners of a commercial complex in the Xi’an province had adorned their building with a mural of what was described as “a long black train with a Nazi-inspired swastika” on the locomotive.

Still, even if everyone in China had been searching for the swastika symbol they saw in this story, it would not have registered on Google Trends.

But these theories were discounted quickly: Google’s Hot Trends samples only from U.S. searches.

Meanwhile, there was the other, perhaps thornier issue of why the swastika disappeared from Google’s Hot Trends list. Generally, when a term is searched by enough people to shoot it to the top spot, it takes hours for it to fade from the list.

An initial inquiry to Google on what might have happened to the swastika met with a cagey reply. Instead of saying why it vanished, Google suggested its own theory of why it had appeared.

An e-mailed statement suggested that the searches had come from “a popular Internet bulletin board,” many of whose members were trying to “find out more about this symbol.”

Enter 4chan, one of the Internet’s most trafficked “image boards” — a place where members congregate to chat and swap photos and images — many of them related to Japanese anime cartoons. One particularly well-known section of 4chan is called “b” — a rowdy back channel filled with obscene images and profanity-riddled discussion.

Google, it turned out, was right — probably. There is no way to verify the chain of events as 4chan posts are not archived and generally cycle out of view within minutes. And a moderator for 4chan said, “I’ve seen nothing to denote 4chan was involved at all.”

Is html clue the answer?

But Christophe Maximin, a 20-year-old French Web developer and frequent 4chan user, said by phone from his home in London that he was monitoring 4chan and watched the following scenario unfold:

At some point on Thursday, a member of 4chan’s b channel posted a simple two-part instruction. First, Google “&21328;”. Second, enjoy.

According to Maximin, hundreds or even thousands of 4chan members gave it a try. “They just wanted to know what it was,” Maximin said. “And what Googling it would do.”

Obviously, there is no character for the swastika on the standard keyboard. But Internet browsers can display many, many characters — the trick is knowing the short code (called html) that represents each. In this case, the code a 4chan member posted was the shorthand for the swastika.

Once the code is processed by a browser, it shows up as the symbol.

The flurry of searches for the swastika code — most of which, it seems, were by people who did not know what the code represented — shot the swastika itself to the top of the Trends list.

It’s a plausible answer — and if it’s true, it means the motivations involved were more rascal than racial.