-
WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator
-
Doctors hope UK archive can solve under-50s bowel cancer mystery
-
Stocks swing following latest AI-fuelled sell-off on Wall St
-
Demanding Dupont set to fire France in Ireland opener
-
Britain's ex-prince Andrew leaves Windsor home: BBC
-
Coach plots first South Africa World Cup win after Test triumph
-
Spin-heavy Pakistan hit form, but India boycott risks early T20 exit
-
Japan eyes Premier League parity by aligning calendar with Europe
-
Whack-a-mole: US academic fights to purge his AI deepfakes
-
Love in a time of war for journalist and activist in new documentary
-
'Unprecedented mass killing': NGOs battle to quantify Iran crackdown scale
-
Seahawks kid Cooper Kupp seeks new Super Bowl memories
-
Thousands of Venezuelans march to demand Maduro's release
-
AI, manipulated images falsely link some US politicians with Epstein
-
Move on, says Trump as Epstein files trigger probe into British politician
-
Arteta backs Arsenal to build on 'magical' place in League Cup final
-
Evil Empire to underdogs: Patriots eye 7th Super Bowl
-
UBS grilled on Capitol Hill over Nazi-era probe
-
Guardiola 'hurt' by suffering caused in global conflicts
-
Marseille do their work early to beat Rennes in French Cup
-
Trump signs spending bill ending US government shutdown
-
Arsenal sink Chelsea to reach League Cup final
-
Leverkusen sink St Pauli to book spot in German Cup semis
-
'We just need something positive' - Monks' peace walk across US draws large crowds
-
Milan close gap on Inter with 3-0 win over Bologna
-
No US immigration agents at Super Bowl: security chief
-
NASA Moon mission launch delayed to March after test
-
Spain to seek social media ban for under-16s
-
LIV Golf events to receive world ranking points: official
-
US House passes spending bill ending government shutdown
-
US jet downs Iran drone but talks still on course
-
UK police launching criminal probe into ex-envoy Mandelson
-
US-Iran talks 'still scheduled' after drone shot down: White House
-
Chomsky sympathized with Epstein over 'horrible' press treatment
-
French prosecutors stick to demand for five-year ban for Le Pen
-
Russia's economic growth slowed to 1% in 2025: Putin
-
Bethell spins England to 3-0 sweep over Sri Lanka in World Cup warm-up
-
Nagelsmann backs Ter Stegen for World Cup despite 'cruel' injury
-
Homage or propaganda? Carnival parade stars Brazil's Lula
-
EU must be 'less naive' in COP climate talks: French ministry
-
Colombia's Petro meets Trump after months of tensions
-
Air India inspects Boeing 787 fuel switches after grounding
-
US envoy evokes transition to 'democratic' Venezuela
-
Syria govt forces enter Qamishli under agreement with Kurds
-
WHO wants $1 bn for world's worst health crises in 2026
-
France summons Musk, raids X offices as deepfake backlash grows
-
Four out of every 10 cancer cases are preventable: WHO
-
Sacked UK envoy Mandelson quits parliament over Epstein ties
-
US House to vote Tuesday to end partial government shutdown
-
Eswatini minister slammed for reported threat to expel LGBTQ pupils
'Clog the toilet' trolls hit Indian visa holders rushing to US
Vacationing in India, engineer Amrutha Tamanam rushed to return to the United States after Donald Trump abruptly announced a $100,000 fee for the visa she holds.
As she scrambled to get back to the country she's called home for a decade, racially motivated far-right trolls launched coordinated efforts to disrupt flight bookings from India, calling their campaign "clog the toilet."
The White House would later clarify that the new H-1B fee was a one-time payment not applicable to current holders. But leading US companies had already advised their employees abroad to swiftly return to avoid the fee or risk being stranded overseas.
Tamanam, an Austin-based software engineer, began searching for a flight from the city of Vijayawada, as users on the far-right message board 4chan moved to overwhelm reservation systems, in a bid to block Indian visa holders from booking tickets.
One 4chan thread encouraged users to find India-US flights, "initiate the checkout process" but "don't checkout," thereby clogging the system and preventing the visa holders from reaching the United States before the announcement took effect.
The campaign may have had a direct impact on Tamanam, who encountered repeated crashes on airline websites. The checkout page, which typically allows users a window of a few minutes, timed out much faster.
After multiple attempts, she eventually managed to rebook a one-way ticket to Dallas on Qatar Airways, spending around $2,000 -- more than double the cost of her original round-trip fare.
"It was hard for me to book a ticket and I paid a huge fare for the panic travel," Tamanam told AFP.
- 'Keep them in India' -
The 4chan thread –- which also circulated among far-right Trump supporters on Telegram and other fringe forums -- read: "Indians are just waking up after the H1B news. Want to keep them in India? Clog the flight reservation system!"
Responding posts, many riddled with racist slurs, advised users to hold seats for popular India-US routes on airline websites and booking platforms -- without completing the purchase.
The stated goal was to block availability on high-demand flights, making it harder to find available seats and inflating prices.
Illustrating the scale of the operation, one 4chan user posted a screenshot of their browser and claimed: "I got 100 seats locked."
"Currently clogging the last available seat on this Delhi to Newark flight," another wrote.
Several 4chan users also posted about holding up seats on Air India and slowing the airline's website. However, an Air India spokesperson told AFP the site experienced no disruptions, with systems operating normally.
- 'Shared antipathy' –
Though difficult to measure the campaign's overall effectiveness, the trolling was an attempt to "cause panic among H-1B visa holders," Heidi Beirich, co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, told AFP.
"The real scary thing about 4chan is its ability to radicalize people into extremist beliefs," Beirich said, adding that several US mass shooters had published manifestos to the site.
H-1B visas allow companies to sponsor foreign workers with specialized skills --- such as scientists and computer programmers -- to work in the United States, initially for three years but extendable to six.
The United States awards 85,000 H-1B visas per year on a lottery system, with India accounting for around three-quarters of the recipients.
In an age of information warfare, the troll operation illustrates how bad actors can launch disruptive attacks "with the stroke of a keyboard," said Brian Levin, founder of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism.
"As nationalistic politics takes hold across the world, an informal international association of opponents will use an array of aggressive tools, including the internet," Levin told AFP.
"What I think is so relevant is how rapidly it spread, how diverse the nations represented were, and how shared antipathy across international borders can be mobilized online."
H.Portela--PC