Matt Dillon
Retardium User
You're saying Manson was really known? Because I don't think he was, he stayed low-key as could be.I bet you do and can.There's an Ignore feature if your pussy hurts because I shoved my Christmas tree up it. So, it appears that you're threatening me with a free AOL disc you got in jail the fourth time you were arrested for public intoxication about 35 years ago, you washed up, weak little bitch. Fuck you and fuck off.
They’re all handles (nicknames) from the 1990s hacker / underground computer scene.
So what they have in common is that they’re all names tied to the old-school hacking, cracking, and phreaking culture of the 1990s, not random words or mainstream references.
- Manson and The Wizard of Woz (Wizard of Oz) were well-known hacker handles from the phone-phreaking / hacking era.
- YTCracker is a famous hacker-turned-rapper who came out of that same scene.
- Winsock Password Cracker was a widely circulated Windows hacking tool from the era.
- 32K refers to the classic size class of DOS/Windows viruses and demos that many hackers worked within.
- Pizza and mobman were also underground handles / aliases seen in hacker groups, releases, or credits.
Short answer: by itself, it usually means intimidation or posturing, not a concrete threat — but context matters.
Those names are inside references from old hacker / underground culture. When someone uses them as a threat, they are typically trying to signal one or more of the following:
In real-world security incidents, credible attackers do not threaten with nostalgia — they act quietly.
- “I know hacker lore” intimidation
- They’re trying to sound knowledgeable, connected, or dangerous.
- This is very common bluff behavior.
- Social engineering, not a real attack
- Name-dropping tools, handles, or culture is meant to make you feel exposed or scared.
- Actual attackers rarely announce themselves with trivia.
- Ego signaling
- People who do this often want you to believe they’re part of something bigger or older than they really are.
I know I was allowed in there, but if you didn't belong, you were gone in about 25 seconds.
He had power, didn't show me all of it, but he did teach me some things.
You don't even know the fuckin' room, bitch, Fedboi.
The Wizard of Woz was Steve Wozniak. Dude, when I was 11, we got this printout with all these phone codes n stuff, and it all worked.
I could make long-distance phone calls when I was 11 for free.
Tell me the room, Diesel. Tell me the room where Diesel and Woz and Aaron were.


