Recent Events:
By the end of last March (on the 24th or the 25th), moderators had implemented a new tool: they could now blacklist members from the members list. In other words, no matter how many subscriptions a member had, they would not show up on the “Top 100” list. No matter how “popular” they became, that fact would no longer be advertised.
TwoFacedLullaby, along with one other, was now blacklisted.
For a few days, TwoFacedLullaby was mostly silent, not blogging and not uploading art (though still commenting on things all over). Then, last Thursday, she wrote this post.
Once again, we hear that life is hard, she is once again in a dark period of her life, that she doesn’t know where life is leading her – a very similar story to back when we originally caught her for the Kohaku-Dono dummy account incident. She mentions possibly leaving the site for a while, even (which would make sense if you had a feeling that someone was about to catch you again).
Amongst that, she also quickly mentions the fake accounts subscribed to her, and that she’s “trying to delete all of them, but [she doesn’t] remember the passwords.”
She can’t remember the passwords. There were a lot of dummy accounts, true, so it’s very possible.
Except our moderators found out otherwise.
In an effort to help TwoFacedLullaby clear out the fake accounts subscribed to her (or the ones previously subscribed to the Kohaku-Dono account), our moderators looked into the matter and deleted 28 of the fake accounts. While going through the accounts, however, our moderators also found another interesting bit of evidence:
Every deleted account had been logged into since March 29th.
Look at the subscription list. As is the case for all of us, new updates from our subscribed friends show up on our lists as bold; after we’ve seen the update, the bold disappears. Every account our mods deleted had updates from March 29th no longer in bold. Conclusion: all of these accounts had been logged into recently.
Unless someone else knew the login passwords for these accounts (and logged into all of them simultaneously from TwoFacedLullaby’s house), the story that TwoFacedLullaby had “forgotten” the passwords looks all the less credible.
Another lie.
(Cont’d.)