This is extremely common in China and the Chinese diaspora as a primary email address. Chinese email addresses generally require proof of a Chinese phone number or residency so they are significantly more reliable than "notascam@proton.mail.com"
chapotraphouse
Banned? DM Wmill to appeal.
No anti-nautilism posts. See: Eco-fascism Primer
Slop posts go in c/slop. Don't post low-hanging fruit here.
QQ email addresses are normally a bunch of numbers because a lot of older people are bad with pinyin and you can't have {汉字|hàn zì} in email names apparently.
You need a government ID to get a phone number, and you need a phone number to get an email address with QQ, being a scammer with a QQ email is probably the least efficient way of going about it when you can just make an email on a western service without having to require a phone number.
Quick question, how do you type 汉子 hanzi with the pinyin on top? I donwloaded a keyboard where I type in pinyin and it suggests me hanzi options
我爱猫 (>^ω^<) (it also suggests me ascii emotes)
It's called Rubi, and you can input it with the markdown {bottom text | top text}
and you can put the floating text over anything {basically|kitties are cute}
Aah splendid, it opens up a whole new level of posting
"{Antisemitism is out of control!!!| The browns are getting uppitty again}"
{ |
}
No luck with emojis
ty for this tip
I just started learning Chinese and seeing the pinyin over the hanzi is super cool.
I can assure you that this is normal. Very normal lol.
All qq accounts are just a bunch of numbers
Aren't their websites also frequently numbers because Unicode wasn't supported in URIs until fairly recently?
I'm not sure about domain names being primarily numbers, but a lot of non-ASCII domain names (including Chinese characters) use Punycode, which looks like a bunch of random letters if they're rendered in ASCII. Those typically look like xn--
followed by other characters, e.g., xn--fsq.com
which is equivalent to 例.com
(which is itself equivalent to example.com
)