What is The Totally Real Online Photo Club?
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Welcome to a totally real and legitimate online photo club. This is a club where we share photos of online photos. That’s right, we share photos of other people’s photos online. That isn’t weird, we just like to appreciate the art of others and how they are memorialized into a website like Facebook, Linked-In, YouTube etc. We appreciate photos from all around the internet, starting from the darkest and deepest pits of the “dark” web, or the TOR browser made for secure browsing, to the open web like Google. We do this, not out of spite, but out of appreciation of how websites are designed.
In this club, we also host weekly “Photo of a Photo of the Week” competitions, where members proudly submit screenshots of profile pictures cropped from other screenshots. Our expert judges carefully analyze the compression quality, accidental thumb placement, and emotional depth of blurry vacation selfies posted in 2014. Some members specialize in collecting pixelated restaurant photos from abandoned review sites, while others bravely venture into forgotten forums searching for rare JPEG artifacts. We believe every reposted image deserves recognition, especially the ones with red circles and unnecessary arrows added in Microsoft Paint. This is all topped with a grand prize of a photo of your choice on the main page!
Generational YouTube Thumbnails (Currently Voting)
Cats Floating (Previous Winners)
Tower of Pisa (Previous Winners)
Submission Rules
This is where you can submit your favorite pictures from around the internet.
Though there are rules.
Welcome to the official rules page for our completely professional online photo club, where every image must somehow originate from another image already floating around the internet. We proudly celebrate screenshots of screenshots, blurry profile pictures cropped from old status updates, and reposts downloaded so many times they look legally classified. Members are encouraged to appreciate accidental masterpieces such as crooked crops, giant red circles pointing at nothing, visible battery percentages, and browser tabs left open by mistake. If your submission looks like it survived three laptops, two USB drives, and a suspicious forum from 2008, then congratulations, you are preserving true internet history.
Our club also maintains strict standards during weekly “Photo of a Photo of the Week” competitions, where members submit treasured discoveries from forgotten corners of the web. Judges carefully inspect compression quality, awkward thumb placement, and the emotional impact of vacation selfies compressed into six visible pixels. Attempts to sharpen or improve image quality are strongly discouraged because every random artifact is considered part of the artistic experience. Members must also accept defeat with dignity when their carefully selected screenshot loses to a blurry restaurant photo captured from somebody else’s cracked monitor. Together, we honor the internet’s finest badly saved JPEGs for future generations.
Submission Form