$fake_date = date("Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime("-".rand(1,365)." days")); echo "[Warez-Haber] New post from $fake_date – 'Adobe Genuine Checker bypass'"; The script generated fake news with random past dates. Yesterday, last month, three years ago. The site started looking alive again — not alive now , but alive sometime . Search engines saw fresh timestamps. The visitors grew: 200 IPs, then 500.
He closed the editor. Left the cron running. The next morning, date("Y-m-d H:i:s") printed 2016-05-12 03:44:01 on the homepage. A new visitor downloaded a fake crack. It was a PHP script that just said: warez haber scripti php date
Emir uploaded it to a cheap VPS out of nostalgia. The script worked. Sort of. The admin panel showed the last login: 2009-11-03 22:14:07 . The last news post: 2010-02-18 09:22:01 . Yet somehow, the site still got traffic — 47 unique IPs that week. Bots? Lost souls? People searching for “Adobe CS4 crack” and stumbling into a digital tomb. $fake_date = date("Y-m-d H:i:s", strtotime("-"
One Tuesday night, a private message appeared on an old IRC channel he’d forgotten he was in. “Emir, you still alive? Take over ‘SceneRelease[.]net’ — domain paid until 2026. I’m out. DB dump + script attached.” The attachment was a zip file: warez_haber_scripti_son.zip . Inside: index.php, admin.php, config.php, and a date() function everywhere. date("Y-m-d H:i:s") to stamp every fake “release” — movies that never leaked, keygens that were just malware, and “haber” (news) posts about groups that had disbanded a decade ago. Search engines saw fresh timestamps
Then came the message on the contact form (which still used mail() without SMTP): “Why are all your ‘latest news’ dated 2017? I downloaded a ‘crack’ and it was just a PHP file that printed today’s date. You broke my expectation of time.” Emir laughed. Then froze. He checked the server’s system time. It was correct. But every date() in his script was producing timestamps from 2015–2018. He opened config.php :
But then the 47 bots, the 200 lost souls, the people who still believed somewhere out there was a working keygen from “yesterday” — what would they find? A dead site. A real timestamp.
A lone coder inherits a dusty warez news script, only to discover that its PHP date() function is the only thing keeping a forgotten digital underworld alive. Emir had spent three years cleaning up other people’s digital trash. Not literal trash — warez sites. Ghosts of the early 2000s: forums with broken CAPTCHAs, “0-day” release blogs that hadn’t seen a real crack since Vista, and news scripts written in PHP 5.2 with register_globals still on.