La página más misteriosa que existió en Internet - Summary

Summary

The summary is:

This is a video transcript that explores the mysteries behind some strange and enigmatic web pages, such as mortis.com, ion.com, and yuzz.org. The narrator tries to find out the origins, meanings, and contents of these pages, and whether they are related to any crimes, deaths, or experiments. He also compares them to other examples of internet art, social experiments, or creepy pastas. He concludes that mortis.com was the most interesting and mysterious one, as it was closed by the FBI and contained something that was worth paying for by some sick minds.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. Mortis.com was a mysterious website that existed on the internet and was closed by the FBI.
2. The website had a login page and contained some information that was not accessible to the public.
3. Some users tried to find out who owned the website and discovered an email address associated with someone named Tomás Link.
4. Tomás Link also had other domains that he opened with other people, but all those people were reported to be dead.
5. The story of Mortis.com was mixed with another story of a website called Ion.com, which had a countdown and claimed to be an experiment on naturalistic observation.
6. Ion.com was created by someone named Mike, who wanted to see how people would react to a mysterious website with little information.
7. The other domains that were linked to Mortis.com were created later by someone who wanted to make the story more creepy and added phrases like "dead but dreaming".
8. The original Mortis.com website is not available on the Wayback Machine, which archives old versions of web pages, because it was excluded by the FBI.
9. There is no evidence that Tomás Link or his collaborators were real or that they died because of Mortis.com.
10. It is speculated that Mortis.com contained something more exclusive and disturbing than gore or murders, something that a sick mind would pay for.