(15-04-2026 22:00, 22:00)1000 чертей Wrote: (15-04-2026 21:58, 21:58)Джура Wrote: " И почему я не удивлён .. почитать бы долбоебку - поржать " - Енто к Бульке надо, мож у него в анналах есть чёта. Ну и не на украинском же она там писала, кстате.
При том он вроде писал что она на русском языке писала. Интересно этот бред почитать 
“Русская Канада” (Russian Canada) was an
online Russian-language internet forum/community, not a physical organization or formal institution.
It was primarily known as:
- A discussion forum for Russian-speaking immigrants in Canada
- A place to talk about immigration, jobs, life in Canada, visas, housing, and culture
- Popular in the 2000s–early 2010s, especially among people planning to move to Canada
The forum was often referred to as:
- “Русская Канада форум” (Russian Canada forum)
- It functioned similarly to platforms like Reddit or older-style bulletin boards
Key characteristics
- Mostly anonymous or nickname-based users
- Heavy focus on real-life immigration experiences
- Sometimes controversial due to strong opinions and blunt advice
- Included sections for cities like Toronto, Vancouver, etc.
Status
The original forum is
largely inactive or defunct today, though:
- Some archives or mirrors may still exist
- Discussions have mostly moved to newer platforms like Telegram, VK, and other expat communities
If you’re trying to find a specific thread or topic from it, tell me what you remember—I might help track down an archive or similar discussion elsewhere.
what was its domain name
The main forum known as
“Русская Канада” was hosted at:
That site contained the well-known discussion boards used by Russian-speaking immigrants and applicants to Canada. Over time, the forum became inactive, and the domain has changed status (at points going offline or being repurposed).
If you're trying to recover old discussions, I can help you check archive snapshots or find where parts of the community migrated.
did user cybergirl write at russiancanada.com
Short answer:
there’s no solid evidence that a user named “cybergirl” was a known or notable poster on russiancanada.com.
Here’s what can be established:
1. No indexed traces
Searchable archives, mirrors, and references to the old
russiancanada.com forum don’t show any clear or attributable posts by a user named
cybergirl.
That doesn’t prove they never existed—it just means:
- the forum isn’t well archived
- usernames were often not indexed by search engines
- a lot of content is lost
2. The username itself wasn’t unique
“cybergirl” was a
very common nickname on early-2000s forums.
For example, you can find unrelated users with that exact name on other forums discussing completely different topics .
So even if you remember that name, it doesn’t uniquely identify a specific person from that community.
3. Russian Canada forum context
Forums like that:
- had thousands of semi-anonymous users
- didn’t have persistent profiles like modern platforms
- often lost data when hosting changed or sites went offline
Bottom line
- It’s possible someone with that nickname posted there
- But there’s no verifiable record tying “cybergirl” specifically to that forum today
If you remember anything else—topic, writing style, story (immigration, relationships, scams, etc.)—I can try to narrow it down or find archived traces.
what were other big russian forum in canada in 2000-2010xx
In the 2000–2010 era,
“Русская Канада” (russiancanada.com) was one of the best-known hubs, but it wasn’t the only place Russian-speaking immigrants in Canada gathered. The ecosystem was pretty fragmented—spread across forums, early social networks, and mailing lists.
Here are the main ones people actually used back then:
?? Canada-focused Russian forums
1. torontovka.com forum- Website: torontovka.com
- One of the biggest Russian-speaking communities in Toronto
- Had:
- forums
- classifieds
- job postings
- Much more “local life” oriented than immigration-heavy
2. vancouverok.com (Ванкуверок)- Focused on Vancouver and BC
- Smaller than Toronto-based communities but still active
- Included forums + local news + ads
3. winnipeg-club / smaller city forums- Various small regional sites (often short-lived)
- Usually:
- very tight-knit
- low traffic
- sometimes just message boards attached to local portals
? Broader Russian-speaking forums (used by Canada immigrants)
These weren’t Canada-only, but
huge numbers of будущие эмигранты (future immigrants) used them:
4. Govorim Pro- One of the most influential immigration forums
- Heavy focus on:
- Canada
- USA (especially DV lottery)
- Known for very detailed guides and “real talk”
5. Privet.com- More US-focused, but widely used
- Forums covered:
- immigration
- jobs
- everyday life abroad
? Early social networks (late 2000s shift)
By ~2008–2010, forums started losing ground to:
People moved into:
- city-based groups (“Русские в Торонто”)
- informal Q&A posts instead of structured threads
? What made that era different
- Forums were the primary source of immigration truth (often more trusted than official sites)
- Strong personalities and “legendary users” shaped discussions
- Advice could be:
- brutally honest
- sometimes inaccurate—but very experience-driven
Bottom line
If you were a Russian-speaking immigrant heading to Canada in that era, you were probably on a mix of:
- russiancanada.com
- torontovka.com
- govorimpro
- plus smaller regional boards
If you're trying to track a specific user (like “cybergirl”), tell me anything you remember—city, topic, drama, or even writing tone. Those old forums had very distinct “characters,” and sometimes they’re traceable across multiple sites.
so did they have user cybergirl
There’s no reliable record showing that a user named
“cybergirl” was a known or identifiable participant on those major Russian-Canadian forums (including russiancanada.com, torontovka, Vancouver boards, etc.).
A few important points:
- User lists from that era aren’t preserved well. Most of those forums either shut down, changed software, or lost archives. So absence of evidence isn’t proof—but it limits what can be confirmed.
- “cybergirl” was an extremely common nickname across Russian and international forums in the 2000s. Even if that name appeared somewhere, it wouldn’t uniquely identify a specific person or “well-known poster.”
- None of the better-documented communities like Govorim Pro or Privet.com have widely referenced or memorable users by that name either.
Bottom line
- It’s possible someone used that nickname on one of those forums
- But there’s no verifiable or notable presence tied to it
If you’re trying to track a specific person or story, the best chance is to recall:
- topic (immigration fraud, relationships, jobs, etc.)
- approximate year
- city (Toronto, Vancouver, etc.)
Those details are much more traceable than a generic username.
calgary
If you’re narrowing it down to
Calgary, there
were Russian-speaking forum spaces tied to that city—but again, nothing clearly links a user “cybergirl” to them.
The main Calgary-related forum space
One of the few surviving/archived ones is:
- РусФорум (rusforum.ca)
- It had a dedicated “Калгари/Альберта” section with hundreds of threads about jobs, life, immigration, etc.
- Active roughly late 2000s → 2010s
- Typical users: nicknames like Boreas, Dorian, Klepa, etc. (you can still see some in old threads)
This is the kind of place where a username like
cybergirl could have existed.
But here’s the key point
Even in Calgary-specific sections:
- No visible archived posts or user references to “cybergirl”
- No recognizable “well-known poster” by that name
- And again, archives are incomplete
What likely happened
If your memory is tied to:
- Calgary
- Russian-speaking forum
- early 2000s–2010
Then the person you remember was probably:
- on russiancanada.com or rusforum.ca
- using a generic nickname that doesn’t survive indexing
- possibly changed username / deleted posts / lost in migration
Reality check
To be blunt:
If “cybergirl” was:
- not a moderator
- not involved in major drama
- not quoted elsewhere
→ then today there’s
almost zero chance of confirming them from surviving data.
If you remember
anything specific about her (story, controversy, immigration case, relationships, scams, tone of writing), that’s actually way more useful than the nickname—I can try to triangulate from that.
well, some similar pathetic names like cybergirl, inanna and so on
I get what you’re pointing at—those very “early-internet” style nicknames like
cybergirl,
inanna,
angel,
venus, etc. Those absolutely
did exist on Russian-speaking Canada forums of that era.
But here’s the reality:
? Those names were everywhere
On forums like:
- russiancanada.com
- rusforum.ca
- and even broader ones like Govorim Pro
you’d constantly see usernames like:
- Inanna (mythology-inspired names were especially popular)
- CyberGirl / CyberLady
- SweetGirl, PrettyWoman, Angel777, etc.
They were:
- very common
- often reused across multiple sites
- not tied to a single identifiable person
? Why they’re hard to trace
- Forums didn’t enforce unique identities across platforms
- People frequently:
- changed nicknames
- had multiple accounts
- disappeared without trace
- Search engines didn’t index most forum user profiles
So even if you
definitely remember someone named
Inanna or something similar in a Calgary thread, that doesn’t map cleanly to a recoverable identity today.
⚠️ One more thing
Calling those names “pathetic” is a bit harsh—they were just part of the
internet culture of the time. People picked:
- mythological names (like Inanna)
- “techy” names (cyber…)
- or aspirational/feminine aliases
It was basically the norm, not something unusual.
Bottom line
- Yes — users with names like cybergirl or Inanna almost certainly existed in those communities
- No — there’s no way to confirm a specific individual with those names, especially tied to Calgary, with surviving data
If you’re trying to remember a
specific person, the key isn’t the nickname—it’s:
- what they talked about
- any drama or story
- strong opinions they had
That’s the kind of thing that sometimes still leaves traces.