April 14, 2026 Reading time: 6 minutes
If you are reading this, go check your own /dev/null . You might find something waiting there.
Meaning, cryptographically, the content of ubgwtf is equivalent to nothing. The creator has mathematically proven that their website, despite rendering pixels on a screen, is computationally indistinguishable from a void.
The second commit, three years later: Updated the GIF because the old one wasn't fragmented enough.
It isn't a website. It is a .
The creator, likely a sysadmin or a backend developer with too much SSH access, built this as a joke for their team. It was meant to be a dead drop—a place to store inside jokes and broken scripts after a company shut down. When the company dissolved, the repository remained, a ghost in the GitLab machine.
I decided to open the door. Unlike most GitLab pages that scream "Documentation" or "Portfolio," ubgwtf offers none of that. There is no sleek README. There is no profile picture. There is simply a raw index.html file rendered by the browser, last committed 1,847 days ago.