I absolutely love the name.<p>Here's a Google Docs mirror, stripped down to 15MiB by removing hidden data:<p><a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DASC25AIlHPdzOYs2-eB3iVqfjNUItuz/view?usp=sharing" rel="nofollow">https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DASC25AIlHPdzOYs2-eB3iVqfjN...</a><p>@edit re: why would anyone remove the hidden data?<p>It makes sense when you mostly want to read the thing and/or put it on an e-book reader. I'm not saying you HAVE to use this version, it's just that if you don't plan to look at the hidden data at first, I'd download it.
Fun zine.<p>As a side note the acronym POC is widely used in the humanities to mean "people of color". Combined with 'GTFO', well er, I wasn't sure what I was going to find upon opening the PDF.
I find the nostarch press printing[1] which is printed with the same paper as a bible to be quite fun. An interesting discussion this past weekend about what I would have thought if I had come across it in the drawer at a hotel.<p>[1] <a href="https://www.nostarch.com/gtfo" rel="nofollow">https://www.nostarch.com/gtfo</a>
> Technical Note:
This file,
pocorgtfo16.pdf, is a polyglot that is valid as a PDF document, a ZIP archive, and a Bash script that runs a Python webserver which hosts Kaitai Struct’s WebIDE which, allowing you to view the file’s own annotated bytes. Ain’t that nifty?<p>Is this true or a joke?