It didn’t take long.
The New York City to Dublin portal has been unplugged for now as vile and rebellious acts are rampant on the 24/7 livestream.
The portal’s organizer, the Flatiron Nomad Partnership, told the Post in a statement that it was closed Tuesday night as staff work over the next few days to minimize shocking behavior.
“Inappropriate behavior comes from a small minority of portal visitors and is amplified on social media,” they added.
“New York has put in place a series of protocols since the portal’s launch, including 24/7 on-site security and barriers to prevent people from setting foot on the portal.
“The Portal team and our partners in Dublin are working on additional solutions to limit this type of behavior that appears on livestreams.”
The interactive art installation in the Flatiron district, along with another installation in Dublin, opened to much fanfare last Wednesday, but quickly turned into a chaotic cesspool of mostly Irish art.
Horrible acts overseas included a knucklehead who flashed an image of planes crashing into the Twin Towers on 9/11 and a bastard who displayed a swastika on his cell phone.
However, New York was not entirely without responsibility.
The OnlyFan model posted a disturbing video to her 400,000 Instagram followers on Sunday, showing her breasts facing the Dublin side.
The project was touted as a “bridge to a unified planet” that would allow passersby to see each other on an 8-foot by 8-foot video screen, but not hear each other.
The portal was temporarily closed on Monday as organizers blamed a “technical glitch” as Dublin City Council vowed to find a solution to deal with the prank.
A Post reporter observed the portal shut down around 8 p.m. Monday before Tuesday’s deployment.
The 27-year-old financial worker said on Monday that he was disappointed that the portal had been shut down.
“I was just watching. I didn’t really have a strategy. Walk away and see how I feel, you know? Haskuk May told the Post. “We saw the portal and just wanted to walk around and get out.”
Mei wasn’t surprised by the dastardly act.
“It’s like anything that’s open can be done,” he said. “It’s only a matter of time before it’s used for things it shouldn’t be used for. There’s a certain level of expectation for honesty.”
Organizers are considering shutting down the portal at midnight once it reopens to minimize unreasonable behavior, insiders told the Post.
The attraction attracted tens of thousands of visitors and had more than 1 billion impressions online in its first week, according to the Flatiron Nomad Partnership.
“The overwhelming majority of visitors to the portal behave appropriately and experience the sense of joy and connection that this public art piece brings to people,” the organization said.




