Pest-by-Modem
- Make up fake acronyms. On-line
veterans like to use abbreviations like IMHO (in my
humble opinion) and RTFM (read the f...... manual) to
show that they're "hep" to the lingo. Make up
your own that don't stand for anything (SETO, BARL,
CP30), use them liberally, and then refuse to explain
what they stand for ("You don't know? RTFM").
- WRITE ALL YOUR MESSAGES IN ALL
CAPS AND DON'T USE PERIODS OR RETURNS SO THAT EVERYONE
HAS TO SCROLL ACROSS THEIR SCREENS TO READ EVERY LINE
ALSO USE A LOT OF !!!!!! AND DDOOUUBBLLEESS TO SHOW THAT
YOU'RE EXCITED ABOUT BEING HERE!!!!!!!
- When replying to your mail,
correct everyone's grammar and spelling and point out
their typos, but don't otherwise respond to the content
of their messages. When they respond testily to your
'creative criticism," do it again. Continue until
they go away.
- Software and files offered
on-line are often "compressed" so that it won't
take so long to travel over the phone lines. Buy a
compression program and compress everything you send,
including one-word E-mail responses like
"Thanks."
- Upload text files with Bible
passages about sin or guilt and give them names like
"SexyHouseWives," then see how many people
download them. Challenge your friends to come up with the
most popular come-on. Take bets and calculate odds on the
results of each upload's popularity.
- cc: all your E-mail to Al Gore
([email protected]) so that he can keep track
of what's happening on the information Superhighway
Internet.
- Join a discussion group, and
tie whatever's being discussed back to an unrelated
central theme of your own. For instance, if you're in a
discussion of gun control, respond to every message with
the observation that those genetically superior tomatoes
seem to have played an important role. Within days, all
discussion of gun control will have ceased as people
write you threatening messages and instruct all other
members to ignore you.