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- **ELECTROPOLIS:**
- **COMMUNICATION AND COMMUNITY**
- **ON INTERNET RELAY CHAT**
-
- Elizabeth M. Reid
- Honours Thesis
- 1991
- University Of Melbourne
- Department Of History
-
- Internet email:
- emr@munagin.ee.mu.oz.au
- emr@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au
-
- IRC:
- Ireshi
-
-
-
- **ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS**
- I would like to thank the History Department for sponsoring my use of
- the University of Melbourne's computing facilities, which enabled me
- to undertake this research. I would also like to thank Richard Oxbrow
- of the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, and
- Matthew Higgins of the Department of Engineering Computer Resources,
- for allowing me to use the computing facilities of each of those
- departments. Lastly, I would like to thank Daniel Carosone (Waftam on
- IRC) for his unfailing support, and for his advice on technical
- details.
-
-
-
- **PREFACE**
- _COMPUTER-MEDIATED_COMMUNICATION_
- Despite the recent innovations of radio and telecommunications,
- communication and language theorists make a sharp distinction between
- the spoken and the written word. That distinction is based on a
- perception of temporal and spatial proximity in the case of spoken
- communication, and distance in the case of written communication.
- "Most analyses of linguistic interaction," as Naomi Baron notes, "are
- based on the paradigm of two people speaking face-to-face."(1) It is
- further assumed that alternative methods of communication -
- telephones and letters for example - supplement, as Baron expresses
- it, 'normal' face-to-face communication.(2) The underlying assumption
- that physical contact is necessarily a part of human communication
- pervades social theory. This is understandable. Until recently,
- physical contact was almost always a prerequisite for communication,
- with letters mainly being transmitted between people who had met in
- the flesh. Even the telephone assumes physical contact. It is
- generally only in the business world that people phone others whom
- they have not met, and personal telephone conversations are, as in
- the case of letters, conducted between people who are already known
- to each other.
-
- The technology of computer-mediated communication offers an
- alternative to this. Computer-mediated communications systems
- (CMCS's) use computers and telecommunications networks to compose,
- store, deliver and process communication. There are three basic
- types of computer-mediated communication systems: email, news, and
- chat programs. 'Email', or electronic mail, allows users of computer
- systems to send messages to each other. 'News' allows users to send
- messages to a database divided under subject headings, facilitating
- electronic mail between multiple users on diverse subjects. These two
- types of communication are asynchronous - messages, whether private
- email or public news, can be created and received at widely separated
- times, allowing time for reflection and deliberation in response. The
- third type of CMCS is the chat program, which does not store messages
- but transmits one person's typing directly to the monitor of another
- person or group of people. Chat programs deal in a form of
- synchronous communication that defies conventional understandings of
- the differences between spoken and written language.
-
- CMCS's are a recent development, with widespread availability only
- becoming possible within the last decade. Consequently, little has
- been written about them outside of technical considerations of their
- design and implementation. The few articles that have addressed the
- subject tend to do so from a commercial orientation - discussing the
- impact of CMC on problem solving techniques, office communication and
- corporate structure.(3) An assumption that is commonly made by
- researchers of computer-mediated communication is that the medium is
- not conducive to emotional exchanges. As Ronald Rice and Gail Love
- state, "the typical conclusion is that as [the communication]
- bandwidth narrows, media allow less 'social presence'; communication
- is likely to be described as less friendly, emotional, or personal
- and more serious, business-like and task oriented."(4) This may have
- been found to be the case in some instances, and may reflect the
- overall concern among researchers to study CMC in a business
- environment. But computer-mediated communication systems are not -
- either theoretically or in practice - limited to commercial use. It
- is also possible to use them for social interaction. Internet Relay
- Chat is one such system. IRC is a multi-user synchronous
- communication facility that is available all over the world to people
- with access to the 'Internet' network of computer systems. IRC was
- not specifically designed for a business environment - the use to
- which it is put is entirely decided by those who use it. Work is
- certainly done on IRC. It is an excellent forum for consultations
- between workers on different points of the globe - everything from
- programming to translation to authorial collaboration goes on on IRC.
- However, a large part of what goes on on IRC is not work but play,
- and it is this aspect of it that I will address.
-
- Communication using the Internet Relay Chat program is written, and
- users are spatially distant, but it is also synchronous. It is a
- written - or rather, typed - form of communication that is
- transmitted, received and responded to within a time frame that has
- formerly been only thought relevant to spoken communication. IRC does
- not assume physical contact between users - either prior to or
- after communication via computer. Users of the system will, as the
- medium is international, know in person at most only a few fellow
- users. IRC allows - encourages - recreational communication between
- people who have never been, most likely will never be, in a situation
- to base their knowledge of each other and their methods of
- communication on physical cues.
-
- Users of IRC do not, however, have no knowledge of each other. The
- people who make up the IRC community are effectively preselected by
- external social structures - access to IRC is restricted to those
- who have access to the Internet computer network. There are many such
- people - the Internet spans countries as diverse as Germany, the
- United States, Japan, Israel, Australia and Korea. However, those
- individuals who use IRC will be in an economically privileged
- position in their society. They have access to high technology. Due
- to the nature of the computer network on which IRC runs, the
- Internet, they will most likely be members of an academic community,
- often students of computer science.(5) Interaction on IRC is then
- carried out in the knowledge that users are on a rough equality -
- according to conventional economic measures - and members of
- similarly privileged social groups. This 'equality' is not intrinsic
- to IRC, it is a by-product of the social structures surrounding
- computer technology.
-
- Nevertheless, IRC provides a unique field to the social theorist. It
- challenges and forces an escape from traditional paradigms of social
- interaction by reference to an architecture that allows relative
- anonymity. It stands as a challenge to the methods of analysis that
- have been directed at computer-mediated communication systems. IRC
- was not designed to perform a corporate function, nor has it come to
- do so. It was intended to be a tool for social interaction between
- spatially disparate people, and as such it cannot be completely
- explained or analysed by reference to the methods used by other CMC
- theorists.(6)
-
- Interaction on IRC involves a deconstruction of traditional
- assumptions about the dynamics of communication, and the construction
- of alternative systems. IRC is essentially a playground. Within its
- domain people are free to experiment with different forms of
- communication and self-representation. Within IRC, "Power is
- challenged and supplanted by rituals combining both destruction and
- rejuvenation."(7) To paraphrase F.R. Ankersmit, users of IRC do not
- shape themselves according to or in conformity with the conventions
- of social contexts external to the medium, but learn to "play" their
- "cultural game" with them.(8)
-
- This is my central thesis, and I will seek to address it from two
- perspectives. My first concern will be the methods by which users of
- IRC utilise the medium in the deconstruction of social boundaries. As
- I have suggested, users of IRC are a pre-selected community - they
- have much in common as far as such considerations as social position
- and education are concerned. IRC, however, presents unique problems
- for the expression of this community. The methods by which such
- groups are usually held together rely on physical proximity. These
- methods are not open to users of IRC - computer-mediated
- communication challenges and deconstructs these social tools. I will
- discuss the means by which communication on IRC does this.
-
- My second concern is the construction of alternative communities on
- IRC. Denied or having deconstructed the more traditional methods of
- sustaining a community, users of IRC must develop alternative or
- parallel methods. Both positive and negative methods of sustaining
- community are developed on IRC. Computer-mediated rewards and
- punishments are developed, and complex rituals have evolved to keep
- users within the IRC 'fold' and to regulate the use of authority.
-
- Discussion of these points will lead to a presentation of the social
- discourse of IRC. The challenging of the power of social norms and
- their replacement with rituals combining both destruction and
- rejuvenation, brings into play areas of discourse that are
- postmodern. This connection between postmodernism and that phase of
- culture and technology marked by computerisation has been remarked
- upon by even those antipathetic to the discourse. Perez Zagorin
- describes postmodernism as "a fundamental mutation in the sphere of
- culture reflecting the new multinational phase of... [the] electronic
- society."(9) Culture, as defined by Schneider, is a "system of
- symbols and meanings."(10) Since computer-mediated communication
- systems are "designed specifically to affect the transmission of
- symbols and meanings", IRC - which is both international and
- electronic - has the potential to alter understandings of cultural
- analysis.(11) My conclusion is that Internet Relay Chat, by
- deconstructing social boundaries and by the ways in which users
- construct their own community and culture, is a postmodern
- phenomenon.
-
- Cultural criticism in this postmodern age is, as Alan Lui states,
- governed by "its belief that criticism can, and must, engage with
- context".(12) It is also, as Ankersmit suggests, reflexive, self-
- referential.(13) If history is to be able to address the questions
- raised by computer-mediated culture, then historians must examine the
- impact of that cultural context upon their craft. Historians must ask
- what will happen to the practice of history when "societies enter
- what is known as the postindustrial age and cultures enter what is
- known as the postmodern age"?(14) If computer-mediated communication
- problematises cultural criticism by questioning conventional notions
- about the construction of the self and of culture, then it also
- problematises historiography. If historians continue to take to the
- increasingly more complex forms of computerised information exchange
- that are being developed then these factors will have ideological
- implications for their craft. What will happen to the relationship of
- the historian to his text, and what will happen to the historian's
- view of texts, once electronic data itself becomes subject to
- historical study?
-
- The most prosaic aspects of the historian's craft are challenged in a
- computer-mediated culture. If primary and secondary sources are
- produced and disseminated electronically, what becomes of the
- conventions of citation?(15) Under the application of this
- technology, historical texts become subject to, as Lyotard describes
- it, an "exteriorization of knowledge with respect to the
- 'knower'"(16) The form which computerised knowledge takes -
- electronic encoding, or data files - is not inherently identifiable
- with its creator. Electronic data can be modified by anyone who has
- the appropriate technology. It is subject to a fluidity that 'hard
- copy' is not - it can be changed without that change being
- detectable. The context of information changes the relationship
- between information and power, between information and discourse. As
- John Perry Barlow asks, "What are data and what is free speech? How
- does one treat property which has no physical form and can be
- infinitely reproduced? Is a computer the same as a printing press?...
- Can anyone morally claim to own knowledge itself?"(17)
-
- In examining the Internet Relay Chat computer-mediated communication
- system I attempt to write history within the context of the culture
- of an electronic, postindustrial, postmodern society.
-
-
-
- **INTRODUCTION**
-
- Most people are familiar with personal computers. Although only a
- small number are conversant with the technical details of
- microcomputer technology, or with computer programming languages,
- most people have a rough idea of what a computer looks like, and that
- they are used by typing commands into a keyboard and viewing feedback
- from the machine on a monitor. Word processing has become so common
- that it would be hard to find a person living in the Western world -
- especially in an academic community - who had not actually used a
- computer.
-
- Throughout this essay I shall assume a basic understanding of the
- physical act of computer use. I do not intend to explain any of the
- technical details pertaining to my subject - most of them are, at any
- rate, beyond my understanding. However I feel that it would be useful
- to give some explanation of the historical context within which
- Internet Relay Chat has been developed, and necessary to offer a
- description of the IRC environment.
-
- _ARPANET,_THE_INTERNET,_AND_AARNET_(18)
- The personal computers with which most readers will be familiar - IBM
- compatibles, Apple Macintoshes, Amigas and so on - are a relatively
- recent phenomenon. It is only within the last ten to twenty years
- that computers have become household items. Before that computing was
- the domain of governmental or commercial organisations which owned
- large - mainframe - computer systems. As usage of these systems
- increased, it became common for computers at one geographical
- location, or site, to be linked together so that users on each could
- have access to the data and facilities contained on all the others.
- These local area networks, or LANs, developed into networks
- connecting machines at dispersed sites, utilising the telephone line
- system. The first of these 'long-haul' networks was the ARPANET,
- which came into existence in 1969. This project was funded by the
- Advanced Research Projects Agency, an arm of the United States
- Department of Defence. ARPANET initially connected machines at the
- University of California (Los Angeles and Santa Barbara campuses) and
- the University of Utah, and was intended to facilitate research at
- those sites. Along the idea of sharing electronic data went the idea
- of communication between users. ARPANET originally allowed two
- methods of communication between users - email and news.
-
- ARPANET's membership grew, with many other educational institutions
- in the United States adopting the new technology. In 1983 ARPANET was
- divided into two networks, known as ARPANET (for research use) and
- MILNET (for military use). The ARPANET arm continued to grow, with
- local area networks at various government, educational and commercial
- sites being added to the system. With the advent of satellite
- communications, it became possible for computers in other countries
- to join the network, and ARPANET became known as the Internet.
- Technically, the Internet is not one network, but a number of
- networks that communicate with each other, however to the user it
- appears to be one big network.
-
- The Australian arm of the Internet is known as AARNet, the Australian
- Academic Research Network. AARNet grew out of ACSnet, the Australian
- Computer Science Network, which served to connect computers used
- directly by computer science researchers. Initially this network was
- linked by conventional telephone lines, with machines exchanging data
- and mail each night. This has developed into a nationwide system
- permanently linking virtually all computers at major academic
- institutions, and some commercial and government research
- organisations. Initially a link to the Internet was run via undersea
- cables to Hawaii, but in early July 1990 the final links were
- installed to make AARNet fully operational, and operation of a
- satellite connection to the United States West Coast segment of the
- Internet was commenced.
-
- The most heavily used forms of inter-user communication on the
- Internet are still the asynchronous forms of email and news. On most
- computers on the Internet synchronous communication is possible using
- a program that enables two users to type directly to each others'
- screens, thus having a real-time electronically mediated
- conversation. This method of communication is, however, fairly
- limited - only two people can 'talk' to each other at once.
-
- It was in response to the limitations of the synchronous
- communication programs in existence that Jarkko Oikarinen decided to
- write a computer program that would enable multiple users to engage
- in synchronous communication across a network. This project was known
- as Internet Relay Chat.
-
- _INTERNET_RELAY_CHAT_(19)
- Jarkko Oikarinen wrote the original IRC program at the University of
- Oulu, Finland, in 1988. He designed IRC as a 'client-server' program.
- The user runs a 'client' program from his or her local machine, which
- then connects, via the Internet, to a 'server' program which may not
- be running on that local machine. There are hundreds of IRC 'servers'
- over the world, all of which communicate with each other and pass
- information back to the client programs - and users - connected to
- them. IRC was first tested on a single machine with less than twenty
- users participating. IRC's networking capabilities were then tested
- on a suite of three machines in southern Finland. Once tested it was
- installed throughout the Finnish national network - FUNET - and then
- connected to NORDUNET, the Scandinavian branch of the Internet. By
- November of 1988, IRC had spread across the Internet. The latest
- listing of countries whose Internet branches host IRC include
- Australia, the United States, Italy, Israel and Korea.(20)
-
- IRC differs significantly from previous synchronous communication
- programs. Fundamental to IRC is the concept of a channel. 'Talk',
- 'chat' and 'voice' had no need of such a concept since only two
- people could communicate at one time, typing directly to each other's
- screen. On IRC however, where two or three hundred users is the
- normal population, such a system would create chaos. It was therefore
- necessary to devise some way of allowing users to decide whose
- activity they wanted to see and who they wanted to make aware of
- their own activity. 'Channels' were the answer. On entering the IRC
- program, the user is not at first able to see the activity of other
- connected users. To do so he must join a channel. Channels are
- created or joined by users issuing a command to the IRC program to
- join a channel. If there is already a channel of the specified name
- in operation, then the user is added to the list of people
- communicating within that channel; if such a channel does not exist,
- then IRC opens a new channel containing the name of the user who
- invoked it, who may then be joined by other users. The user can issue
- a commands requesting a list of the users connected to IRC and
- which channels they are attached to. IRC keeps track of who has
- joined which channels, and ensures that only people within the same
- channel can see each others' typed messages. IRC can support an
- unlimited number of channels. Channels can have any name, but
- generally the name of the channel indicates the nature of the
- conversation being carried out within it - 'Finland', 'hottub',
- 'worker', 'party', and so on. The user who initially invokes a
- channel name is known an a channel operator, or 'chanop', and has
- certain privileges. He or she may change the mode of the channel -
- may instruct IRC to limit usage of the channel to a certain number of
- users, may limit entry to the channel to people specifically invited
- by him or her to join, may make the channel invisible to other users
- by specifying it's exclusion from the list of active channels that a
- user may request of IRC, may kick another user off the channel, or
- confer chanop privileges on another user.
-
- IRC supports numerous other commands. Once a channel has been joined,
- everything that the user types will be by default sent to all other
- occupants of the channel. It is possible, however, to alter that
- default setting by issuing commands to direct a message to a
- particular user, users, channel or channels. A number of other
- commands - the ability to send messages to all users or to kick a
- user off the IRC system entirely - are reserved for IRC operators, or
- 'opers', the people who run and maintain the IRC network connections.
- Opers also have access to special commands related to the technical
- implementation of IRC.
-
- IRC is not an 'official' program. There are few 'official' programs
- on the Internet. Most are simply programs that a group of people, who
- by virtue of their paid or student work have access to computers on
- the Internet, have decided to install on these machines. IRC
- operators are people who have chosen to invest the time needed to set
- up and maintain the IRC program on their local machines for the
- benefit of other local users.
-
- IRC, then, is a multi-user synchronous communications system. It
- allows people to choose which person or group of people they wish to
- see the activity of, and to whom they wish their own activity to be
- transmitted.(21) IRC - the whole Internet - forms a 'virtual
- reality'.(22) In the words of John Perry Barlow:
-
- Whether by one telephonic tendril or millions, [these computers are
- all] connected to one another. Collectively, they form what their
- inhabitants call the Net. It extends across that immense region of
- electron states, microwaves, magnetic fields, light pulses and
- thought which sci-fi writer William Gibson named Cyberspace.
-
- Cyberspace, in its present condition, has a lot in common with the
- 19th Century West. It is vast, unmapped, culturally and legally
- ambiguous, verbally terse (unless you happen to be a court
- stenographer), hard to get around in, and up for grabs... In this
- silent world, all conversation is typed. To enter it, one forsakes
- both body and place and becomes a thing of words alone... It is, of
- course, a perfect breeding ground for both outlaws and new
- ideas...(23)
-
- Within this breeding ground, users of IRC invent new concepts of
- culture and interaction, and challenge the conventions of both.
-
-
- **PART ONE:**
- **DECONSTRUCTING BOUNDARIES**
-
- Traditional forms of human interaction have their codes of etiquette.
- We are all brought up to behave according to the demands of social
- context. We know, as if instinctively, when it is appropriate to
- flirt, to be respectful, to be angry, or silent. The information on
- which we decide which aspects of our systems of social conduct are
- appropriate to our circumstances are more often physical than verbal.
- Place and time are perceptions of a physical reality that are not
- dependent on statements made by other people. We do not need to be
- told that we are at a wedding, and should be quiet during the
- ceremony, in order to enact the code of etiquette that our culture
- reserves for such occasions. "Being cultured" says Greg Dening, "we
- are experts in our semiotics... we read sign and symbol [and] codify
- a thousand words in a gesture."(24) In interacting with other people,
- we rely on non-verbal information to delineate a context for our own
- contributions. Smiles, frowns, tones of voice, posture and dress -
- Geertz's "significant symbols" - tell us more about the social
- context within which we are placed than do the statements of the
- people we socialise with.(25) Language does not express the full play
- of our interpersonal exchanges - which, continues Dening, "are
- expressed in terms of address, in types of clothing, in postures and
- facial expressions, in appeals to rules and ways of doing
- things."(26) The words themselves tell only half the story - it is
- their presentation that completes the picture.
-
- Internet Relay Chat, however, deals only in words. Computer-mediated
- communication relies only upon words as a channel of meaning.(27)
- "Computer-mediated communication has at least two interesting
- characteristics:" writes Kiesler, "(a) a paucity of social context
- information and (b) few widely shared norms governing its use."(28)
- Users of these systems are unable to rely on the conventions of
- gesture and nuances of tone to provide social feedback. They cannot
- rely upon the conventional systems of interaction if they are to make
- sense to one another. Words, as we use them in speech, fail to
- express what they really mean once they are deprived of the
- subtleties of speech and the non-verbal cues that we assume will
- accompany it. Internet Relay Chat is synchronous, as is face-to-face
- interaction, but it is unable to transmit the non-verbal aspects of
- speech that conventions of synchronous communication demand.
-
- It is not only the meanings of sentences that become problematic in
- computer-mediated communication. The standards of behaviour that are
- normally decided upon by non-verbal cues are not clearly indicated
- when information is purely verbal. Not only are smiles and frowns
- lost in the translation of synchronous speech to pure text, but
- factors of environment are unknown to interlocutors. It is not
- immediately apparent, in computer-mediated communication, what forms
- of social etiquette are appropriate at any given time.
-
- Kiesler, Siegel and McGuire have described computer-mediated
- communication as having four distinct features in comparison to
- conventional forms of interaction: an absence of regulating feedback,
- dramaturgical weakness, few social status cues and social anonymity.
- Conventional systems for regulating interaction fall apart. The
- structure of IRC causes its users to deconstruct the conventional
- boundaries defining social interaction. "Anonymity [and] reduced
- self-regulation" become, as I shall discuss, pronounced in computer-
- mediated communication.(29)
-
- _ANONYMITY_
- Although the social and economic status generally associated with the
- use of such high technology as computer systems offers IRC users, as
- I have indicated, some general context within which to place each
- other, they know little else about each other, and that little is
- open to manipulation by the user.
-
- Users of Internet Relay Chat are not generally known by their 'real'
- names. The convention of IRC is to choose a nickname under which to
- interact.(30) The nicknames - or 'nicks' as they are referred to -
- chosen by IRC users range from 'normal' first names such as 'Peggy'
- and 'Matthew', to inventive and evocative pseudonyms such as
- 'Tmbrwolf', 'Pplater', 'LuxYacht' and 'WildWoman'.(31) The
- information which one user can gain about others on IRC consists of
- the names by which they choose to be known and the Internet 'address'
- of the computer by which they are accessing the IRC program. The
- first is easily changed. IRC supports a command that allows users to
- change their nicknames as often as they wish. The second is not so
- easily manipulated, but still open to tampering provided that the
- user has some technical skill. Essentially there is nothing that one
- IRC user can ascertain about another - beyond the fact that they have
- access to the Internet - that is not manipulable by that user.
-
- Our conventional presentation of self assumes that we cannot change
- the basics of our appearance. Physical characteristics, although open
- to cosmetic or fashionable manipulation, are basically unalterable.
- What we look like, we have to live with. This is, however, not the
- case on IRC. How an IRC user 'looks' to another user is entirely
- dependant upon information supplied by that person. It becomes
- possible to play with identity. The boundaries delineated by cultural
- constructs of beauty, ugliness, fashionableness or unfashionableness,
- can be by-passed on IRC. It is possible to appear to be, quite
- literally, whoever you wish.
-
- The anonymity of interaction in IRC allows users to play games with
- their identities. The chance to escape the assumed boundaries of
- gender, race, and age create a game of interaction in which there are
- few rules but those that the users create themselves. IRC offers a
- chance to escape the language of culture and body and return to an
- idealised 'source code' of mind.
-
- The changes that a user might make to his or her perceived identity
- can be small, a matter of realising in others' minds a desire to be
- attractive, impressive, popular:
-
- *BabyDoll* Well, I gotta admit, I shave a few lbs off of my
- wieght when I tell the guys on irc what i look like..
-
- However, the anonymity of IRC can provide more than a means to 'fix'
- minor problems of appearance - one of the most fascinating aspects of
- this computer-mediated fluidity of cultural boundaries is the
- possibility of gender-switching. While secondary characteristics such
- as hair colour are relatively easily changed in 'real life', gender
- reassignment is a far more involved process. This aspect of computer-
- mediated communication has had little attention given it. Sproull and
- Kiesler note that "unless first names are used as well as last names,
- gender information is also missing", but do not discuss the
- implications of this.(32) IRC destroys the usually all but
- insurmountable confines of sex: changing gender is as simple as
- changing one's nickname to something that suggests the opposite of
- one's actual gender. It is possible for IRC to become the arena for
- experimentation with gender specific social roles:
-
- <Marion> I've tried presenting m,yslef as male on occasion - to
- be honest I found itdull
- <Barf> Umm, I've gender switched once or twice for about 2 hour
- or so - mainly to lead another male up the garden path as a
- practical joke; but never a serious gender switch.
- <Marion> how did you find being perceived as female?
- <Barf> I wasn't really being perceived as female, since I was
- basically just calling myself by a female name and utilising my
- knowledge of being male to get the other male all stirred up
- <Barf> I did find it mildly irritating that I should get so much
- attention and be immediately fixated as a sex object simply by
- pretending to be female
- <Marion> to be honest, I didn't like being male becuaseI missed
- the flattery that women tend to get
- <Marion> being expected to give attention ratehr than recieve it
- was quite a shock!
- <Barf> ahh - that is one reason that I tend to dislike unequal
- ratios in the sexes - the females get all the attention.(33)
-
- The potential for such experimentation governs the expectations of
- many users of IRC. Gender is one of the more 'sacred' institutions in
- our society, a quality whose fixity is so assumed that enacted or
- surgical reassignment has and does involve complex rituals, taboos,
- procedures and stigmas. The attitudes taken by individual users of
- IRC differ as regards the possibility for gender concealment. Some
- view it as 'part of the game', others are hostile toward users who
- gender switch:
-
- <saro> KAREN IS A BOY
- <saro> KAREN IS A BOY
- <saro> KAREN IS A BOY
- <SmilyFace> aros: so?????????
- <Karen> yes aros I heard you
- <FuzzyB> Takes a relaxed place beside Karen offering her her
- favourite drink.
-
- Whatever may be the attitude of individual users of the IRC program
- to such examples of gender experimentation, the crucial point is that
- it is an inherent possibility offered by the IRC software.
- Exploitation of this potential is an accepted part of the 'virtual
- reality' - a popular phrase amongst users of the Internet - of IRC.
- It becomes possible to play with aspects of behaviour and identity
- that are not normally possible. IRC enables people to deconstruct
- aspects of their own identity, and of their cultural classification,
- and to challenge and obscure the boundaries between some of our most
- deeply felt cultural significances. A willingness to accept this
- phenomenon, and to join in the games that can be played within it, is
- an aspect of the culture of IRC users.
-
- _REDUCED_SELF-REGULATION_
- Researchers of human behaviour on computer-mediated communication
- systems have often noted that users of such systems tend to behave in
- a more uninhibited manner than they would in face-to-face encounters.
- Sproull and Kiesler state that computer-mediated behaviour "is
- relatively uninhibited and nonconforming."(34) Kielser, Siegel and
- McGuire have observed that "people in computer-mediated groups were
- more uninhibited than they were in face-to-face groups."(35) Rice and
- Love suggest that "disinhibition" may occur "because of the lack of
- social control that nonverbal cues provide."(36)
-
- Internet Relay Chat reflects this observation. Protected by the
- anonymity of the computer medium, and with few social context cues to
- indicate 'proper' ways to behave, users are able to express and
- experiment with aspects of their personality that social inhibition
- would generally encourage them to suppress:
-
- <Barf> Yes.. Oh well - I'm just saying that I switch
- personalities all the time, and my usual personality on IRC and
- my usual personality on Fidonet are at extremes, and I've never
- really shown my real self on any computer medium.
- <Barf> I'm deliberately creating fake personalities instead of
- highlighting less obvious parts of my personality, so I do the
- opposite of what my real self would do.
- <Marion> by doing something it by definition becomes an aspect
- of yourself - what you call your 'real self' is most likely the
- way you would like to see yourself or the way you usually are
- <Barf> I'm experiment in being different people, and that
- involves doing things that I don't want to do to make the fake
- character consistent and believable
- <Barf> No - my fake characters often do things and behave in
- such a way that I wouldn't want to ever be like
- <Marion> woulsn't want to - perhaps not - but if it occurs to
- you to encat it then it is part of your potentiality
- <Barf> Ah - but the reason that I experiment with different
- characters is so I can see how other people react and then adopt
- the good parts of the character that provoked a favourable
- response - however I don't compromise my own individuality and
- will continue
- <Barf> to do things that I like to do that not everyone else
- would like me to do.(37)
-
- IRC encourages disinhibition. The lack of social context cues in
- computer-mediated communication obscures the boundaries that would
- generally separate acceptable and unacceptable forms of behaviour.
- Furthermore, the essential physical impression of each user that he
- is alone releases him from the social expectations incurred in group
- interaction. Computer-mediated communication is less bound by
- conventions than is face-to-face interaction. With little regulating
- feedback to govern behaviour, users behave in ways that would not
- generally be acceptable with people who are essentially total
- strangers.
-
- The lack of self-regulation amongst users of IRC can be both positive
- and negative, as far as interaction is concerned. The safety of
- anonymity can "reduce self-consciousness and promote intimacy"
- between people who might not otherwise have had the chance to become
- close.(38) It can also encourage "flaming", which Kiesler, Siegel and
- McGuire define as the gratuitous and uninhibited making of "remarks
- containing swearing, insults, name calling, and hostile
- comments."(39)
-
- Users of IRC often form strong friendships. Without social context
- cues to inhibit a free exchange between people - to encourage shyness
- - computer-mediated interlocutors will often 'open up' to each other
- to a great degree. Freedom is given, either to be someone whom you
- are not, or to be more yourself than would usually be acceptable. As
- one user of the system sums it up:
-
- *bob* by nature I'm shy..
- *bob* normally wouldn't talk about such thingsw if you met me
- face to face
- *bob* thus the network is good.. (40)
-
- Personal relationships amongst participants in computer-mediated
- communication systems can often be deep and highly emotional. Hiltz
- and Turoff have noted that some participants in such systems "come to
- feel that their very best and closest friends are members of their
- electronic group, whom they seldom or never see."(41) 'Net.romances',
- long distance romantic relationships carried out over IRC, can result
- from the increased tendency for participants in CMC systems to be
- uninhibited:(42)
-
- Channel Nickname S User@Host (Name)
- +custard Ireshi G *@*.*.*.OZ.AU (Libby)
- +custard Lori H@ *@*.*.washington.edu (Lori -
- Daniel's beloved)
- +custard Daniel H@ *@*.*.*.edu.au (Daniel - Lori's
- beloved)...
- <Lori> After just a few chats on irc, it became obvious to me
- that this was someone I could easily become very good friends
- with him...
- <Lori> The more we talked, the more we discovered we had in
- common...
- <Lori> By this time, I knew I was starting to have "more than
- just a friend" feelings about Daniel...
- <Lori> I told him that I was starting to get a crush on him...
- <Lori> Anyway, it's grown and grown over the months.
- <Daniel> A few mishaps, but we've overcome them, to bounce back
- stronger than ever.
- <Lori> And, as you know, we'll be getting together for 3 weeks
- at the end of November, to see if we're as wonderful as we think
- we are.
-
- Such expressions of feeling are not in any way thought to be shallow
- or ephemeral. Far from being unsatisfactory for "more interpersonally
- involving communication tasks, such as getting to know someone", as
- Hiemstra describes researchers of CMC behaviour as having
- characterised the medium, IRC has in this instance fostered an
- extremely emotional bond between two people.(43) Users of IRC are
- able to so dispense with the conventional boundaries surrounding
- communication, and cross-cultural exchange, to form deep friendships,
- even love-affairs, with people whom they have never met.
-
- Net.romances display computer-mediated relationships at their most
- idyllic. However, disinhibition and increased freedom from social
- norms have another side. Along with increased broad-mindedness and
- intimacy among some users goes increased hostility on the part of
- others. 'Flaming', the expression of anger, insults and hatred, is a
- common phenomenon in all forms of computer-mediated communication,
- and IRC is no exception. Anonymity makes the possibility of social
- punishment for transgression of cultural mores appear to be limited.
- Attracting the anger of other users of the system is a relatively
- unthreatening prospect - although it is possible for users to ignore
- a particular user, all that user need do is change his or her
- nickname to 'start afresh' with the people whom he or she had
- alienated. Protected by terminals and separated by distance, the
- sanction of physical violence is irrelevant, although, as I shall
- discuss later, social sanctions are present and often in a verbal
- form that apes physical violence. The safety of anonymous expression
- of hostilities and obscenities that would otherwise incur social
- sanctions, encourages some people to use IRC as a forum for airing
- their resentment of individuals or groups in a blatantly uninhibited
- manner:
-
- !Venice! Bashers have taken over +gblf... we could use some
- help...
- !radv*! Comment: -Gay_Bashe:+gblf- FUCK ALL OF BUTT FUCKING, ASS
- LICKING, CHICKEN SHIT BIOLOGICAL DISIASTERS!(44)
-
- Not all uninhibited behaviour on IRC is either so negative or so
- positive. Much of the opportunity for uninhibited behaviour is
- invested by users of IRC in sexual experimentation. The usually
- culturally-enforced boundaries between sexual and platonic
- relationships are challenged in computer-mediated circumstances.
- Norms of etiquette are obscured by the lack of social context cues,
- and the safety given by anonymity and distance allow users to ignore
- otherwise strict codes regarding sexual behaviour. Conversations on
- IRC can be sexually explicit, in blatant disregard for social norms
- regarding the propositioning of strangers:
-
- *Han* does this compu-sex stuff really happen?
- Lola-> *Han* *smooch*
- *Han* mmmmmmm......hehehe you alonee ; )?
- Lola-> *Han* certianly am! I'm dialling in from home
- *Han* me tooo.....are oyu horny today at all ; )?
- Lola-> *Han* today? it's the middle of the night where I am...
- as for the adjective, well, do what you can ;-)
- *Han* mmmmmm......when did you last get off?(45)
-
- Such behaviour is often referred to as 'net.sleazing'. Perhaps
- because the majority of the users of IRC are in their late teens or
- early twenties, since the Internet primarily serves educational
- institutions and thus students, sexual experimentation is a popular
- Internet game. Adolescents, coming to terms with their sexuality in
- the 'real world', find that the freedom of 'virtual reality' allows
- them to safely engage in sexual experimentation. Ranging from the
- afore-mentioned gender-role switching to flirtation and 'compu-sex',
- IRC provides a medium for the safe expression of a "steady barrage of
- typed testosterone."(46)
-
- Disinhibition and the lack of sanctions encouraging self-regulation
- lead to extremes of behaviour on IRC. Users express hate, love,
- intimacy and anger, employing the freedom of the electronic medium to
- air views and engage in relationships that would in other
- circumstances be deemed unacceptable in relating to strangers. This
- 'freedom' does not imply that IRC is an idyllic environment. Play
- with social conventions can indeed lead to greater positive affect
- between people, as it has between 'Daniel' and 'Lori', and to greater
- personal fulfilment for some users. It can, however, also create a
- violent chaos in which people feel 'free' to act upon prejudices,
- even hatreds, that might otherwise be socially controlled.
-
- _BEYOND_BOUNDARIES_
- Users of IRC treat the medium as a frontier world, a virtual reality
- of virtual freedom, in which participants feel free to act out their
- fantasies, to challenge social norms, and exercise aspects of their
- personality that would under normal interactive circumstances be
- inhibited. The medium itself blocks some of the socially inhibiting
- institutions that users would, under other circumstances, be
- operating within. Social indicators - of social position, of age and
- authority, of personal appearance - are relatively weak in a
- computer-mediated context. They might be inferred, but they are not
- evident. Internet Relay Chat leaves it open to users to create
- virtual replacements for these social cues - as I shall discuss in
- Part Two, IRC interaction involves the creation of replacements and
- substitutes for physical cues, and the construction of social
- hierarchies and positions of authority. That it is possible for users
- of IRC to do this is due to the ways in which the medium deconstructs
- conventional boundaries constraining interaction and conventional
- institutions of interpersonal relationships. It is this freedom from
- convention that allows IRC users to create their own conventions, and
- to become a cohesive community.
-
- The chance for deconstruction of social boundaries that is offered by
- IRC is essentially postmodern. On its lighter side, computer-mediated
- communication lends itself to irony, pastiche, playfulness and a
- celebration of ephemeral and essentially superficial examples of
- witty bravado. On its more negative side, the disinhibiting effect of
- computer-mediated communication encourages the expression of dissent,
- rebellion, hostility, and anti-social chaos. It involves a stripping
- away of the social coordinates that let the user know where he or she
- is in the cultural network, indeed it encourages this by allowing the
- continual invention of new moves to old language games.(47)
-
- Users challenge the boundaries between their differing social
- systems, introducing elements of intimacy to meetings with strangers
- and foreigners, overstepping the thresholds of social nicety. There
- is a continual search for ways to present the unpresentable, to bring
- elements technically outside the medium of communication within its
- realm. Whether this continual play with the limits of expression is
- positive or negative, it involves users of the system in a game that
- is essentially postmodern. Engagement with the system involves
- immersion in the specific context of the IRC program. There is no way
- to interact with IRC without being a part of it - it is interaction
- that creates the virtual reality of channels and spaces for
- communication. Immersed in this specific, although not 'local' in any
- geographic sense, context, players of the IRC game are involved in
- turning upside down the taken-for-granted norms of the external
- culture. Emotions and behaviours are taken out of their usual
- contexts and transposed into the electronic context of IRC, where
- they cease to be unproblematic. Faced with the impossibility of
- replicating conventional social boundaries in the IRC environment,
- users of the system search out and experiment with new and
- unconventional ways of relating. It is this "symbolic cultural
- ethos... that reflects the postmodern elements of the computer
- underground and separates it from modernism... by offering an ironic
- response to the primacy of a master technocratic language."(48) The
- users of IRC have created a culture that challenges "the sanctity of
- an established... authority."(49) To paraphrase Jim Thomas and Gordon
- Meyer, speaking on the computer underground of 'hackers', it is this
- style of playful rebellion, irreverent subversion and juxtaposition
- of fantasy with high-tech reality that impels me to interpret IRC as
- a postmodernist culture.(50)
-
-
-
- **PART TWO:**
- **CONSTRUCTING COMMUNITIES**
-
- In crude relief, culture can be understood as a set of solutions
- devised by a group of people to meet specific problems posed by
- situations they face in common... This notion of culture as a
- living, historical product of group problem solving allows an
- approach to cultural study that is applicable to any group, be it a
- society, a neighbourhood, a family, a dance band, or an organization
- and its segments.(51)
-
- This definition of culture owes much to Geertz's understanding of
- culture as a "system of meanings that give significance to shared
- behaviours which must be interpreted from the perspective of those
- engaged in them."(52) 'Culture' includes not only the systems and
- standards adopted by a group for "perceiving, believing, evaluating
- and acting", but also includes the "rules and symbols of
- interpretation and discourse" utilised by the members of the
- group.(53) Culture, says Geertz, is "a set of control mechanisms -
- plans, recipes, rules, instructions (what computer engineers call
- 'programs') - for the governing of behaviour."(54) In this sense the
- users of IRC constitute a culture, a community. They are commonly
- faced with the problems posed by the medium's inherent deconstruction
- of traditional models of social interaction which are based on
- physical proximity.
-
- The measures which users of the IRC system have devised to meet their
- common problems, posed by the medium's lack of regulating feedback
- and social context cues, its dramaturgical weakness, and the factor
- of anonymity, are the markers of their community, their common
- culture. These measures fall into two distinct categories. Firstly,
- users of IRC have devised systems of symbolism and textual
- significance to ensure that they achieve understanding despite the
- lack of more usual channels of communication. Secondly, a variety of
- social sanctions have arisen amongst the IRC community in order to
- punish users who disobey the rules of etiquette - or 'netiquette' -
- and the integrity of those shared systems of the interpretation.(55)
-
- _SHARED_SIGNIFICANCES_
- In traditional forms of communication, as I have already suggested,
- nods, smiles, eye contact, distance, tone of voice and other non-
- verbal behaviours give speakers and listeners information they can
- use to regulate, modify and control communication. Separated by at
- least the ethernet cables of local area networks, and quite likely by
- thousands of kilometres, the users of IRC are unable to base
- interaction on these phenomena. This "dramaturgical weakness of
- electronic media" presents a unique problem.(56) Much of our
- understandings of linguistic meaning and social context are derived
- from non-verbal cues. With these unavailable, it remains for users of
- computer-mediated communication to create methods of compensating for
- the lack. As Hiltz and Turoff have reported, computer conferees have
- developed ways of sending computerised screams, hugs and kisses.(57)
- This is apparent on IRC.
-
- Textual substitution for traditionally non-verbal information is a
- highly stylized, even artistic, procedure that is central to the
- construction of an IRC community. Common practice is to simply
- verbalise physical cues, for instance literally typing 'hehehe' when
- traditional methods of communication would call for laughter. IRC
- behaviour takes this to an extreme. It is a recognised convention to
- describe physical actions or reactions, denoted as such by
- presentation between two asterisks:(58)
-
- <Wizard> Come, brave Knight! Let me cast a spell of protection
- on you..... Oooops - wrong spell! You don;t mind being green for
- a while- do you???
- <Prince> Lioness: please don't eat him...
- <storm> *shivers from the looks of lioness*
- <Knight> Wizard: Not at all.
- <Bel_letre> *hahahah*
- <Lioness> Very well, your excellency. *looks frustrated*
- <Prince> *falls down laughing*.
- <Knight> Wizard: as long as I can protect thou ass, I'd be utter
- grateful! :-)
- <Bel_letre> *Plays a merry melody*
- <storm> *walks over to lioness and pats her paw*
- <Wizard> *Dispells the spells cast on Knight!*
- <Wizard> Knight: Your back to normal!!!
- <Prince> *brings a pallete of meat for Lioness*
- <Lioness> *licks Storm*
- <storm> *Looking up* Thank You for not eating me!(59)
-
- The above extract from a log of an IRC session, involving an online
- fantasy role-playing game, shows a concentration of verbalised
- physical actions and reactions. This density of virtually physical
- cues is somewhat abnormal, but it amply demonstrates the extent to
- which users of the IRC system feel it important to create a physical
- context within which their peers can interpret their behaviour.
- Verbal statements by themselves give little indication of the
- emotional state of the speaker, and without physical expression to
- decode the specific context of statements, it is easy to misinterpret
- their intent:
-
- *Whopper* just kidding...not trying to be offensive
- <Fireship-> *Whopper* didn't assume that you were...(60)
-
- The corollary of Geertz's definition of culture is that groups of
- people who fail to communicate do not compose a common culture. If
- meaning is lost in transition from speaker to addressee, then
- community is lost - "undirected by culture patterns - organized
- systems of significant symbols - man's behaviour would be virtually
- ungovernable, a mere chaos of pointless acts and exploding emotions,
- his experience virtually shapeless."(61) In order for IRC users to
- constitute a community it is necessary for them to contrive a method
- to circumvent the possibility of loss of intended meaning of
- statements. Verbalisation of physical condition is that method.
- Interlocutors will describe what their reactions to specific
- statements would be were they in physical contact. Of course, this
- stylized description of action is not intended to be taken as a
- literal description of the speakers' physical actions, which are,
- obviously, typing at a keyboard and staring at a monitor. Rather they
- are meant to represent what would be their actions were the virtual
- reality of IRC an actual reality. Without some way of compensating
- for the inherent lack of social context cues in computer-mediated
- communication, IRC would get no further than the deconstruction of
- conventional social boundaries. The textual cues utilised on IRC
- provide the symbols of interpretation and discourse that the users of
- IRC have devised to 'meet specific problems posed by situations they
- face in common.' Without these textual cues to substitute for non-
- verbal language, the users of IRC would fail to constitute a
- community - with them, they do.
-
- The users of IRC often utilise a 'shorthand' for the description of
- physical condition. They (in common with users of other computer-
- mediated communication systems such as news and email) have developed
- a system of presenting textual characters as representations of
- physical action. Commonly known as 'smileys', CMC users employ
- alphanumeric characters and punctuation symbols to create strings of
- highly emotively charged keyboard art:
-
- :-) or : ) a smiling face, as viewed side-on
- ;-) or ; ) a winking, smiling face
- :-( or : ( an 'unsmiley': an unhappy face
- :-(*) someone about to throw up
- 8-) someone wearing glasses
- :-P someone sticking out their tongue
- >:-O someone screaming in fright, their hair standing on
- end
- :-& someone whose lips are sealed
- @}-`-,-`-- a rose
-
- These 'emoticons' are many and various.(62) Although the most
- commonly used is the plain smiling face - used to denote pleasure or
- amusement, or to soften a sarcastic comment - it is common for IRC
- users to develop their own emoticons, adapting the symbols available
- on the standard keyboard to create minute and essentially ephemeral
- pieces of textual art to represent their own virtual actions and
- responses. Such inventiveness and lateral thinking demands skill.
- Successful communication within IRC depends on the use of such
- conventions as verbalised action and the use of emoticons. Personal
- success on IRC, then, depends on the user's ability to manipulate
- these tools. The users who can succinctly and graphically portray
- themselves to the rest of the IRC usership will be most able to
- create a community within that virtual system.
-
- Speed of response and wit are the stuff of popularity and community
- on IRC. The Internet relays chat, and such social endeavour demands
- speed of thought - witty replies and keyboard savoir faire blend into
- a stream-of-consciousness interaction that valorises shortness of
- response time, ingenuity and ingenuousness in the presentation of
- statements. The person who cannot fulfil these requirements - who is
- a slow typist, who demands time to reflect before responding, will be
- disadvantaged. For those who can keep the pace, such 'stream-of-
- consciousness' communication encourages a degree of intimacy and
- emotion that would be unusual between complete strangers in the 'real
- world'. The IRC community relies on this intimacy, on spur of the
- moment social overtures made to other users:
-
- /time
- *** munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU : Tuesday August 27 1991 -- 00:28 EST
- (from munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU)
- /join +Sadness
- *** Miri has joined channel +Sadness
- /away Dying of a broken heart
- You have been marked as being away(63)
- /topic Heartbreak
- *** Miri has changed the topic to "Heartbreak"
- *MALAY* What's wrong? Are you OK? <Tue Aug 27 00:36>
- *Stodge* Hey, what's happened? Wanna talk about it? <Tue Aug 27
- 00:36>
- *LadyJay* What's the matter Miri? <Tue Aug 27 00:37>
-
- IRC users regard their electronic world with a great deal of
- seriousness, and generally with a sense of responsibility for their
- fellows. The degree of trust in the supportive nature of the
- community that is shown in the above example, and the degree to which
- that trust was justified, demonstrates this. Hiltz and Turoff have
- described this syndrome of empathetic community arising amongst
- groups of people participating in CMC systems. They have "observed
- very overt attempts to be personal and friendly" and note that
- "strong feelings of friendship" arise between computer-mediated
- interlocutors who have never met face-to-face. IRC may encourage
- participants to play with the conventions of social interaction, but
- the games are not always funny. The threads holding IRC together as a
- community are made up of shared modes of understanding, and the
- concepts shared range from the light-hearted and fanciful to the
- personal and anguished. The success of this is dependant upon the
- degree to which users can trust that the issues that they communicate
- will be well received - they depend on the integrity of users.
-
- This expectation of personal integrity and sincerity is both upheld
- by convention and enforced by structure.
-
- _SOCIAL_SANCTIONS_
- One of the most sensitive issues amongst users is the question of
- nicknames. The IRC program demands that users offer a unique name to
- the system, to be used in their interaction with other users. These
- aliases are chosen as the primary method by which a user is known to
- other users, and thus generally reflect some aspect of the user's
- personality or interests. It is common for users to prefer and
- consistently use one nickname. Members of the IRC community have
- developed a service, known as 'Nickserv', which enables IRC users to
- register nicknames as belonging to a specific user accessing the IRC
- system from a specific computer on the Internet. Any other user who
- chooses to use a nickname thus registered is sent a message from
- Nickserv telling him or her that the chosen nickname is registered,
- and advising them to choose an alternate name. Furthermore, the IRC
- program will not allow two users to adopt the same nickname
- simultaneously. The program design is so structured as to refuse a
- user access to the system should he or she attempt to use the
- nickname of another user who is online, regardless of whether their
- nickname is registered. The user must choose a unique nickname before
- being able to interact within IRC. Names, then, as the primary
- personal interface on IRC, are of great importance. One of the
- greatest taboos, one that is upheld by the basic software design, is
- the use of another's chosen nickname.
-
- The illegitimate use of nicknames can cause anger on the part of
- their rightful users and sometimes deep feelings of guilt on the part
- of the perpetrators. This public announcement was made by a male IRC
- user to the newsgroup alt.irc, a forum for asynchronous discussion of
- IRC:(64)
-
- I admit to having used the nickname "allison" on several
- occasions,the name of an acquaintance and "virtual" friend at
- another university.Under this nick, I talked on channels +hottub
- and +gblf, as well as witha few individuals privately. This
- was a deceptive, immature thing to do,and I am both embarrassed
- and ashamed of myself.(65) I wish to apologizeto everyone I
- misled, particularly users 'badping' and 'kired'...
- I am truly sorry for what I have done, and regret ever having
- usedIRC, though I think it has the potential to be a wonderful
- forum and meansof communication. It certainly makes the world
- seem a small place.I shall never invade IRC with a false nick or
- username again.(66)
-
- The physical aspect of IRC may be only virtual, but the emotional
- aspect is actual. IRC is not a 'game' in any light-hearted sense - it
- can inspire deep feelings of guilt and responsibility. It is also
- clear that users' acceptance of IRC's potential for the
- deconstruction of social boundaries is limited by their reliance on
- the construction of communities. Experimentation ceases to be
- acceptable when it threatens the delicate balance of trust that holds
- IRC together. The uniqueness of names, their consistent use, and
- respect for - and expectation of - their integrity, is crucial to the
- development of online communities. As previously noted, should a user
- find him or herself unwelcome in a particular channel all he or she
- need do is adopt another nickname to be unrecognizable. The idea of
- community, however, does demand that members be recognizable to each
- other. Were they not so, it would be impossible for a coherent
- community to emerge.
-
- The sanctions available to the IRC community for use against errant
- members are both social and structural. The degree to which members
- feel, as 'Allison' did, a sense of shame for actions which abuse the
- systems of meaning devised by the IRC community, is related to the
- degree to which they participate in the deconstruction of traditional
- social conventions. By being uninhibited, by experimenting with
- cultural norms of gender and reciprocity in relationships, 'Allison'
- became a part of a social network that encourages self-exposure by
- simulating anonymity and therefore invulnerability. In this case, the
- systems of meaning created by the users of IRC have become
- conventions with a terrorizing authority over those who participate
- in their use. As I shall describe, users of IRC who flout the
- conventions of the medium are ostracised, banished from the
- community. The way to redemption for such erring members is through a
- process of guilt and redemption; through, in 'Allison's' case, a
- 'public' ritual of self-accusation, confession, repentance and
- atonement.
-
- IRC supports mechanisms for the enforcement of acceptable behaviour
- on IRC. Channel operators - 'chanops' or 'chops' - have access to the
- /kick command, which throws a specified user out of the given
- channel. IRC operators - 'opers' - have the ability to 'kill' users,
- to break the network link that connects them to IRC. The code of
- etiquette for doing so is outlined in the documentation that is part
- of the IRC program:
-
- Obnoxious users had best beware the operator who's fast on the
- /kill command. "/kill nickname" blows any given nickname
- completely out of the chat system. Obnoxiousness is not to be
- tolerated. But operators do not use /kill lightly.(67)
-
- There is a curious paradox in the concomitant usage of the words
- 'obnoxious' and 'kill'. Obnoxiousness seems a somewhat trivial term
- to warrant the use of such textually violent commands such as /kick
- and /kill. The word trivialises the degree to which abusive
- behaviour, deceit, and shame can play a part in interaction on
- Internet Relay Chat. The existence of such negative behaviour and
- emotions is played down, denigrated - what is stressed is the
- measures that can be taken by the 'authorities' - the chanops and
- opers - on IRC. Violators of the integrity of the IRC system are
- marginalised, outcast, described so as to seem insignificant, but
- their potential for disrupting the IRC community is suggested by the
- emotive strength of the words with which they are punished. The terms
- 'killing' and 'kicking' substitute for their physical counterparts -
- IRC users may be safe from physical threat, but the community
- sanctions of violence and restraint are there, albeit in textualised
- form.
-
- Operators have adopted their own code of etiquette regarding /kills.
- It is the general rule that an operator issuing such a command should
- let other operators, and the victim, know the reason for his or her
- action by adding a comment to the '/kill message' that fellow
- operators will receive:
-
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for I4982784 from MaryD
- (Obscene Dumps!!!)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for mic from mgp (massive
- abusive channel dumping involving lots of ctrl-gs and
- gaybashing, amongst other almost as obnoxious stuff)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for JP from Cyberman
- ((repeatedely ignorning warnings to stop nickname abuse))(68)
-
- There is no technical reason why such comments or excuses should be
- given - they are purely a 'courtesy'. Those in authority on IRC have
- self-imposed codes of behaviour which supposedly serve to ensure that
- operator privileges are not abused.
-
- Operators have considerable power within IRC. They can control not
- only an individual's access to IRC, but are also responsible for
- maintaining the network connections that enable IRC programs at
- widely geographically separated sites to 'see' each other. The issue
- of whether or not operators have too much power is a contentious one.
- While operators are careful to present their /killings as justifiable
- in the eyes of their peers, this is often not felt to be the case by
- their victims. Accusations of prejudice and injustice abound. IRC
- operators answer user's complaints and charges with self-
- justifications - often the debates are reduced to 'flame-wars',
- abusive arguments between opponents who are more concerned to insult
- and defeat rather than reason with each other:
-
- !JP! fucking stupid op cybman /killd me - think ya some kind of
- net.god? WHy not _ask_ people in the channle i'm in if I'm
- annoying them before blazing away????
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for JP from Cyberman
- (abusive wallops)(69)
-
- 'Kills' can also be seen as unjustified by other operators, and the
- operator whose actions are questioned by his peers is likely to be
- 'killed' himself:
-
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Alfred from Kamikaze
- (public insults are not appreciated)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Kamikaze from dave (yes,
- but they are allowed.)(70)
-
- The potential for tension between operators of IRC is often diffused
- into a game. 'Killwars', episodes in which opers will kill each
- other, often happen. There is rarely overt hostility in these 'wars'
- - the attitude taken is one of ironic realisation of the
- responsibilities and powers that opers have, mixed with bravado and
- humour - an effort to parody those same powers and responsibilities:
-
- !puppy*! ok! one frivolous kill coming up! :D
- !Maryd*! Go puppy! :*)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for puppy from Glee (and
- here it IS! : )
- !Chas*! HAHA : )
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Glee from Maryd (and
- here's another)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Maryd from Chas (and
- another)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Chas from blopam (chain
- reaction - john farnham here I come)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for blopam from dave (you
- must be next.)
- !Chas*! HA HA HA : )
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Chas from Maryd (Only
- family is allowed to kill me!!!)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Maryd from dave (am I
- still family?)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Glee from puppy (just
- returning the favor ;D)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Maryd from Chas (Oh
- yeah?? Oh my brother !!)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for dave from Maryd (yep,
- you sure are : ))
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Chas from Maryd (8 now)
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Maryd from Chas (Oh yah
- ?)
- !Alfred! thank you for a marvellously refreshing kill war; this
- completes my intro into the rarified and solemn IRCop
- godhood.(71)
-
- The ideas of authority and freedom are often in opposition on IRC, as
- the newly invented social conventions of the IRC community attempt to
- deal with emotions and actions in ways that emulate the often violent
- social sanctions of the 'real world.' The potential for tension and
- hostility between users and opers arising over the latter's use of
- power can erupt into anger and abuse. Disagreement between operators
- over their implementation of power can result in the use of
- operators' powers against each other. The games that opers play with
- 'killing' express their realisation of the existence of these
- elements in the hierarchical nature of IRC culture and serve to
- diffuse that tension - at least among opers - and to unite them as an
- authoritative class. But it does not fully resolve these conflicts -
- the tensions that are expressed regarding the oper/user power
- segregation system point to the nexus point between the
- deconstruction of boundaries and the construction of communities on
- IRC.
-
- _THE_IRC_CCOMMUNITY_
- The emergent culture of IRC is essentially heterogeneous. Users
- access the system from all over the world, and - within the
- constraints of language compatibility - interact with people from
- cultures that they might not have the chance to learn about through
- any other direct means. The melting pot of the IRC 'electropolis', as
- Hiltz and Turoff term computer-mediated communication networks,
- serves to break down, yet valorise, the differences between
- cultures.(72) It is not uncommon for IRC channels to contain no two
- people from the same country. With the encouragement of intimacy
- between users and the tendency for conventional social mores to be
- ignored on IRC, it becomes possible for people to investigate the
- differences between their cultures. No matter on how superficial a
- level that might be, the encouragement of what can only be called
- friendship between people of disparate cultural backgrounds helps to
- destroy any sense of intolerance that each may have for the other's
- culture and to foster a sense of cross-cultural community:(73)
-
- <Corwyn> Eldi: London, Paris, Waterloo, Dublin, Exeter, are all
- in Ontario
- <eldi> Ontarior!!! haha! Paris, France, London, England, Dublin,
- Irelang are all better than SF, CA, US
- <yarly> the coffeeshops! :-)
- <Corwyn> Eldi: Don't you like San Francisco?
- <eldi> well, it's like anything else. if you're around it too
- much, there's no novelty in it.
- <Corwyn> Eldi: I guess so
- <eldi> I'm going to Paris in a few days. I'm gonna this that's
- the greatest thing I've ever seen, I'm sure
- <Corwyn> Eldi: never been further west than Hannibal, MO I am
- afraid
- <eldi> but i'm gonna be living with a host family(studenmt echa
- exchange) history and philosophy
- <eldi> at thier summer home.
- <Corwyn> Eldi: parlez-vous francais?
- <eldi> Thier regular home is in the suburbs of Paris. I'm
- sureParis wouldn't be as exciting to THEM,. and me! see what i
- mean?
- <yarly> francais!
- <eldi> BIEN SUR! j'espere que je puisse communiquer en (a)
- Paris!!!
- <eldi> of course! I hope thatI will be able to commin
- (communicate) in paris,
- <yarly> translation please eldi!
- <yarly> je ne parle pas francias
- <eldi> in french, in paris all
- <eldi> of course there is one phrease that is most important for
- americans abraoad
- <Corwyn> Eldi: what is that? Parlez-vous anglais?
- <eldi> "Ne tirer pas! Je suis Canadaien" "Don't shoot! I'm a
- canadian"
- <eldi> why bother to kill a canadaien? There goverment never
- does anything you can protest against! ;-)? (74)
-
- Irreverent, and ironic, this kind of exchange exhibits the
- cosmopolitan nature of IRC. Cultural differences are celebrated, are
- made the object of curiosity and excitement, while the interlocutors
- remain aware of the relativity of their remarks. The ability to
- appreciate cultural differences and to welcome immersion in them,
- while retaining a sense of ironic distance from both that visited
- culture and one's native culture, is the object of interest.
-
- Community on IRC is "created through symbolic strategies and
- collective beliefs."(75) IRC users share a common language, a shared
- web of verbal and textual significances that are substitutes for, and
- yet distinct from, the shared networks of meaning of the wider
- community. Users of IRC share a vocabulary and a system of
- understanding that is unique and therefore defines them as
- constituting a distinct culture. This community is self-regulating,
- having systems of hierarchy and power that allow for the punishment
- of transgressors of those systems of behaviour and meaning. Members
- of the community feel a sense of responsibility for IRC - most
- respect the conventions of their subculture, and those who don't are
- either marginalised or reclaimed through guilt and atonement. The
- symbolic identity - the virtual reality - of the world of computer-
- mediated communication is a rich and diverse culture comprised of
- highly specialised skills, language and unifying symbolic meanings.
-
- As I have suggested, this community is essentially postmodern. The
- IRC community shares a concern for diversity, for care in nuances of
- language and symbolism, a realisation of the power of language and
- the importance of social context cues, that are hallmarks of
- postmodern culture. IRC culture fulfils Denzin's prescription that
- the identity and activity of postmodern culture should "make fun of
- the past [and of past cultural rituals] while keeping it alive, and
- search for new ways to present the unpresentable in order to break
- down the barriers that keep the profane out of the everyday."(76)
-
-
-
- **CONCLUSION:**
- **DISCOURSE AND MORAL JUDGEMENT**
-
- It is tempting to view IRC in moral terms. I have sought to show that
- IRC provides a medium in which behaviour that is both outside of and
- in opposition to accepted social norms is accepted and even
- encouraged. I have demonstrated the ways in which the IRC community
- has developed its own distinctive system of significant signs and
- symbols. But this is not to imply that the IRC community is
- democratic or liberating. This freedom - from old conventions and to
- create new ones - can be both positive and negative. 'Positive' forms
- of human interaction exist on IRC - there is friendship, tolerance,
- humour, even love. There is also hatred, violence, shame and guilt.
- The 'freedom' of computer mediated communication is expressed in a
- lack of conventional social controls, not in any utopian implication.
-
- I feel that it would be a mistake to project future societal effects
- from the kinds of phenomena that I have described as happening on
- IRC. But the temptation is there. On this issue, Johansen, Vallee and
- Spangler say:
-
- Whenever a new technology emerges, it is tempting to predict
- that it will lead to a new and better form of society. The
- technology for electronic meetings is no exception. The new
- media invite a look at alternative organizations and alternative
- societies. Combined with current social concerns, they also
- encourage utopian visions... In this vision, electronic media
- create a sense of community and commonalty among all people of
- the world...(77)
-
- Such a wide-ranging conclusion is unjustifiable. As I have shown, IRC
- users can share a sense of community and commonalty, but they can
- also exhibit alienation and hostility. It is impossible to say which,
- if either, will prevail in IRC's future.
-
- Nevertheless, the cultural play that occurs on IRC does have
- implications for individual players beyond the scope of the
- virtuality of the computer network. If, as Hiltz and Turoff have
- said, users of CMC systems can come to feel that their most highly
- emotional relationships are with fellow users whom they rarely or
- never see, then this indicates the potential for computer-mediated
- communication systems to influence the lives of their users.
- Certainly for 'Lori' and 'Daniel', and for 'Allison', the virtual
- reality of Internet Relay Chat has strongly affected their
- relationships with others and their view of themselves. For them, and
- others, 'virtuality' is reality.
-
- IRC has the potential to affect users of the system in many and often
- opposing ways. For the shy and socially ill-at-ease, computer
- mediated communication can provide a way of learning social skills in
- a non-threatening environment. It may also provide a crutch and an
- excuse not to develop social skills that can be implemented in the
- 'real world'. Relationships formed on IRC may be supportive, deeply
- felt and may give users much happiness. They may also lead to a
- reluctance to form relationships outside the electronic medium, and
- may be in themselves painful due to the lack of possibilities for the
- expression of more conventional forms of affection. The cross-
- cultural, international nature of IRC can create a sense of empathy
- and tolerance for differing cultures. It can also provide a medium
- for the uninhibited expression of racial hatred. Little is as yet
- known about the potential psychological and social effects of
- computer-mediated communication. At present we have, as Hiltz and
- Turoff admit, "only the skimpiest of insights" into what those
- effects might be, and which might predominate.(78)
-
- It would be easy to gloss over the less attractive aspects of IRC and
- to stress the more positive side. IRC is, after all - as it was
- intended to be - fun. Nevertheless, those unattractive aspects cannot
- be ignored. IRC, in common with other examples of computer mediated
- communication, has no intrinsic moral implications. It is a cultural
- tool, of a kind whose specific discursive background I have located
- in postmodernism, that can be used in a number of differing and
- contradictory ways.
-
- Moral judgement of IRC is fruitless, since the possibilities are so
- balanced that it is unclear which aspects of IRC might be dominant -
- if any are. IRC is essentially postmodern, and as such its cultural
- subversion can be as effectively channelled at egalitarianism as at
- racism, at feminism as at sexism. IRC cannot be made to serve a moral
- point - but it can be used to problematise the discourses of many
- academic disciplines.
-
- Interaction on IRC presents many anomalies that cannot be understood
- in the light of present discourse. Its mode of communication is
- synchronous, yet interlocutors are neither proximate nor necessarily
- known to each other. There is a lack of conventional social and
- emotive context cues - yet conversation can be highly personalised,
- and a social structure has emerged. IRC is a social phenomena, yet
- its existence is in the nowhere of electron states and its artifacts
- in magnetic recordings. If IRC, and computer-mediated communication
- in general, is to be fully understood and analysed, then the
- conventions of many disciplines must be deconstructed. Linguistics,
- communication theory, sociology, anthropology - and history - are
- challenged by the culture shared by the users of IRC. The divisions
- between spoken and written, and synchronous and asynchronous forms of
- language, are broken down. The idea that as the communication
- bandwidth narrows interaction should become increasingly impersonal
- does not hold true for IRC. Understandings of cultural significances
- as relying on physical display are challenged. Factors of authority,
- hierarchy and social control are reconstructed. IRC deconstructs and
- reconstructs not only its own structure but also the conventions of
- the discourses that might address it.
-
- If these disciplines are to be able to address postindustrial,
- postmodern phenomena, they must be able to incorporate the challenges
- that those phenomena offer them. IRC is only one example of the kinds
- of interaction that are increasingly common in media utilising high-
- tech, computerised technology. As it becomes more common - as more
- corporations take to electronic mail and news systems to facilitate
- communication, as more academics from non-science disciplines begin
- to utilise the facilities offered by the Internet, as more people
- come to rely on the styles of communication, community and culture
- that have developed on Internet Relay Chat - discourse, and therefore
- disciplines, must alter to encompass these media.
-
-
-
- **APPENDIX_A:_IRC_COMMANDS**
-
- The IRC user interface consists of a status line on the second line
- from the bottom of the user's screen, and a command line on the
- bottom of the screen on which typed input from the user can be seen.
- The remainder of the screen shows the activity of other users,
- results of input to the command line, or the results of information
- requests of the IRC program. From this interface a number of commands
- can be issued. The syntax for a command is:
- /<command-name> <command-modifiers>
- There are three sets of commands, available to three sets of users.
- 'User commands' are available to all users of IRC; 'chanop commands'
- are available to the initiators of a channel; and 'oper commands' are
- available to IRC server operators.
-
- _USER_ COMMANDS_
- Away: /away <some-string-of-text> is used when a user does not wish
- to leave IRC, but can't attend to the screen for a while. Anyone
- who /msg's or /whois's that user will be sent a message saying
- that he is away, with his explanatory text string attached.
- Msg's sent to him will be there for him to read when he, say,
- gets back from lunch, and he will not have given the senders the
- impression that he is ignoring them. Msg's sent will be
- displayed to the recipient with the time and date received
- shown.
- Bye: /bye quits IRC.
- Clear: /clear clears the screen.
- Help: /help <command-name> will give the user detailed instructions
- on how to use a specific command.
- Ignore: /ignore <nickname> <message-type> makes the messages of a
- specified type, from a given user, invisible to the issuer. The
- use of 'all' for 'message-type' makes the specified user
- invisible.
- Join: /join <channel-name> joins a channel of that name, or creates
- one if a channel of that name does not exist. There are four
- types of channel:
- Null channel: when the user initially enters IRC he will be
- placed in channel 0, which is the null channel - he cannot
- see the activity of any other users on that channel, but he
- can issue commands, and receive and send private messages.
- This null channel is a necessity considering that there are
- usually over two hundred people using IRC at any one time.
- Numeric channels: these channels can be of three types - public
- channels (that show up on a /list or /names), secret
- channels (which don't show up on /list etc., but the users
- on them are listed as being on the null channel) and hidden
- channels (neither channel name nor users on it will be shown
- by any user command). Public channels are numbers 1-999,
- secret channels are numbers 1000 and up, and hidden channels
- are negative numbers.
- +channels: these channels have a text name, prefixed by a '+'
- (ie. +mychannel, +hottub and +gblf). The status of the
- channel can be selected by the channel operator (see /mode
- command).
- #channels: these channels have a text name, prefixed by a '#'
- (ie. #twilight_ or #report). As with +channels, the channel
- status can be set by the channel operator. Unlike '+'
- channels and numeric channels, a user may be on more than
- one, and up to ten, #channels at one time, in addition to
- being on one +channel or numeric channel.
- Note that /join will, if issued from a +channel or a numeric
- channel, automatically exit the user from that channel before he
- can join another + or numeric channel.
- Leave: /leave <channel-name> leaves that channel. If the user is not
- on any other channels, he is placed in the null channel.
- Links: /links lists the currently active set of IRC servers.
- List: /list will give the user a list of all active chat channels,
- the number of users on each, and the topics associated with each
- channel.
- Lusers: /lusers will tell the user how many people are on IRC, how
- many "have a connection to the twilight zone" (are IRC
- operators) and how many channels there are.
- Msg: /msg <nickname or channel-name> sends a private message to
- another user, or to all users on a specific channel.
- Names: /names will list all channels and the nicks of people attached
- to them. Chanops will be marked by an '@' sign prefixing their
- nick.
- Nick: /nick <some-string-of-text> changes the user's IRC nickname.
- Note that IRC nicks can only be up to nine characters long.
- Query: /query <nickname> opens a private conversation with another
- user. Until a second query command, without an argument, is
- issued, everything that the user types will be by default sent
- only to the specified user instead of to a channel.
- Time: /time <servername> will display the time and date local to that
- IRC server. If a servername is not specified then the time and
- date local to the user's server will be shown.
- Topic: /topic <some-string-of-text> will set or change the topic of
- the channel the user is on to the string specified.
- Wallops: /wallops <some-string-of-text> writes a message to all IRC
- operators online. This is useful if, for instance, special help
- is needed with IRC.
- Who: /who will return a list of the users currently on IRC, giving
- their IRC nicknames and host addresses. This command can be
- modified to list only users on particular servers, or particular
- hosts. For instance. '/who -server *.au' would return a list of
- all the people on Australian servers; '/who *' returns a list of
- the users is on the same channel as the issuer of the command;
- '/who <channel-name>' lists users on a particular channel.
- Whois: /whois <nickname> gives detailed information about a user on
- IRC.
- Whowas: /whowas <nickname> gives detailed information about a user
- who has recently logged off the system or recently changed
- nicknames.
-
- _CHANOP_COMMANDS_
- Invite: /invite <nickname> invites a user to the channel that the
- issuer of the command is on. Note that this command can be used
- by non-chanops if the channel is not invite-only.
- Kick: /kick <channel-name> <nickname> throws a specified user off
- that channel and places them in the null channel.
- Mode: this command is used by channel operators, who are the people
- who initially invoked a channel name or have had chanop status
- given them by a chanop. The syntax is: /mode <channel-name>
- <modifier> <parameter>. Modifiers are
- p - Private channel. Users who are not on the channel will not
- see the channel name on a /names or /who list - the members
- of the channel will appear to be on the null channel.
- s - Secret channel. Users who are not on the channel will not
- see the channel name on a /names or /who list, nor will the
- names of the people who are on the channel appear on any
- listing. The channel and users on it are invisible.
- m - Moderated channel. Only chanops can 'speak'.
- o - Operator privilege. This bestows chanop status and
- privileges to the person (parameter) given. That person then
- has access to these chanop commands.
- t - Only operators can change the topic of the channel.
- l - Limited channel. The number of people in this channel is
- limited to the number (parameter) given.
- i - Invite-only channel. Users cannot join the channel unless
- invited to do so by a chanop.
- note that all these modifiers must be used with either '+' or '-
- to add or remove a specification from the channel's status.
-
- _OPER_COMMANDS_
- kill: /kill <nickname> breaks the specified user's connection to the
- IRC network.
- Oper: /oper <nickname> <password> users who have the potential for
- operator privileges initially invoke those privileges with this
- command, where nickname is the nickname under which operation is
- intended, and password is the password known to the chat system
- for that nickname.
- Wall: /wall <some-string-of-text> is used to send a broadcast message
- to everyone connected to IRC.
-
- There are a number of other commands available to IRC operators -
- /trace, /connect, /squit, /stats for example - pertaining to the
- technical operation of IRC, controlling the network connections and
- so forth. These commands are numerous and not strictly relevant to my
- essay so I have chosen to exclude them from this list.
-
- _MESSAGE_AND_COMMAND_FORMATS_
- _IRC_messages_appear_as_follows:_
-
- Private /msgs to a person:
- are seen by the sender as: ->*recipient* <text>
- are seen by the recipient as: *sender* <text>
- Private /msgs to a channel:
- are seen by the sender as: >channel> test
- are seen by the recipient as: <sender/channel> text
- Public messages:
- are seen by the sender as: > text
- are seen by the recipient/s as: <sender> text
- Walls:
- are seen by the sender as: #sender# text
- are seen by the recipient/s as: #sender# text
- Wallops:
- are seen by the sender as: !sender! text
- are seen by the recipient as: !sender! text
-
- _The_results_of_IRC_commands_appear_as_follows:_
-
- /invite commands produce:
- as seen by the inviter:
- *** Inviting Waftam to channel +anarres
- as seen by the invited person:
- *** Ireshi invites you to channel +anarres
- /join commands produce:
- *** Ireshi has joined channel +anarres
-
- /kill commands produce:
- as seen by IRC operators:
- *** Notice -- Received KILL message for Ireshi. Path:
- munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU!Waftam (You don't know how much this
- hurts me..)
- as seen by the 'victim':
- *** You have been killed by Waftam at
- munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU!Waftam
- (You don't know how much this hurts me..)
- *** Use /SERVER to reconnect to a server
-
- /kick commands produce:
- as seen by the kicker and other members of the channel:
- *** Waftam has been kicked off channel +anarres by Ireshi
- as seen by the person kicked:
- *** You have been kicked off channel +anarres by Ireshi
-
- /lists commands produce the following:
- *** Channel Users Topic
- *** +Vikz! 1
- *** +Hulk 1
- *** +anarres 2 Tests
- *** +ricker 1
- *** +hottub 5 Computers no bubbles.
- *** +hack 1
- *** #twilight_ 5
-
- /mode commands produce:
- *** Mode change "+i " on channel +anarres by Ireshi
-
- /names commands produce:
- Pub: +Vikz! @Vikz
- Pub: +Hulk @HulkHogan
- Pub: +anarres Waftam @Ireshi
- Pub: +ricker @CandyMan
- Pub: +hottub Glenn ozfuzzy Chetnik GA spewbabe
- Pub: +hack sachz
- Pub: #twilight_ Troy spewbabe Glenn @Avalon @Waftam
- Prv: * titus dean ktpham DNA McAdder Amphiuma Titan
- ThreeAM darling Xen
-
- /nick commands produce:
- *** Ireshi is now known as Test
-
- /query commands produce:
- - with an argument: *** Starting conversation with waftam
- - without arguments: *** Ending conversation with waftam
-
- /time commands produce:
- *** munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU : Thursday September 26 1991 -- 09:33
- EST (from
- munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU)
-
- /topic commands produce:
- *** Ireshi has changed the topic to "Test"
-
- /whois or /whowas commands produce:
- *** Waftam is/was danielce@munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Daniel Carosone)
- *** on channels: Waftam :+anarres #twilight_zone
- *** on irc via server munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU (University of Melbourne,
- Australia)
- *** Waftam is away: busy working
- *** Waftam has a connection to the twilight zone (is an IRC operator)
-
-
-
- **BIBLIOGRAPHY**
-
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- HILTZ, S. R., and TUROFF, M., "Structuring computer-mediated
- communication systems to avoid information overload", Communications
- of the ACM,Volume 28, Number 7, July 1985, pp. 680-689.
-
- JOHANSEN, ROBERT, JACQUES VALLEE and KATHLEEN SPANGLER, Electronic
- Meetings: Technical Alternatives and Social Choices, Addison-Wesley
- Publishing Company, Inc.: Reading, Mass., 1979.
-
- KIESLER, SARA, JANE SIEGEL, and TIMOTHY W. McGUIRE, "Social
- psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication", American
- Psychologist, Volume 39, Number 10, October 1984, pp. 1123-1134.
-
- KIESLER, SARA and LEE SPROULL, "Reducing Social Context Cues:
- Electronic Mail in Organizational Communication" in Management
- Science Vol.32 No.11, November 1986, pp.1492-1512.
-
- LAQUEY, TRACEY L., The User's Directory of Computer Networks,
- Digital Press: Massachussets, 1990.
-
- Logs of IRC sessions (included as Appendix B).
-
- LUI, ALAN, "Local Transcendence: Cultural Criticism, Postmodernism,
- and the Romanticism of Detail", Representations No. 32: Fall 1990, pp
- 77-78.
-
- LYOTARD, JEAN-FRANCOIS, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on
- Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis, 1984.
-
- MEYER, GORDON and JIM THOMAS, "The Baudy World of the Byte Bandit: A
- Postmodernist Interpretation of the Computer Underground" electronic
- manuscript (also published in SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.), Computers in
- Criminal Justice,Wyndham Hall: Bristol, Indiana, 1990, pp. 31-67 )
- An earlier version of this paper was presented at the American
- Society of Criminology annual meetings, Reno (November 9, 1989).
-
- MEYER, GORDON R., The Social Organization of the Computer
- Underground, Masters Thesis: Northern Illinois University,
- Department of Sociology, DeKalb, Illinois: 1989.
-
- See MILLWARD, ROSS and PHILIP LEVERTON,Technical note 82: Using the
- UNIX Mail System, University Computing Services: University of
- Melbourne, 1989, pp 13-15.
-
- The on-line hacker Jargon File, version 2.9.4, July 1991.
-
- RICE, RONALD E. and DONALD CASE, "Electronic Message Systems in the
- University: A Description of Use and Utility" in Journal of
- Communication No.33 1983, pp131-152
-
- RICE, RONALD E. and GAIL LOVE, "Electronic Emotion: Socioemotional
- Content in a Computer-Mediated Communication Network" in
- Communication Research Vol.14 No.1, February 1987, pp 85-108.
-
- SCHNEIDER, D., "Notes Toward a Theory of Culture", in K.R. Basso and
- H.A. Selby (eds.), Meaning in Anthropology, University of New Mexico
- Press: Albuquerque, 1976, p.197-220.
-
- VAN MAANEN, JOHN, and STEPHEN BARLEY, "Cultural Organization:
- Fragments of a Theory." in P.J. Frost, et. al., (eds.),
- Organizational Culture, Sage: Beverly Hills, 1985, pp. 31-53.
-
- ZAGORIN, PEREZ, "Historiography and Postmodernism: Reconsiderations",
- History and Theory,pp 263-274.
-
-
-
- **FOOTNOTES**
-
- 1 BARON, NAOMI S., "Computer Mediated Communication as a Force in
- Language Change" in Visible Language Vol.18 No.2 Spring 1984, p.120.
- 2 BARON, op cit, p.122.
- 3 Many of the references that I have used approach CMC from this
- perspective - see, for instance, RICE, RONALD E. and DONALD CASE,
- "Electronic Message Systems in the University: A Description of Use
- and Utility" in Journal of Communication No.33 1983, pp131-152, and
- ALLEN, THOMAS J. and OSCAR HAUPTMAN, "The Influence of Communication
- Technologies on Organizational Structure" in Communication Research,
- Vol.14 No.5, October 1987, pp. 575-587. A notable exception is the
- work of Gordon Meyer and Jim Thomas, particularly "The Baudy World of
- the Byte Bandit: A Postmodernist Interpretation of the Computer
- Underground" (published in SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.), Computers in
- Criminal Justice, Wyndham Hall: Bristol, Indiana, 1990, pp. 31-67 )
- While not discussing the impact of CMC on human interaction per se,
- they discuss computer-mediated communities in the context of
- 'hacking', that is, unauthorised access to computer media.
- 4 RICE, RONALD E. and GAIL LOVE, "Electronic Emotion:
- Socioemotional Content in a Computer-Mediated Communication Network"
- in Communication Research Vol.14 No.1, February 1987, p. 88.
- 5 The Internet will be discussed in detail in the Introduction.
- 6 A common test has been the assessment of the time taken and
- methods used by CMC groups to reach concensus on a given problem as
- compared to face-to-face groups. See, for instance, KIESLER, SARA,,
- JANE SIEGEL and TIMOTHY W. McGUIRE, "Social Psychological Aspects of
- Computer-Mediated Communication" in American Psychologist Vol.39
- No.10 October 1984, pp.1123-1134. This is clearly not an accurate
- measure of the kind of communication that occurs on IRC, which is
- chat rather than debate.
- 7 MEYER, GORDON and JIM THOMAS, "The Baudy World of the Byte
- Bandit: A Postmodernist Interpretation of the Computer Underground",
- electronic manuscript, (also published in SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.),
- Computers in Criminal Justice, Wyndham Hall: Bristol, Indiana, 1990,
- pp. 31-67) lines 837-838. See Footnote 15 regarding electronic
- manuscripts.
- 8 ANKERSMIT, F.R., "Historiography and Postmodernism", History
- and Theory no.28 (No. 2, 1989), p.151.
- 9 ZAGORIN, PEREZ, "Historiography and Postmodernism:
- Reconsiderations", History and Theory, Vol.29 No.3, 1990, p. 265.
- 10 SCHNEIDER, D., "Notes Toward a Theory of Culture", in K.R.
- Basso and H.A. Selby (eds.), Meaning in Anthropology, University of
- New Mexico Press: Albuquerque, 1976, p.198.
- 11 HIEMSTRA, GLEN, "Teleconferencing, Concern for Face, and
- Organizational Culture", in M. Burgoon (ed.), Communication Yearbook
- 6, Sage: Berverly Hills 1982, p.874.
- 12 LUI, ALAN, "Local Transcendence: Cultural Criticism,
- Postmodernism, and the Romanticism of Detail", Representations No.
- 32: Fall 1990, pp 77-78.
- 13 ANKERSMIT, F.R., "Historiography and Postmodernism", History
- and Theory No. 28 (No.2, 1989) p.148.
- 14 LYOTARD, JEAN-FRANCOIS, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on
- Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis, 1984, p.3.
- 15 Two of the articles that I have made use of have only been
- available to me in electronic format, although they have been
- published in the United States. These are: MEYER, GORDON and JIM
- THOMAS, "The Baudy World of the Byte Bandit: A Postmodernist
- Interpretation of the Computer Underground" (published in
- SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.), Computers in Criminal Justice, Wyndham Hall:
- Bristol, Indiana, 1990, pp. 31-67 ), and BARLOW, JOHN PERRY, "Crime
- and Puzzlement: Desperados of the DataSphere" (published in Whole
- Earth Review, Sausalito, California, Fall 1990, pp.45-57). The former
- was electronically mailed to me by the authors, the latter was posted
- to the newsgroup alt.hackers. In referring to these articles, I have
- cited the electronic form of the texts, since that is what I have
- been working with, giving line numbers rather than page references.
- However, electronic manuscripts would generally be read from within a
- text editor or word processor, enabling the reader to search for a
- specific text string.
- 16 LYOTARD, op cit, p.4.
- 17 BARLOW, op cit, lines 322-326.
- 18 For a brief description of ARPANET, the Internet and AARNet,
- see MILLWARD, ROSS and PHILIP LEVERTON,Technical note 82: Using the
- UNIX Mail System, University Computing Services: University of
- Melbourne, 1989,,pp 13-15. For a more detailed discussion, see
- LAQUEY, TRACEY L., The User's Directory of Computer Networks,
- Digital Press: Massachusetts, 1990, pp.193-379, especially pp.193-
- 204.
- 19 Based on a conversation with 'Max' on IRC, Thursday July 11th,
- 22.20. My quotes from IRC sessions are taken from 'logs', computer
- files which consist of the records of conversations on IRC, either
- kept by me or given to me by the log keepers. In all quotes from
- logged IRC sessions, I have preserved the original spelling and
- syntax. I have, however, changed the names of the interlocutors
- unless I have been specifically requested by them not to do so. I
- have done my best to be certain that I have not used nicknames
- already in use on IRC - if I have inadvertently done so, my apologies
- to the people concerned. I have also deleted the Internet emailing
- addresses of IRC users so as to protect their privacy - for instance,
- my own address emr@munagin.ee.mu.oz.au appears as *@*.*.*.oz.au. I
- have thus indicated the geographic location of users without
- disclosing their full addresses and identities. In the version
- submitted to the University of Melbourne, these logs were included as
- Appendix B.
- 20 The full listing is: Austria, Australia, Canada, Switzerland,
- Germany, Denmark, Finland, France, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea,
- Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden, United
- Kingdom, United States. Taken from a posting to the newsgroup alt.irc
- (from: troy@plod.cbme.unsw.oz.au (Troy Rollo), Organization: Centre
- for Biomedical Engineering, Uni of NSW, Date: 10 Jul 91 10:27:48 GMT,
- Subject: NickServ Statistics as at July 10 1991).
- 21 See Appendix A for a more complete (though not exhaustive) list
- and description of IRC commands.
- 22 'Virtual reality' is a phrase often used by users and
- constructors of computer systems designed to mimic 'real life'. The
- word 'virtual' is also used to describe individual computer-simulated
- equivalents of aspects of reality. The ABC recently aired a program
- discussing the technology of virtual reality: the BBC production
- "Colonising Cyberspace: Advances in Virtual Reality Technology" was
- shown on Sunday 11th August at 9.30pm as part of the "Horizens"
- series.
- 23 BARLOW, JOHN PERRY, "Crime and Puzzlement: Desperados of the
- DataSphere", electronic manuscript (also published in Whole Earth
- Review, Sausalito, California, Fall 1990, pp.45-57), lines 56-68.
- 24 DENING, GREG, The Bounty: An Ethnographic History, Melbourne
- University Press, 1988, p.102.
- 25 GEERTZ, CLIFFORD; The Interpretation of Cultures: selected
- essays; Basic Books, Inc.: New York, 1973, p.45.
- 26 DENING, op cit, p.100.
- 27 This may not be the case in the future. Recent advances in
- 'multi-media' computer applications make the development of CMC
- systems that incorporate video, audio and textual elements a
- possibility.
- 28 KIESLER, SARA, JANE SIEGEL, and TIMOTHY W. McGUIRE, "Social
- Psychological Aspects of Computer-Mediated Communication", American
- Psychologist, Volume 39, Number 10, October 1984, p. 1126.
- 29 KIESLER, SIEGEL and McGUIRE, op cit, p. 1126.
- 30 For technical reasons - which I am not competent to explain -
- IRC nicknames cannot be of more than nine characters in length.
- 31 The significance of IRC 'nicks' will be discussed in Part Two:
- Constructing Communities.
- 32 KIESLER, SARA and LEE SPROULL, "Reducing Social Context Cues:
- Electronic Mail in Organizational Communication" in Management
- Science Vol.32 No.11, November 1986, p.1497. Sproull and Kiesler's
- comment suggests that user names were predetermined in the system
- that they were investigating. If this has been generally the case in
- the CMC systems that have been written about, then users may not have
- the option of altering names, and therefore potentially their
- perceived gender.
- 33 IRC log, Friday July 12th, 00.39. This log is taken by
- 'Marion', therefore her name does not appear in the log. I have added
- her name to the beginning of her statements for the sake of clarity.
- 34 KIESLER, SARA and LEE SPROULL, op cit, p.1498.
- 35 KIESLER, SIEGEL and McGUIRE, op cit, p.1129.
- 36 RICE, RONALD E. and GAIL LOVE, "Electronic Emotion:
- Socioemotional Content in a Computer-Mediated Communication Network"
- in Communication Research Vol.14 No.1, February 1987, p.89.
- 37 IRC log, Friday July 12th, 00.39.
- 38 KIESLER, SIEGEL and McGUIRE, op cit, p.1127.
- 39 KIESLER, SIEGEL and McGUIRE, op cit, p.1129.
- 40 IRC log, Tuesday May 14th, 23.48
- 41 HILTZ, STARR ROXANNE and MURRAY TUROFF, The Network Nation:
- Human Communication via Computer, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company,
- Inc.: Reading, Mass., 1978,,p.101.
- 42 Users of the Internet often refer to social phenomena occurring
- on the system by using the format "net.<phenomenon>" - thus
- 'net.sleazing' and 'net.romance.'
- 43 HIEMSTRA, GLEN, "Teleconferencing, Concern for Face, and
- Organizational Culture", in M. Burgoon (ed.), Communication Yearbook
- 6, Sage: Berverly Hills, 1982, p.880.
- 44 IRC log, Sunday July 7th, 18.36 - note that these are 'wallop'
- messages, that is messages written to all operators. +gblf is a
- popular channel on IRC, so popular that it is in almost - that is,
- barring technical mishaps - permanent use. The acronym stands for
- 'gays, bisexuals, lesbians and friends.' Other 'permanent' IRC
- channels are +hottub, known for flirtatious chat, and +initgame, in
- which users play games of 'twenty questions'.
- 45 IRC log, Tuesday May 14th, 23.48. In the original transcript,
- taken by 'Lola', her name is not shown. 'Han's' private messages to
- 'Lola' appear as shown, however her private messages to him appear in
- the format "->*Han* <message text>. I have included 'Lola's' name at
- the beginning of her statements for the sake of clarity.
- 46 BARLOW, JOHN PERRY, "Crime and Puzzlement: Desperados of the
- DataSphere" electronic manuscript (published in Whole Earth Review,
- Sausalito, California, Fall 1990, pp.45-57) lines 114-115.
- 47 See LYOTARD, JEAN-FRANCOIS, The Postmodern Condition: A Report
- on Knowledge, University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis, 1984,
- especially "Part Three - The Method: Language Games," pp.9-11 for a
- discussion of this concept.
- 48 MEYER, GORDON and JIM THOMAS, "The Baudy World of the Byte
- Bandit: A Postmodernist Interpretation of the Computer Underground"
- electronic manuscript (also published in SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.),
- Computers in Criminal Justice, Wyndham Hall: Bristol, Indiana, 1990,
- pp. 31-67 ) lines 208-236.
- 49 MEYER and THOMAS, lines 237-238.
- 50 MEYER and THOMAS, lines 289-291
- 51 VAN MAANEN, JOHN, and STEPHEN BARLEY, "Cultural Organization:
- Fragments of a Theory." in P.J. Frost, et. al., (eds.),
- Organizational Culture, Sage: Beverly Hills, 1985, p.33..
- 52 MEYER and THOMAS, lines 172-174.
- 53 MEYER and THOMAS, lines 175-177.
- 54 GEERTZ, CLIFFORD, The Interpretation of Cultures: selected
- essays, Basic Books, Inc.: New York, 1973, p.44.
- 55 The "The on-line hacker Jargon File, version 2.9.4, July 1991",
- an electronic dictionary of computer-related terms defines
- 'netiquette' "as, /net'ee-ket/ or /net'i-ket/ [portmanteau from
- "network etiquette"] n. Conventions of politeness recognized on
- {USENET}." Note that USENET is the news network that the Internet
- carries.
- 56 KIESLER, S., SIEGEL, J., and McGUIRE, T. W., "Social
- psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication", American
- Psychologist, Volume 39, Number 10, October 1984, p.1125.
- 57 Cited in KIESLER, et al, p.1125.
- 58 To a lesser extent, users of IRC will also use other non-
- alphanumeric characters (for instance '<', '>', '#', '!' and '-') to
- enclose and denote 'physical' actions and responses. The asterisk is,
- however, by far the most common indicator.
- 59 IRC log, Thursday May 2nd, 20.06.
- 60 IRC log, Sunday June 30th, 17.12. As in previous quotes, the
- name of the log keeper - 'Fireship' - has been added for the sake of
- clarity.
- 61 Geertz, op cit, p.46.
- 62 This term is in general use throughout the computer network.
- The "The on-line hacker Jargon File, version 2.9.4, July 1991"
- defines them as follows:
- emoticon: /ee-moh'ti-kon/ n. An ASCII glyph used to indicate an
- emotional state in email or news. Hundreds have been proposed, but
- only a few are in common use. These include:
- :-) `smiley face' (for humor, laughter, friendliness,
- occasionally sarcasm)
- :-( `frowney face' (for sadness, anger, or upset)
- ,-) `half-smiley' ({ha ha only serious}), also known as `semi-
- smiley' or `winkey face'.
- :-/ `wry face'
- (These may become more comprehensible if you tilt your head sideways,
- to the left.)
- The first 2 listed are by far the most frequently encountered.
- Hyphenless forms of them are common on CompuServe, GEnie, and BIX,
- see also {bixie}. On {USENET}, `smiley' is often used as a generic
- term synonymous with {emoticon}, as well as specifically for the
- happy-face emoticon. It appears that the emoticon was invented by one
- Scott Fahlman on the CMU {bboard} systems around 1980. He later
- wrote: "I wish I had saved the original post, or at least recorded
- the date for posterity, but I had no idea that I was starting
- something that would soon pollute all the world's communication
- channels."
- Note that CompuServe, GEnie, and BIX are computer networks.
- 63 Note that the setting of an 'away message' causes all private
- messages sent to someone who is /away to appear on their screen with
- the date and time at which they were received shown. The sender
- receives the 'away message' - this function is mostly used when a
- person must be away from their terminal for a while, but does not
- wish to leave IRC.
- 64 The news service carried by the Internet, known as Usenet News,
- contains many hundreds of groups, which are organised into divisions
- according to their application. Each division will contain many
- newsgroups, further divided into smaller subdivisions. These
- divisions and their subdivisions are known as hierarchies. Examples
- of major newsgroup divisions are the 'alt', 'rec' and 'sci'
- hierarchies, which contain such newsgroups as alt.irc, rec.humour,
- rec.society.greek, rec.society.italian and sci.physics.fusion.edward.
- teller.boom.boom.boom.
- 65 See Footnote 20 in Part One regarding channels +hottub and
- +gblf.
- 66 Newsgroup alt.irc 28.9.91. I have omitted the name and Internet
- address of the poster at his request.
- 67 Internet Relay Chat, documentation file 'MANUAL.' Copyright
- (C) 1990, Karl Kleinpaste (Author: Karl Kleinpaste; email
- karl@cis.ohio-state.edu; Date: 04 Apr 1989; Last modification: 05
- Oct 1990).
- 68 IRC log, Sunday July 7th, 18.36. This log was taken by an irc
- operator - these lines consist of 'notices' sent by operators to all
- other operators online. They are read as follows: the first 'notice'
- announces that a user named '14982784' has been banished from the IRC
- system by an operator named 'MaryD', the second that a user named
- 'mic' was 'killed' by an operator named 'mgp.' 'Dumping' denotes the
- sending of long strings of text to the IRC environment. This is
- frowned upon since it prevents other users from being able to
- converse, and because it can cause the IRC server connections to
- malfunction. 'ctrl-gs' refers to the combination of the [control] and
- [g] keys on a computer keyboard which, when pressed together, will
- cause the computer to sound a 'beep'. If many 'ctrl-gs' are sent to
- an IRC channel then the terminals of all the channel participants
- will 'beep', which can be extremely annoying to those users. '/kill
- notices' are accompanied by technical information regarding the
- details of the 'path' over the computer network that the command
- travelled - these details, being lengthy and irrelevant to my
- purpose, I have omitted. Note that there is nothing to stop 'killed'
- users from reconnecting to IRC.
- 69 IRC log, Sunday July 7th, 18.36.
- 70 IRC log, Sunday September 22nd, 08.22. Again, I have deleted
- all information pertaining to the IRC network routes from these
- messages.
- 71 IRC log, Sunday September 22nd, 08.22. Note that Chas's
- 'laughter', and Alfred's final comment, are wallop messages, that is,
- a message written to all operators.
- 72 HILTZ, S. R., and TUROFF, M., "Structuring computer-mediated
- communication systems to avoid information overload", Communications
- of the ACM,Volume 28, Number 7, July 1985, p. 688.
- 73 Apparently, Kuwait had just purchased an Internet link some few
- weeks before the Iraq invasion, and, while radio and television
- broadcasts out of the country were quickly stifled, almost a week
- passed before the Internet link was disabled. A number of Kuwaiti
- students were able to use IRC during this time and gave on-the-spot
- reports. Israel is also on the Internet, and I am told that users
- from the two countries often interacted with very few disagreements
- and mostly with sympathy for each other's position and outlook. A
- similar pattern was followed during the attempted Russian coup. At
- times of such international crisis, IRC users will form a channel
- named +report in which news or eyewitness reports from around the
- world will be shared.
- 74 IRC log, Sunday June 30th, 17.12
- 75 MEYER, GORDON and JIM THOMAS, "The Baudy World of the Byte
- Bandit: A Postmodernist Interpretation of the Computer Underground"
- electronic manuscript (also published in SCHMALLEGER, F. (ed.),
- Computers in Criminal Justice, Wyndham Hall: Bristol, Indiana, 1990)
- lines 1145-1146.
- 76 Quoted in MEYER and THOMAS, lines 1158-1161.
- 77 JOHANSEN, ROBERT, JACQUES VALLEE and KATHLEEN SPANGLER,
- Electronic Meetings: Technical Alternatives and Social Choices,
- Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.: Reading, Mass., 1979,
- pp.117-118.
- 78 HILTZ, STARR ROXANNE and MURRAY TUROFF, The Network Nation:
- Human Communication via Computer, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company,
- Inc.: Reading, Mass., 1978, p.102.
- 79 These examples are taken from a sample session of IRC. The results
- of /names and /list have been shortened.
-