leejosepho
Active member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2005
- Messages
- 348
- Reaction score
- 1
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Undisclosed
Thinker said:You, sir, are a troll.
leejosepho said:To all: I know the term "troll" is used to describe an individual exhibiting some certain or particular kind(s?) of behaviour on the internet, but that is *all* I know about it. If you would, please inform me as to what is being alleged against me, and if guilty, I will admit that and accept whatever consequences or "punishment" might follow.
Thank you ...
Kelzie said:Well, my definition of a troll is someone who has no purpose other than to **** people off.
I don't think you are one though...even if I don't agree with your opinions. :2wave:
BTW. Moving to off topic. A person's "trollness" has nothing to do with religion and philosophy.
In Usenet newsgroups and email discussion lists, a troll is not a grumpy monster that lives beneath a bridge accosting passers-by, but rather a provocative posting intended to produce a large volume of frivolous responses. The term can also refer to someone making such a posting ("a troll") or to the action ("trolling", "to troll").
The content of a troll posting generally falls into one of several categories. It may consist of an apparently foolish contradiction of common knowledge, a deliberately offensive insult to the readers of a newsgroup or mailing list, or a broad request for trivial follow-up postings. The result of such postings is frequently a flood of angry responses. In some cases, the follow-up messages posted in response to a troll can constitute a large fraction of the contents of a newsgroup or mailing list for as long as several weeks. These messages are transmitted around the world to thousands of computers, wasting network resources and costing money for people who pay to receive Usenet news or download email. Troll threads also frustrate people who are trying to carry on substantive discussions.
Androvski said:When you start saying "who's that trip trapping over my bridge", that's the time to worry.
mixedmedia said:This whole trolling phenomena is news to me. Some people just have too much free time on hand. As long as it doesn't cause too much disruption, though, it seems a harmless enough pursuit. Probably better than having them out on the streets.
robin said:
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