R H Draney <
dado...@spamcop.net> writes:
> Glenn Knickerbocker filted:
>>
>>On 5/22/2012 2:13 PM, R H Draney wrote:
>>>The next stage is what happened with the word "spam"...as originally understood,
>>>it referred to flooding an online forum with commercial messages in overwhelming
>>> quantities...
>>
>>No, as originally understood, it referred to flooding USENET with
>>any kind of message in multiple copies (as in Spam, Spam, Spam,
>>Spam, Spam, Spam, baked beans, Spam, Spam, Spam, and Spam). The
>>encouraged behavior in place of spamming was crossposting, posting
>>just one copy of a message to all the relevant newsgroups at once.
>
> First time I heard the word to mean anything other than a tasty
> canned meat product was this incident:
>
>
http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/1999/04/19098
I think that [the 1994 Canter & Siegel "Green Card Lottery"] was the
first application to that domain. Eric Raymond's _New Hacker's
Dictionary_ (1991) gives it in an earlier computer sense:
spam [from the MUD community] vt. To crash a program by
overrunning a fixed-size buffer with execessively large input
data.
There is no entry in Guy Steele's earlier (1983) _Hacker's
Dictionary_. (Then again, there were no MUDs back then.) I can see
how sending repeated messages could be seen as a metaphorical
extension of that sense.
I see "spammed" in rec.games.mud back to October, 1990, and "spamming"
in alt.mud in July, 1990.
Oh, wait! How could I forget ARMM?!
In the sober light of day, I'm laughing as I re-read the comments
on the March 30 ARMM Massacre. Last _night_, on the other hand, I
had a mental image of a machine sitting atop a hill, making a low
droning sound, releasing infinite numbers of Frankenstein's
Monsters on the surrounding environs. Frankenstein's Monsters
here, Frankenstein's Monsters there, lurching about
stiff-leggedly, arms outstretched, and all muttering the same word
over and over: ARMM ARMM ARMM ARMM ARMM.
Usenet History, I tell you. This needs its own listing in the
Jargon File:
:ARMM: n. A USENET posting robot created by Dick Depew of Munroe
Falls, Ohio.
Originally intended to serve as a means of controlling posts
through anon servers (see also {anon servers}). Transformed by
programming ineptitude into a monster of Frankenstein
proportions, it broke loose on the night of March 31, 1993 and
proceeded to spam news.admin.policy with something on the order
of 200 messages in which it attempted, and failed, to cancel
its own messages. This produced a recursive chain of messages
each of which tacked on:
* another "ARMM:" onto the subject line
* a meaningless "supersedes" header line
* another character in the message id (producing message ids
several lines long)
* a ^L
This produced a flood of messages in which each header took up
several screens and each message id got longer and longer and
longer and each subject line started wrapping around five or
six times. ARMM was accused of crashing at least one mail
system and inspired widespread resentment among those who pay
for each message they have downloaded.
Eric Raymond, you listening?
Joel Furr, news.admin.policy,
Mar. 31, 1993
(ARMM stood "Automated Retroactive Minimal Moderation")
Joel Furr was active in MUD groups, and so was probably thinking of
"spam" in the MUDdish sense, but this seems quite likely to be the
incident (and even the article) that made the term cross over when his
article was read by people unfamiliar with the term.
[Attn Jesse Sheidlower: OED antedating]
--
Evan Kirshenbaum +------------------------------------
Still with HP Labs |This isn't good. I've seen good,
SF Bay Area (1982-) |and it didn't look anything like
Chicago (1964-1982) |this.
| MST3K
evan.kir...@gmail.com
http://www.kirshenbaum.net/