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2ch: Japanese Web Forum As Social Vent

News for nerds writes "This NY times article (reg blah blah) sheds the light on Japan's largest Internet bulletin board - 2ch. About 5.4 million people come to this "Channel 2" each month, many of them several times a day (just like you nerds making beowulf cluster of alphabets all the day!). Founded in 1999, "ni-channeru," as it is called there, has become part of Japan's everyday culture as no other Web site has. While you can also find useful info such as dinner recipes there, it's almost like Battle Royale came into life as a web site, filled with verbal and physical violence backed by pseudo anonymity."

275 comments

  1. Sounds Like... by Nerd+With+Nalgene · · Score: 5, Funny

    A nerd-less version of Slashdot.

    --


    "as if nothing were solid...and that would be the end of the world, not fire and brimstone, but goo."--Rand
    1. Re:Sounds Like... by Anarcho-Goth · · Score: 1

      A nerd-less version of Slashdot.

      Are you saying there are no Nerds in Japan?
      Or that nerds in Japan aren't really into 2ch?

      --
      I hate Liberals and Conservatives.
      If you are a Liberal or a Conservative, then HAVE A NICE DAY!
      Courage.
    2. Re:Sounds Like... by irokitt · · Score: 4, Funny

      So what happens when everybody on this board starts hitting Slashdot's servers...

      --
      If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
    3. Re:Sounds Like... by xoran99 · · Score: 1

      Except much LARGER... Slashdot users have at most six digits in their UIDs, but this board has 5.4 million users (not hits)... Incredible.

      --

      Karma: Bad (mostly due to all those "In Soviet Russia" jokes)

    4. Re:Sounds Like... by Snowy_loves_you · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ofcourse you know, There are a nerd-less-less version of 2ch, in Japan, The Slashdot Japan !

      --

      ----------
      Slashdot Japan
      http://slashdot.jp/
      snowy
      http://slashdot.jp/~snowy/

    5. Re:Sounds Like... by packeteer · · Score: 1

      Neither i think. I think hes saying that the website isn't MOSTLY nerds as it is here on slashdot. Clearly your logic is teh borked and you need to be assimilated. (+5 Star Wars referance)

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    6. Re:Sounds Like... by Snowy_loves_you · · Score: 1

      Oh, sorry.

      There are->There is

      --

      ----------
      Slashdot Japan
      http://slashdot.jp/
      snowy
      http://slashdot.jp/~snowy/

    7. Re:Sounds Like... by metlin · · Score: 4, Funny

      In Soviet Russia.... ;-)

    8. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh I think you mean Star Trek
      -5 for incorrect reference

    9. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your Star Wars memory is teh borked. -5 Wrong use of Star Trek reference...

    10. Re:Sounds Like... by Himajin2000 · · Score: 1
      Here's one minor example of the "2ch effect".

      A poster on the Rotten Tomatoes Matrix Reloaded forum hooked up with a couple of Japanese fans who happened to be 2channelers. The RT thread was mentioned on a 2ch movie board, and look what happened:

      http://www.rottentomatoes.com/vine/forumdisplay.ph p?f=101122457

      Over 200,000 page views...

    11. Re:Sounds Like... by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1

      Hence why we are slashdotting them before they get us. WW3 over the net ;)

    12. Re:Sounds Like... by ethx1 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.... looks like the "2ch effect" could rival the slashdot effect.

    13. Re:Sounds Like... by Himajin2000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Erm, I'll try again

      http://www.rottentomatoes.com/vine/forumdisplay.ph p?f=101122457.

      Incidently, because of the "2ch effect" it is considered bad manners to post links there without disabling them first (usually by chopping off the first "h").

    14. Re:Sounds Like... by JM+Apocalypse · · Score: 5, Funny

      I love the translations by babelfish ... and the poll!

      Englishify slashdot.jp

      --

      - - - - - - -
      Orppf urp mf y.ppcxn. yflcbi otcnnov C am yflcbi yr n.apb Ekrpatv (Dvorak -> Qwerty)
    15. Re:Sounds Like... by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, I live in Japan. The population is primarily made up of nerds.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    16. Re:Sounds Like... by esoteric_z · · Score: 1
      "In Soviet Russia.... ;-)"

      Am I just Canadian or do I just not get why this is both "funny" and deserving of mod points?

      In case you didn't realize, the "cold war" is over. You don't have to blindly hate anybody anymore.

      Oh wait... there's always the Islamics, or Iraqis, or Drug Barons, or terrorists, or... damn.. how many enemies you guys got? :O

      (By the by... the a lot of Russians are actually *protesting* for a communist or socialist government back in power. At least they knew they'd have jobs and food and wages. Capitalism indeed... jobless, foodless and wageless...)

      WARNING: The opinions expressed above may be that of a drunken ranting Canadian and should be taken with a strong dose of Prozac or whatever drug Lily is pushing into the general populous. You have been warned. BE HAPPY! :)

    17. Re:Sounds Like... by ildon · · Score: 1

      We need a "splendid discernment" moderation.

    18. Re:Sounds Like... by revmoo · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah no kidding, why can't slashdot US have such interesting topics as "You participate! Fire truck + ambulance = it goes out, the rescuing car". I might not even complain about dupes then :)

      --
      I would expect such blatant racism on Fark, but on Slashdot? Mods please ban this asshole.
    19. Re:Sounds Like... by ildon · · Score: 1

      The "in Soviet Russia" jokes are a reference to the comedic stylings of Yakov Smirnov, a man who immigrated to the United States from Russia in 1977. Personally I never thought he was very funny, and other people think it's funny to use the "in Soviet Russia" jokes in situations where they make absolutely no sense to indicate that something is "backwards".

      Next time use Google before making a complete ass of yourself. Google still works when you're drunk. Trust me.

    20. Re:Sounds Like... by johnwroach · · Score: 1

      ooh...sorry.

      (-6, not knowing the difference between star wars and star trek)

      Of course, it's late. I forgive you.

    21. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In Soviet Russia...

      It's the start of a joke. e.g. "In Soviet Russia, the Internet surfs you!" So the ide of /. getting /.ed is a little like all the hundreds and thousands of "In Soviet Russia..." jokes. You should read more (or less) /.

    22. Re:Sounds Like... by Yorrike · · Score: 1

      So you're saying, in Soviet Russia, "Soviet Russia" joke laughs at you? Or is it that you laugh at "Soviet Russia" joke in Soviet Russia? Now I'm confused.

      --

      Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?

    23. Re:Sounds Like... by Omestes · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "It received many , but it has been said from amongthose Anal Cunt"

      I don't get it...

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    24. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you - I don't think any of us here consider ourserlves nerds.

      GEEKS, perhaps. But I am certainly not a NERD. Nerds don't have medals and trophies from two decades of sports involving physical contact. Nerds don't lose their virginity at 16. Nerds don't have women hitting on them frequently.

    25. Re:Sounds Like... by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      It is human nature to sort people into groups, and to make conclusions about individuals and groups alike. Nothing to do with nationality as you allude to in the quote below (assuming you're either Russian or european and talking about Americans).

      Oh wait... there's always the Islamics, or Iraqis, or Drug Barons, or terrorists, or... damn.. how many enemies you guys got? :O

      Sounds like you yourself are perpetuating the us-versus-them montra.

    26. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just because your stepdad gave you trophies for tongue wrestling, doesn't mean that him taking your anal virginity at 16 makes you less of a nerd.

    27. Re:Sounds Like... by tolan-b · · Score: 2, Funny

      Even NYT links are more fun translated badly from Japanese!

      "according to the New Yorktimes (to read article, the register is needed)"

      I knew El Reg was the secret to reading NYT articles ;)

    28. Re:Sounds Like... by James_Duncan8181 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Further to this, I demand (score: 2, splendid discernment) as a mod type over here!

      --
      "To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
    29. Re:Sounds Like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I like the mods.

      (score: 3, splendid discernment)

    30. Re:Sounds Like... by Harinezumi · · Score: 1

      Never slashdot Slashdot until Slashdot slashdots you?

    31. Re:Sounds Like... by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      Check this one out:

      (score: 3, splendid discernment)

      --
      --------
      Free your mind.
    32. Re:Sounds Like... by i+chose+quality · · Score: 1

      i knew i'm on a sinking ship:
      "The world of Slashdot it will pass very."

      prepare for the end of slashdot!

      --
      the computer is online
      i am not at it
      what a waste of ressources
    33. Re:Sounds Like... by esoteric_z · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right. *Open mouth, insert foot*.. Gotta stop coming to ./ after pubbing...

    34. Re:Sounds Like... by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      I always considered the word geek to have a more pejorative connatation than nerd. Personally, I've been calling myself a proud nerd for some time now.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
  2. 3get by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As 2ch-er....

    1. Re:3get by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      those people...

  3. kinda like by GeekTek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    craigslist.org in a way.

    Beyond being a great place to sell off my accumulation of computer crap, I found my car and my girlfriend on there. Thanks Craig!

  4. We have that in America (and rest of world) too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's called USENET

    http://groups.google.com for you kids out there.

  5. Punch bag by romit_icarus · · Score: 2, Insightful
    A virtual Japanese punching bag!

    On a serious note, media properties like this, I suppose, do their bit in maintaining social balance. Japan already has a disturbingly high suicide rate...

    1. Re:Punch bag by adochan · · Score: 1

      Suicide rates in Japan are high for sure, but not nearly as 'disturbingly' high as people tend to think.
      See the World Health Organization or check this nice overview of a view selected countries.

    2. Re:Punch bag by romit_icarus · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Wouldn't you call a rate of 36.5 per 1000 (for men) disturbingly high?

      Especially, when it comes from a relatively economically stable country with no current war involvements...

    3. Re:Punch bag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't call Japan "economically stable"... they've got a shitload of debt.

      They also have soldiers in Iraq.

      Moron.

    4. Re:Punch bag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm..Thats per 100,000 not 1000

    5. Re:Punch bag by Captain+Stoichiometr · · Score: 1

      70.6 in the Russian Federation. In the Russian Federation, the roulette plays YOU!

  6. Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    But buggered if I know how they communicate in a language made almost entirely of rectangles.

    1. Re:Tried to read it by yintercept · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's all in the subtle positioning of the rectangles.

      The large number of people who don't have oriental language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad. Occasionally, companies and programmers have bouts of interest in localization. Such efforts often fall through.

      Regardless, the Internet is a great place to learn language skills. Personally, I think all web designers should chose a second language and trying muddling their way through web sites written in a different language to understand the challenges of different cultures.

    2. Re:Tried to read it by L7_ · · Score: 1, Informative

      i think he just hasn't installed the asian font sets, so all the characters show up as rectangles.

      *whoosh*

    3. Re:Tried to read it by CaptnMArk · · Score: 1

      I used to have them installed. But due to spam, I prefer to not have them so I don't have to suffer when the fonts load.

    4. Re:Tried to read it by Hatta · · Score: 3, Informative

      The large number of people who don't have oriental language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad.

      If you don't speak any asian languages, what's the point? It's like locales. Just sitting on my disk, wasting space. Apt-got localepurge and haven't noticed a single change. Except several dozen megabytes more HD space, that is.

      Or perhaps you mean that I should want to have such things. Because languages are good for me or some such. Sorry, but I have way too much to learn already, that'll have to wait for another lifetime.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think he picked that up. I mean, I'm not quite sure, but I think the line...

      The large number of people who don't have oriental language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad

      ...kind of gives it away. It's just that after that he goes on to say something reasonably thoughtful, which is maybe why you didn't get it.

      *whhhooooossshhhhhh*

    6. Re:Tried to read it by chrismear · · Score: 2, Funny

      The large number of people who don't have oriental language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad

      Personally, I think the large number of anime geeks who don't speak Japanese but do have Japanese language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad.

      Just kidding. I have them installed too! ^_^

    7. Re:Tried to read it by cozziewozzie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or perhaps you mean that I should want to have such things. Because languages are good for me or some such. Sorry, but I have way too much to learn already, that'll have to wait for another lifetime.

      There is an old European proverb that says: With each language you learn, you're worth one more person.

      Learning languages is great. Learning languages is a unique gateway into loads of new information, new literature, and other cultures. Think of all the good scientific work written in German. Think of all the South American literature. Think of all the Asian philosophy.

      I really could never understand people who are not interested in learning languages. Maybe it's because I grew up in Europe, but I see people who don't at least speak one language next to their own as just shy of illiterate (and they often ARE illiterate).

    8. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually really great things are translated into tons of languages. If it isn't available in english, it probably wasn't worth reading. Granted, some things are best read in their native tongue, but then you have to decide which culture's things you want to bother learning and that negates all the other cultures since you can't learn 4,000 languages.

      Also, who has time to learn additional languages? If I am going to learn another language, it's going to be a programming language which will directly affect my salary and value to my company. (Yeah, yeah, knowing more languages might help you be employable in SOME situations, but in most tech situations, knowing more technology is better).

      How are you ignorant and illiterate if you only know one language? What makes knowing two languages make you some sort of einstein? If you know two languages, there are still dozens of major languages out there that you do *not* know. So you're not any less ignorant and illiterate than the guy who only knows one language. So he knows one out of 50 and you know two out of 50. Big deal.

      I could never really understand people who waste all the time to learn another language just to come off as elitists and impress people by saying they know another language. Maybe if I lived in Europe where I could reach twelve different languages/regions in a one day car trip - or dozens of languages/regions within a short flight. However, in 95% of America, you can fly twelve hours and still be in a country that speaks primarily english. If I fly twelve hours to the west, I'm stuck in an ocean. If I fly twelve hours to the east, I'm still in America. If I fly south, I'm in the northern parts of Mexico where english is quite prevelant (but why would I want to go to Mexico anyway??) and if I fly North, I'm in Canada which while heavily french in some parts is primarily english.

      Unlike Europeans, people on this side of the globe don't have the need for such internationalization. We live in massive (geographically speaking) countries and are mostly seperated by the rest of the world by a massive ocean. Learning a second or third language is not a matter of necessity like it may be for you guys. In fact, if you learn a second language, who are you going to speak it with? While my company is huge and has a lot of people for whom english is a second language, they all speak it very well, It's not like I have any interaction with people who speak only or mostly another language ever.

      Or are you suggesting that I should spend several years perfecting a foreign language or two so that I will be able to speak that language if I ever manage to have enough money and free time (remember, Americans don't get the mass amounts of vacation time that you guys d, either) to visit europe for two weeks in my life? If so, that seems like a lot of time wasted for a two week little jaunt to places I'll never be back to again.

      Learning languages, honestly, is time wasted.

    9. Re:Tried to read it by cozziewozzie · · Score: 2, Informative

      You make learning languages sound so difficult and horrible, and it's actually fun and interesting. Most of the world learns English as a second language, so it can't be that hard.

      If you're only interested in increasing value to your company, then you would probably think that learning languages is only for the elitists (no cash? useless!). You can never learn everything in the field of engineering either, but that doesn't mean you should stop bothering to learn anything outside the narrow scope of your field.

      Languages are the way people communicate and anything that increases your ability to communicate and understand other people and cultures improves you as a person. You might not sorely need it, but if you're not at all interested, that's tragic.

    10. Re:Tried to read it by Requiem · · Score: 1

      The large number of people who don't have oriental language sets installed on their browser is a bit sad.

      Is it? Not all of us have the time to try to muddle through websites in other languages. I'll do it in French if necessary, since I understand a little, but honestly.

    11. Re:Tried to read it by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Same thing here. I erased the localizations for Mac OS X and freed up 451MB of space but I kept the Asian font sets, so pages render correctly. I hate rectangles.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    12. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of all the good scientific work written in German. Think of all the South American literature. Think of all the Asian philosophy.

      You mean German philosophy and Asian Science, as Asian philosophy is garbage.

      That said, good luck reading Hegel, Kant, Heidegger, or Nietzsche in the original German. The first three use many technical terms which won't be in a dictionary (or will have subtley different meanings), and the later's works are much too literary for beginners. Maybe start with Schopenhauer?

      Besides, what's the point of reading scientific works in their native languages? They tend to be dull, and hence ammenable to translation. Besides, its not as if there is some sort of lack of communcation between scientists of different countries, and that Germany has made some great advance no one else knows of owing to language barriers.

    13. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For social scientists, more languages is very important.

    14. Re:Tried to read it by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Learning languages is a unique gateway into loads of new information, new literature, and other cultures. Think of all the good scientific work written in German. Think of all the South American literature. Think of all the Asian philosophy.

      Now, I see this and think, "Hm, pity it wasn't all written in English. Then I could read everything and not be bothered with choosing a language to learn and spending years mastering it before I really understood the complexities of it."

      Now, I'm not saying that learning another language is a bad thing. But I'm working on a phd and it's painfully obvious that I haven't even mastered english yet. Just saying that I, personally, have other callings. Learning a language is something I'll get to after I learn to play an instrument, master perl, grow a garden, etc. etc.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The biggest problem with learning a different language, especially in suburban America, is that even if you know how to speak a different language, you will more than likely be talking only to yourself. You can stare at a book, a computer screen, or flash cards all you want, but you won't know a language unless you can get involved in some type of IN PERSON dialog at least a few times a week.

    16. Re:Tried to read it by yintercept · · Score: 1
      Usually really great things are translated into tons of languages. If it isn't available in english, it probably wasn't worth reading.

      Yes, but none of these translations is ever pure and true to form. You really don't appreciate the dramatic differences between English translation and German original until you understand some of the profound differences in sentence structure. For example, it is possible that one of the reasons that many German philosophers prefer dialectics to syllogisms is that the German verb often comes at the end of the sentence. Such things are lost in translation.

      As for the proximity argument. That is changing. It used to be that an American would have a months travel to a land of a different language. With planes it became a days travel. Now, we are a click away from different languages.

      The fastest growing segments of the Internet and IT are outside the US at the moment...for US companies to maintain their top position, they need to learn to localize. So linguistic skills are paramount.

    17. Re:Tried to read it by cozziewozzie · · Score: 1

      Oh, I agree that you shouldn't spend all your time on languages. I think everything you mentioned is worth learning about!

      That's why I'm trying to learn as many languages as I can while I'm working on a PhD, playing instruments, mastering perl/HTML/CSS and several other things :-)

    18. Re:Tried to read it by N1KO · · Score: 1

      I think this is more of a cultural issue. The american population is very xenophobic, which isn't necessarily worse than here in Toronto. Even if people claim it's multicultural, it's really a city composed of many groups of people each having their own culture.

    19. Re:Tried to read it by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      The US isn't really xenophobic. We're just a very large country where everyone speaks the same language instead of 25 smaller countries right next to each other, each one with its own language (Europe).

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    20. Re:Tried to read it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please *whhhooooossshhhhhh* again, it makes me hot

  7. What, why? by Jade+E.+2 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Why the hell would that many people go to a website that's nothing but a bunch of question marks? (The humorless need not reply.)

    1. Re:What, why? by megaversal · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for a few hours from now when enough /.ers visit, then the people will have the question marks when nothing loads.

      --
      Sig!
    2. Re:What, why? by AnotherFreakboy · · Score: 1

      You don't seem to understand when they link to slashdot, slashdot goes down!

      --
      Why not get the real ultimate power?
    3. Re:What, why? by SandmanWAIX · · Score: 1

      I know theres a joke about Soviet Russia in there somewhere.....

    4. Re:What, why? by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Russian, Slashdot goes down on you?

      Mental images bad, very, very bad...

      --
      If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
    5. Re:What, why? by BJH · · Score: 1

      Not hardly. 2ch regularly saturates a 100Mbps connection, and has 3-5 million visits a day. /. probably gets less than a tenth of that.

  8. Re:4chan.org by megaversal · · Score: 4, Funny

    Except 4chan is geared toward porn...

    (I only know because I visit!)

    --
    Sig!
  9. Physical violence? by aidfarh · · Score: 2, Informative

    First I asked myself, "How could a web site be filled with physical violence?". Then I RTFA and became more confused, as there was no mention of any physical violence.

    Then I realised it was just an attempt by the poster to get more hype for the post by inserting illogical statements in the desciption.

    --
    There is no sig.
  10. moderation? by moxruby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It seems generally true that as a website becomes popular, a certain group of dickheads (usually males in the 12-16 age group) turn up with the goal of ruining it for everyone.

    Slashdot deals with this in a unique way by allowing the users to do the police work. This is (imo) vastly superior to having overzealous super-moderators cruising around laying down the law.

    2ch sounds like it's an order of magnitude larger than slashdot. Can any japanese users of 2ch shed light on how they deal with the "fuckwit factor"?

    1. Re:moderation? by Hobobo · · Score: 2, Informative

      RTFA - They don't.

    2. Re:moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But being a vigilante is fun!

    3. Re:moderation? by metlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It seems generally true that as a website becomes popular, a certain group of dickheads (usually males in the 12-16 age group) turn up with the goal of ruining it for everyone.

      Not really. The point is, they have their own world, just like the rest of the community.

      Think of it as the equivalent of graffiti - sure, it ruins walls and what not, but hey it's a creative outlet and a means of expressing themselves. And better this than anything else.

      And more importantly, it's called Freedom of Speech - and I really like the way Slashdot handles this.

      The point is, almost everyone feel like trolling at some point of time or the other, or atleast on some topic or the other. And when you do, you inevitably fall into the so-called fuckwit category that you mentioned.

      And quite honestly, I take offence at your choice of words - fuckwit factor? What is that supposed to mean?

      It's a forum, and people can discuss just about anything that pleases them - and on a place like Slashdot, you are given the choice of seeing what you like. Despite everything, I would not like anyone messing with the posts, no matter how shitty they are.

      There are times when I read at -1 (and quite honestly, enjoyed the trolls) and there are times when I read at +3.

      There is no one-size fits all.

      And that's one of the many reasons I like Slashdot (well, Kuro5hin is better in some respects when it comes to tolerating trolls, but I digress). Your fuckwit tolerance level changes, and you have the choice of choosing how tolerant you are.

      And finally, to answer your question - RTFA. They do not.

    4. Re:moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > This is (imo) vastly superior to having overzealous super-moderators cruising around laying down the law.

      Can it be both, like it is on Slashdot?

    5. Re:moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, and oh so fabulous result is a homogenous bunch of cliched posters making star trek jokes and talking about Linux. Most of whom are not programmers and in fact don't run Linux anyhow.

    6. Re:moderation? by Danny+Rathjens · · Score: 1
      usually males in the 12-16 age group
      I think that you vastly underestimate the amount of jerks over the age of 16, ;)
      "On average, people are mean."

      Slashdot deals with this in a unique way by allowing the users to do the police work. This is (imo) vastly superior to having overzealous super-moderators cruising around laying down the law.
      That is an interesting observation considering that it works nearly the opposite way in real life. Perhaps it has to do with the ratio of offenders to the population. In real life, that ratio is quite small and so a dedicated force to hunt them down seems to work better. Online, with so many barriers removed, the ratio of offenders seems to be a lot higher.

      Actually, I think that is wrong. People posting nonsense to annoy or harrass others is not the equivalent of a crime. It is more the equivalent of things like talking loudly in a theater or cutting in line. And we do have a moderation system in real life for things like that. It is called reputation. Even if we are somewhere with all strangers, our instincts generally make us want to look good in other people's eyes and we are also aware, even afraid, that our behaviour can make it back via gossip to whomever we do care about.

    7. Re:moderation? by spacecowboy420 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There was a time in the not so distant past when I too enjoyed the guilty pleasure of troll browsing. I loved watching someone get hooked by an elaborate post that was just off enough to alert a discerning browser to the trollness of the post. It was/is my understanding that an effective "troll" is one that creates a response. I thought it was a wonderful way to teach n00b5 to think before they post, kind of knee jerk suppresion training.

      Then came the crap flood "trolls". See, a finely crafted troll is one that causes me to chuckle guiltily about it - something you can appreciate the thought and, well, the art of. When GNAA started their crap flood campaign, I was forced to raise me browse level - for that I am saddened. I really miss the offtopic trolls that made me laugh so much so many times.

      Freedom of speech is one thing, I could handle one requisite GNAA post per story - great, you said your piece. Crapflooding is no longer speaking, it is bothersome and witless.

      --
      ymmv
    8. Re:moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you! You mother fucking shithead faggot nigger!

      (Get it? hahahah... ah nevermind.)

    9. Re:moderation? by moxruby · · Score: 1

      Agreed.

      I enjoy a quality troll as much as the next man, but the sad reality is that most of the rubbish rated as "troll" is nothing more than crapflooding.

      I firmly believe that slashcode should merge the "troll" and "flamebait" moderation and add a "crapflood" moderation.

      I could then give -6 to all crapfloods and +1 to everything else.

    10. Re:moderation? by Phidoux · · Score: 1

      How true! And it's about time that a few more /.ers realised this.

    11. Re:moderation? by BJH · · Score: 1

      Several ways:

      1) 2ch has a select group of users who can delete posts.
      2) Posters can be blocked by IP address.
      3) 2ch allows what they call "boards" (a collection of related "threads" - a thread is the equivalent of a Slashdot story, with a maximum of 1000 posts) to block posts from hosts with open proxies.
      4) Some boards are moderated, in the sense that only specific users (called "journalists") can create new threads, thereby blocking thread spammers (people who create large numbers of new threads).

      They have a number of other rather neat features as well, but it is pretty chaotic. Take a look at their bandwidth usage - during their busiest periods, they use over 100Mbps of bandwidth a second, from text-only posting!

    12. Re:moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you. I'm 26.

    13. Re:moderation? by wheany · · Score: 1

      Normal person + Anonymity + Audience = Total Fuckwad.

      PA

  11. 2ch is great by dirtsurfer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Most importantly, it's the best place in the world for a constant stream of pics of cute japanese girls :D

    1. Re:2ch is great by omicronish · · Score: 1

      I would be very happy if you could paste links to pages on 2ch containing pictures of said cute Japanese girls, as I cannot read Japanese.

    2. Re:2ch is great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 名前:名無し&# 12373;ん@女性魂&nbs p; :04/05/10 04:35 ID:3k1X8X81
      空 気 嫁
      &nbs p;       /,.ァ、\
           ( ノo o ) )  
            )ヽ ◎/(.   
          (/.(・)(・)\&#122 88;
          (/| x |\&#65289 ;
          &#1228 8; ( ヽノ
      &nbs p;        ノ >ノ  ヒタヒ& #65408;
        三  し&# 65333;

  12. Another News Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Here's an article to accompany this story. Plus no need to register with NYT. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/ 2001923719_japannet09.html

  13. Those wacky Japs! by Mordant · · Score: 1

    Venting their frustrations anonymously on a Web-based bulletin-board system? Who would'a thunk it?

    What will they think of, next?!

    1. Re:Those wacky Japs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol!

    2. Re:Those wacky Japs! by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

      There's more to it than that.

      Imagine a web forum the size of the alt.hierarchy in usenet, with years of history, "culture", and about 50,000,000 in jokes.

      That's 2ch. It's freaking huge in Japan. As big as Slashdot is amongst English speaking nerds, 2ch is with Japanese nerds.

      That's not even mentioning the ascii art, the memes, etc.

    3. Re:Those wacky Japs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That's not even mentioning the ascii art, the memes, etc.

      so how long till we get Pedo-Bear ascii art on Slashdot?

    4. Re:Those wacky Japs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9/5 BUKI BUKI NEVAR FORGET

      pedo bear can turn on a dime, macrosszero style

    5. Re:Those wacky Japs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GEN FUKUNAGA invades Suulashudotto!!

    6. Re:Those wacky Japs! by orac2 · · Score: 1

      a Web-based bulletin-board system? Who would'a thunk it?

      You laugh now, but in ten years time you'll be venting on a Japanese-made bulletin-board: it'll be smaller, faster, cheaper and in stereo.

      --
      "Just once, I'd like to meet an alien menace that wasn't immune to bullets." -- The Brigadier, Dr. Who
    7. Re:Those wacky Japs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Venting their frustrations anonymously on a Web-based bulletin-board system? Who would'a thunk it?
      >
      >What will they think of, next?!

      Fucking market's in the goddamn tank again, I'm pissed off, and you ask me what the fuck the wacky Japs'll come up with next? Well, fuck. I don't know. How the hell am I supposed to know what the FUCK THE WACKY JAPS'LL COME UP WITH NEXT?

      Hey, that felt pretty good.

      So where the fuck's my goddamn venture funding? Can we at least patent this "method for anonymous venting of frustration on a Web-based bulletin-board system" stuff and extort royalties out of 2ch and VA Software by threatening to sue the fuck out of them?

  14. Uhh, it's in japanese by t0qer · · Score: 1

    Maybe I should have done the NYT registration thing, and read the article, but the board is in japanese!

    I work with japanese, and I understand a few words, but I just can't see what the hubbub about this article on a japanese board that I can't even read is.

    Here is a very active forum of trolls and flames in english if anyone is interested.

    1. Re:Uhh, it's in japanese by badasscat · · Score: 1

      Maybe I should have done the NYT registration thing, and read the article, but the board is in japanese!

      Uh, yeah. Kind of the point. This is a story about how a culture other than ours is using the internet for emotional release.

      I work with japanese, and I understand a few words, but I just can't see what the hubbub about this article on a japanese board that I can't even read is.

      Well, why don't you ask the people you work with? Maybe it would help you understand them a little better, which is the reason why articles such as this one are written. I'd think someone who apparently works at/for a karaoke bar would be a little more open-minded about other cultures. Not every article here exists to comment on your life personally.

      That said, I do think articles like this are born out of a sort of well-intentioned naivete - the assumption being that people in other cultures should naturally be different than us, and it's somehow surprising and newsworthy when we learn they're not. It shouldn't be surprising that they would use internet forums in the same way we do. They do most things in the same way we do; they're a modern, technologically and socially advanced country with a political and economic infrastructure largely built by the United States.

      But still, if this article makes western tech-heads realize that Japanese tech-heads are really pretty much the same as they are, I guess it's accomplished something.

  15. Registration Free Link by karmatic · · Score: 4, Informative

    Reg Free Link here .

    They are making this harder to do...

    1. Re:Registration Free Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      How did you get that link? I was trying to make my own reg free link, and got it by going to Google news,
      and searching for the article but it just forwarded me to the ny times site without any additions to the html link.

      I noticed however that the 3 things you need are the partner (=google, or =slashdot?), an ex=(something,
      maybe related to the partner?), an en=(i don't know how you get this?) and an ei=5062

      How?

    2. Re:Registration Free Link by karmatic · · Score: 1

      Don't want to give away my karma-whoring tips, but I will anyway.

      Steps:
      1) Go to site, login. Look at page title.
      2) Go to google news, search for title
      3) Don't click the First link above the main search results, go down 2 lines to where the link is repeated. Replace partner=GOOGLE with partner=SLASHDOT, just in case their admins ever check the log.

      Have fun. It took me about 5 minutes of searching to figure this one out. I even tried doing a google redirect - it won't work.

    3. Re:Registration Free Link by karmatic · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hey, I found an even better, faster way to do this. Drop me a line at my URL, and I'll tell you how to do it.

      No, I won't share it here.

    4. Re:Registration Free Link by shanen · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reg-free link. Registration won't even work with Opera through my Italian proxy server. Also, the NY Times is getting so weak that I'd have given up without your simplified link. Now regarding the actual content...

      I've known about ni-channeru for a while, but the Japanese language as used there is mostly too difficult for me to follow. I judge it more by the reactions of my Japanese friends when I ask them about it, and their reactions are pretty weird. Overall, I think most of them regard it as a kind of national embarrassment--but some of them must be using it. The article basically meshes with what little I think I know. It must be wrong.

      Die, NY Times!

      --
      Freedom = (Meaningful - Coerced) Choice != (Speech | Beer^2), and sad sock puppets' bad mods avail them naught.
    5. Re:Registration Free Link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      poo face.

  16. Slashdot japan by dncsky1530 · · Score: 1, Informative
    Slashdot has a japanese counterpart, The stories get lots of comments almost as many as this slashdot.

    "Although about 20 Web sites attract more users than Channel 2, based on March ratings from NetRatings Japan, most of the others are portal or retail sites; and while Yahoo Japan also runs a bulletin board, it is not considered as influential as Channel 2"

    I should think Slashdot would be pretty influential, especially in such a tech heavy society.

    1. Re:Slashdot japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahahahahahahaha....
      Yeah right....
      Slashdot does not have a big following in mainstream Japan.

      Your idea that Japan is "tech heavy" is laughable.

      Go fucking live there for a while you maroon.
      What a bunch of fucking anime pedo freaks you are...

  17. Re:4chan.org by zalas · · Score: 0, Redundant

    4chan is mainly an image board, and yes a lot of the images are pornographic in nature. 2chan is mostly text based, with some image boards scattered here and there.

  18. Reg Free Link by rffmna · · Score: 0, Redundant
    --
    -------
    FM Clan
    1. Re:Reg Free Link by School_HK · · Score: 1

      That's good. Google is a partner.

  19. There are ... by oddmake · · Score: 1

    nerd-full boards at 2ch.
    I found an answer about some question about Debian system.

  20. Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    ..."ni-channeru," as it is called there, has become part of Japan's everyday culture as no other Web site has.

    I've lived in Japan since 1999, in the technology community (such as it is...), and I have never heard of this site until now, never even heard it referenced on TV or in print.

    And I have seen Slashdot referenced on newshows and in print.

    1. Re:Never heard of it.... by adochan · · Score: 1

      I've been in Japan for several years as well, and have seen references in several shuukanshi, but more clearly, if you go to your average internet cafe, more than likely you will see a large number of people reading/writing on 2ch if you look around on your way to your own cubicle.
      Ask around, I'm quite sure Japanese people around you have either heard of 2ch or visit it themselves.

    2. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Must not spend any time around the Japanese workers then. 2chan is the place. File Sharing with "Winny" would never have been the same without it either. It's also especially useful if you are thinking of moving to a new (tech) company to find the latest dirt on them and has been since before I started using it in 2001. Of course, filtering out Japanese posts can be a pain, but that's the price you pay for info unavilible anywhere else.

    3. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you don't know Morning Musume either.

    4. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only people who've heard of Morning Musume are teenage girls and loli-luvin businessmen.

    5. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The only people who've heard of Morning
      > Musume are teenage girls and loli-luvin
      > businessmen.

      So, what line of business are you in...?

    6. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm the traveling salesman from all those farmer's daughter jokes.

    7. Re:Never heard of it.... by achurch · · Score: 1

      I've lived in Japan since 1999, in the technology community (such as it is...), and I have never heard of this site until now, never even heard it referenced on TV or in print.

      Either you're lying, or you're so focused on maintaining your little bubble of American-ness that you might as well not be in Japan at all. 2ch is all over the place, and was even mentioned in national newspapers multiple times recently.

      Thanks for playing, better luck next time.

    8. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Summary: You've spent the last 15 years in Japan using only English.

      Sorry, but YOU FAIL IT!!!

    9. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So, what line of business are you in...?

      Oh I'm open for business. Buisness of kicking your ass. And let me tell you, buisness is booming.

    10. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Summary: You've spent the last 15 years in Japan using only English.

      Sorry, but YOU FAIL IT!!!


      And apparently you fail arithmetic. 2004 - 1999 != 15.

    11. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haw. You're right. I saw the "19xx" and for some reason assumed he'd been there for a year more than me (1990 - present day). Brain fart.

    12. Re:Never heard of it.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I didn't...

  21. Vocabulary Mapping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    slashdot -> 2ch
    subscriber -> 1
    first post -> 2get!

  22. Wikipeda article by Kusunose · · Score: 5, Informative

    2ch

    1. Re:Wikipeda article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nurupo!

    2. Re:Wikipeda article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GATSU!>>9104644

    3. Re:Wikipeda article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  23. Context & Japanese Social Habits by Fedhax · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For those of us that are on a continent that ends with "America" or lives in Europe, this idea may not seem new or even novel. For us, dealing with Trolls and Frames are just annoying necessary evils for communicating in a broad, public forum. We deal with it ( Ignore, Moderate, Meta-moderate, etc ), and keep moving forward.

    Now, to say that Japan, and its society, resembles nothing like Western cultures is a massive understatement. In that culture, being able to speak your mind, in a raw form, can be dangerous to your reputation which affects your career, finances, and relationships, and the last thing a Japanese person wants is to be alienated from the Group. The issues of Tatemae and Honne cover this social restraint of tactful to the group and honest in private, among other aspects of Japanese life.

    Basically, this public, anonymous forum gives Japanese people the ability ( It is still a novelty to most of them, I would imagine ) to act "normal": Polite, Helpful, Insight, Confrontational, Insulting, Argumentative, etc. These free-flowing interactions are just not acceptable in a Japanese public setting. In the end, if you know the context of the culture ( I have a little insight into it, but I am sure other /. with more experience in Japan than I can pick up where I leave off. ), this bulletin board is a very big deal.

    1. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by bkhl · · Score: 1

      Basically, this public, anonymous forum gives Japanese people the ability ( It is still a novelty to most of them, I would imagine ) to act "normal"

      You are very liberal with the use of the word "normal" here (quotes or no quotes). What's normal in your society isn't necessarily in Japan, or wherever.

    2. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, maybe all the frustrated people I deal with during my daily life in Japan will vent on this site, instead of reving their motorbike as loud as possible as they slowly cruise down an otherwise quiet street, or modifying their car to be extra loud and driving late at night to annoy as many people as possible. Or how about tailgating me all the way home because they don't like my driving (not that that's happened a bunch of times or nothing), muttering racial slurs on the subway that they assume my gaijin ears can't understand, or giving me mean looks at the hot spring because they can't believe ol' whitey would show his face there ... hey at least I didn't try to go to the onsen with the "no foreigners allowed" sign ... yeah, Japanese people didn't have any way to vent their anger until this dude made this site.

    3. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by solferino · · Score: 1
      Now, to say that Japan, and its society, resembles nothing like Western cultures is a massive understatement.

      yeah, like they actually employ understatement in communication rather than using the word to simply further inflate content-free rhetoric like the sample of yrs quoted above - (Hey let's bold and italicise my pearls of wisdom just to make sure no-one misses them)

    4. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Alsee · · Score: 1

      What's normal in your society isn't necessarily in Japan

      As I read it, that is exactly why he put 'normal' in quotes. He was reffering to the likely reader's understanding of normal and precicely highlighting the relativity of that interpretation.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by netwiz · · Score: 1

      actually, I thought that he posted a rather good summation of the NYT article liked above.

      ah, but you're trolling...

    6. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by bkhl · · Score: 1

      Sure. What I don't get is why it would automatically be good that japanese people can behave like north american people.

      The japanese system of politeness is just different, not worse. You just happen to be blind the restrictions in your own culture.

    7. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, do you actually live in Japan? I think your whole post is a massive OVERstatement of the differences between Japanese and American culture.

      Sure, in work and anonymous public settings there is a pressure to be polite, but if you watch Japanese people (especially young ones) talk to family and friends they are pretty much like us (by that I mean Americans). That is in their close knit group of friends they can be confrontational, insulting, argumentative, etc.

      I dont see many Americans going around talking to strangers about their personal problems, issues, etc either btw.

      I am assuming you are not Japanese. I don't know what sort of experiences you had in Japan, but I would make a WAG and say the Japanese folks you are in contact with don't consider you to be a close friend, so you are only experiencing the polite but standoffish tatemae side. Get to know Japanese folks better and believe me you'll start hearing their honne loud and clear

    8. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not sure if you will ever read this comment, but heck, I'm willing to respond:

      No, I am not Japanese, but you also talk about not knowing what sort of experiences I had in Japan. Feel free to actually read over my blog to get a grasp/understanding of my PoV of Japanese Life.

      My limited experience in Japan turned out to be living, unknowingly at the time, in a Douwa among the 'yotsu', 'hinin', 'burakumin', etc of Japan. Needless to say, for a gaijin to find himself in such a situation put me well into the world of standoffish Tatemae among the real/proper side of most Japanese people. Hell, it wasn't until I returned to my home country that I had a Japanese acquaintance provide the reason for my treatment.

      Yes, I think my experience with the Land of the Rising Sun was a tad unusual for gaigokujin.

    9. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heheh up till the part you mention gaijin and onsen I thought you were talking about the US :)

      Regardless, I agree with you, the Japanese are just as small-minded, xenophobic, and plain rude to foreigners as we are.

    10. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      From all accounts I've read, the Japanese are far more xenophobic and small-minded, but less rude, about foreigners than most of the United States.

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    11. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the perfect example of the dangers of over generalizing.

      In some ways the Japanese are more xenophobic, but in others, they embrace foreign things/foreigners to an almost mania. It all depends on the thing/person.

      A Japanese person would think nothing of watching American films, read American books (translated or not), and trying to speak English. How many Americans could care less of "foreign films", subtitles, foreign books, and trying to learn another language?

      In terms of people, caucasians are highly revered in Japan, while other Asians, African/African Americans, etc are looked upon as either savages or just plain trash.

      If I were to generalize about us Americans, I would say we are more of an equal opportunity foreigner hater, though then again we probably do look at Europeans differently than Asians/Africans.

    12. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The japanese system of politeness is just different, not worse. You just happen to be blind the restrictions in your own culture.

      You seem to be reading things I have not said. Where did I say anything was better or worse?

      The way I read hispost was that 'normal' was in quotes because our norms are not a real normal, merely A normal, and that Japanese norms are another just as valid definition of normal.

      Each culture has its good points and bad points. What *is* good is cultural exploration and exchange in both directions. The fact that millions of Japanese are flocking to 2ch seems to indicate that at least some of them see it as a good thing.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    13. Re:Context & Japanese Social Habits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a different AC but here goes...

      What gave you away as a non-Japanese was that you did not seem to realise the letting-off-steam functions of beer drinking in Japan. There are certain circumstances where you are indeed allowed to say exactly what is on your mind and not mince your words either. Parts of teh rules, if you wish, is that the ones you are talking to should pay attention with no recrimination afterwards.

      I lived and worked in Japan. I saw this in action.

      And yes, culture in japan is different from that of the US. Making comparisons is counter productive; rather learn to observe what it is, how it operates.

  24. Battle Royale by Siener · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I must say, this article does not seem much more than an excuse to get Battle Royale mentioned on slashdot's front page. For those of you not in the know, it's a Japanese movie about a class of 9th graders who have to kill each other in a government organised game show.

    Unfortunately for all the American slashdotters, it has never been released in the US (not even on VHS or DVD), and probably will never be. There have been many debates on why exactly this is. I know only one thing, if I were the distributor, I would want to keep it out of the US. The profits will not be worth the moral outrage it will cause.

    Bottom line is that it is a great movie, and if you have the chance, you should watch it.

    1. Re:Battle Royale by JazzXP · · Score: 1

      Sounds very similar to a movie released a few years back called Series 7.

    2. Re:Battle Royale by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or, if you're in the UK, watch Channel 4 at 11pm tonight (Monday 10th). They're showing it.

    3. Re:Battle Royale by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 1

      I have seen the first one, but not the sequel "Battle Royale 2"

      Freaky movie. On an island where everyone tries to kill each other, it would be too cliche and spoiling of me to tell you what kind of person survives.

      Oh shit, now I've done it...

      --
      READY.
      PRINT ""+-0
    4. Re:Battle Royale by foniksonik · · Score: 1

      Did it happen to be released right after the Columbine, CO killings? If so then you have your answer.

      Americans really responded to news of junior high kids serially massacreing their fellow students.

      Has anything like it happened in Japan or is it all an imaginary situation, possibly based on the prozac induced insanity that happened in our own backyard?

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    5. Re:Battle Royale by paul248 · · Score: 1

      Warning: don't watch the sequel, even if you can get it for free. Here's pretty much the whole plot: Gunfire, somebody dies, somebody else dies, repeat.

      The first one was awesome though.

    6. Re:Battle Royale by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      I have seen the first one, but not the sequel "Battle Royale 2"

      Don't bother with the sequel. It's unutterable crap, skipping character development and human interest in favour of bloodshed. And since it's playing to an audience that saw Battle Royale and then came back for more, it decides that the mass slaughter of children isn't going to shock anyone - so instead we have the celebration of international terrorism. How imaginative.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    7. Re:Battle Royale by darkewolf · · Score: 1

      Its an interesting film with a fairly positive outcome at the end. People willing to give their own life for their loved ones.

      Got good release here in Australia though. And BR2 is doing the same I think.

      --
      "That is not dead which can eternal lie...."
      Nimheil
    8. Re:Battle Royale by scosol · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just FYI- I and a lot of people I know have picked up the NTSC director's cut on ebay :)

      Moral outrage?
      Have you seen "Ichi The Killer"?
      Fry's sells that for fucks sake!

      --
      I browse at +5 Flamebait- moderation for all or moderation for none.
    9. Re:Battle Royale by MalachiConstant · · Score: 1
      I haven't seen Battle Royale, but there's a good american take on this general idea called Series 7. It's about a government sanctioned gameshow where random people are given a gun and told that they are on the show. After that they have to kill the other contestants or be killed. The last survivor gets to continue to the next series.

      It's a very shocking movie, the violence is very realistic, it's shot on video and looks like any other reality show. It reminded me of Man Bites Dog for it's disturbing depictions of murder. Not exactly a date movie.

    10. Re:Battle Royale by Siener · · Score: 1
      I haven't seen Battle Royale, but there's a good american take on this general idea called Series 7.

      The idea is very much the same, but Series 7 lacks one thing that makes Battle Royale so disturbing and controversial: In Battle Royale it's 14-15 year old school kids killing each other, not adults.

    11. Re:Battle Royale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the big deal?

      Ever read the book Lord of the Flies? Or seen the movie from about ten years back? Bunch of little kids (teenagers at the most, but most probably pre-teen) on an island fighting to survive. Hell, one kid even crushes another's skull in a very brutal and disgusting scene with a huge boulder. And in another, some kids are stabbed with stakes.

      Battle Royale *yawn*.

    12. Re:Battle Royale by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      I've always thought that, as with many many Japanese films, if you imagine that it's a message about America, (weather or not it's actually intended to be) you'll get an interesting viewpoint.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    13. Re:Battle Royale by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Not exactly a date movie.

      Depends who you date.

      That response could be a simple flip joke, but actually I'm thinking of one girl I dated in particular. She had a brain and a very dark and twisted sense of humor (definite pluses in my book). One day we sat around talking - in a little village cemetary from the 1800's. She brought me there. She pointed out her favorite headstone with some poetry she liked.

      My motto: "Normal people are boring. I don't have many boring friends." She was cool, she was twisted, she was interesting. Battle Royale sounds like it would have been an excellent date movie :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    14. Re:Battle Royale by khallow · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately for all the American slashdotters, it has never been released in the US (not even on VHS or DVD), and probably will never be. There have been many debates on why exactly this is. I know only one thing, if I were the distributor, I would want to keep it out of the US. The profits will not be worth the moral outrage it will cause.

      I guess there's a first for everything. I haven't seen the movie, but the blurb doesn't sound too bad. So what makes it morally outrageous in your opinion?

    15. Re:Battle Royale by Mannerism · · Score: 1

      You're trolling, but I'll bite.

      Comparisons between Lord of the Flies and BR are inevitable but not entirely justified. Without writing an essay, here's my point of view. Golding was writing about man's inherently primal nature and the conflict between it and civilized society. BR is satirical, contemporary social criticism that examines how youth deal with the rules that society forces upon them.

    16. Re:Battle Royale by LazyBoy · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately for all the American slashdotters, it has never been released in the US (not even on VHS or DVD), and probably will never be.
      Lots of import versions are available. Poker Industries has several versions. There are probably lots of others places to get it including ebay and suprnova.
      --

      If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.

    17. Re:Battle Royale by N1KO · · Score: 1

      The second one is much worse than the first if you take it seriously. Otherwise it's one of the funniest movies ever.

    18. Re:Battle Royale by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Uhhh ok. Rented it from blockbuster last night. Along with suicide club. Rated R. It was on VHS.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    19. Re:Battle Royale by Siener · · Score: 1

      I guess there's a first for everything. I haven't seen the movie, but the blurb doesn't sound too bad. So what makes it morally outrageous in your opinion?
      I don't think there's anything wrong with the movie morally. I was making a comment about the US public. They seem to be a bit sensitive about depictions of kids killing each other, for fairly obvious reasons.

    20. Re:Battle Royale by Siener · · Score: 1

      Ever read the book Lord of the Flies? Or seen the movie from about ten years back?

      I've read the book and I've seen the movie. Battle Royale is different for (at least) 3 reasons.
      1. BR is WAY more violent
      2. In BR the kids are given no choice about being violent. They are given weapons and told to kill each other or die.
      3. Lord of the Flies was released before Columbine. It shouldn't make a difference, but it does.

      Battle Royale isn't better, it's just different. Lord of the Flies is an absolute classic. Watch/read both.

      Interestingly enough, the two stories have very different moral outlooks and surprisingly enough, BR has the more positive one.

  25. NYT sensationalism by ChronoWiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Didn't the NYT just do a article about the wild west, irc which turned out to be utter sensationalist crap. Why should we believe this, or even read a word of it? Not to mention that none of us can actually read EITHER article without a little/lot of effort respectively (finding google link/learning nihongo).

    1. Re:NYT sensationalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to agree, time and again the NYT is proven to be a load of shit and yet it is regarded as some sort of "premier" news source. No, it isn't. And no, it's not cool to keep posting news from ONE source again and again, let alone a source that requires registration.

      examples;

      Australia- The Age
      UK - Guardian, BBC

      How often are these papers referenced too in comparison to the NYTs? And they don't have the slurr of being American gutter trash media.

      I am sorry, I have to troll this, it is not a prestige paper, it is a load of shit and the rest of the world laughs at you and the fact that you think its content is worth registration.

  26. Re:We have that in America (and rest of world) too by cujo_1111 · · Score: 1

    NNTP servers for all us old farts...

    --
    If I point out that you are incorrect, making me a foe does not make you any more correct.
  27. The big deal by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The big deal about this board is that Japanese people very rarely vent angrily in public life. In fact, IMHO they generally don't say a heck of a lot at all.

    Anyway, considering I work in pretty much an all Japanese office, *occasionally* there will be personal misunderstandings. Back home we'd probably have an argument to clear the air to find out where people stand, so something can be done about it. Over here, for the sake of personal feelings, you can't tell incompetant workers outright that they are doing a shitty job, or somesuch.

    Over here, personal disagreements just get sat on and when people have disputes, rather than talk about it to fix it, they just never end up talking to that person again. Or if they do talk, it's under the cover of being insincerely "nice". This is just so the peace is not disturbed.

    I guess this is what happens when you adhere to the "If you haven't got anything nice to say, say nothing" approach. You never get to the bottom of anything, and you never find out what other people are really thinking.

    It means that Japan is a very safe society (nobody really verbally or physically attacks anyone here).... but all these negative emotions get pent up.

    Anyway, one day I noticed that some Japanese co-workers were ignoring me for some reason (which was completely out of character). I tried to ask what the matter was, but they said nothing.
    Later on I googlesearched my name and found a messageboard post with my name mentioned. It turned out that one of those workers was venting about something I said at work, under a nickname on some private message-board.

    Needless to say, this pissed me off... but that's the Japanese for you. They'll never tell you anything to your face, even each other, but 2ch can tell you everything.

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
    1. Re:The big deal by miu · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Over here, personal disagreements just get sat on and when people have disputes, rather than talk about it to fix it, they just never end up talking to that person again. Or if they do talk, it's under the cover of being insincerely "nice". This is just so the peace is not disturbed.

      And this is different from American corporate culture how?

      People gossip, form alliances, backstab, bully, and snub here in the US too. A showdown or heart to heart to resolve differences is actually fairly rare in any office, it's more likely that a person will silently become your enemy and never show it until they have a chance to screw you over.

      Sure the Japanese are different, but so is every other country. I think too much credence is still given to the "inscrutable oriental" image.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    2. Re:The big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the West it's called "being a two faced bastard". That's very Nihon-gin.

    3. Re:The big deal by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 1

      But a showdown or heart to heart is more likely to happen in the west than it is here. At least I've seen them happen there from time to time, but never in Japan.

      --
      READY.
      PRINT ""+-0
    4. Re:The big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a stupid, fat, lazy-assed, overpaid IT loser who doesn't have half the skills of what young Japanese are bringing to IT shops these days. The days of the competent gaijin earning 6 figure$ (8 figureY) incomes are OVER, and you're just riding the coattails know that Japanese companies don't typically lay people off due to incompetence.

      Enjoy it while you can, I guess.

    5. Re:The big deal by nikster · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sure the Japanese are different, but so is every other country.

      dude, you have not worked in germany.

      the way criticism is delivered differs substantially.

      america uses the hamburger tactic: criticism (the meat) is wrapped in sweet talk and encouragement (the bun). in germany, it's just the meat. in japan, just bun.

      if you do something good in america, they will make you think you just achieved the greatest thing in the world, whereas in germany you get a dry "not bad" and that will be the end of it.

      when there is a successful project, there will be own-shoulder-padding to no end in america whereas in germany they will focus on what hasn't worked and could be done better.

      to americans, the germans just seem blunt to the point of being insulting... and to germans, the americans seem to be on prozac...

      from what i have seen in aisa is that - for example - they will never say "no" to a higher-up, whereas in germany and america it's expected (at least in my industry) and managers rely on that as valuable feedback. e.g. in asia you will not point out problems that you see with your boss' suggestion. even if you know you can't possibly do it you will keep silent and try your best...

    6. Re:The big deal by ignavus · · Score: 1

      and to germans, the americans seem to be on prozac

      Well, they are, aren't they?

      They keep sending me emails to buy some.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    7. Re:The big deal by It's+all+Krista's+Fa · · Score: 1

      So that explains why the German guys I've spoken to seem to react to praise like it was crack.

      --
      It's all Krista's Fault.
    8. Re:The big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. I am just about the only American who is not on it! (or something similar under a different name)

  28. /. reduced to leeching stories from Channel 9??? by psykocrime · · Score: 1, Troll

    So much for the supposed anti-microsoft bias of Slashdot! This story appears to be taken straight from a Microsoft website.

    So I guess all the folks who think Slashdot is nothing but a bunch of M$ hating Linux fan-boys can go back in the closet now. Sadly, only to be replaced by a new crew crowing about how /. has sold out to the Evil Empire...

    --
    // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
  29. Been There, Done That... by daitengu · · Score: 1, Troll

    About 10 years ago or so, this would have been called FidoNet" FidoNet is now still alive, but is mostly just one large Flame War. It's a shame that they're using the web for this, as Zone 6 (Asia) is down to about 20 some members.

  30. why sites like these are appearing now by Spatula+Sam · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I think the article greatly exagerates both the audience and the importance of this website. I live in Japan, and travel in fairly geeky circles, but none of my Japanese friends in IT had heard of the website. I also frequently read the newspapers and occasionally the tabloids, but I haven't seen it mentioned there either.

    It's true that there haven't been many successful "web communities" in Japan until now (unless, of course, you count the sex sites), and most internet usage here has been business oriented or mapquest-style information searches (and of course email). However, I would suggest that was not due to any fundamental difference in Japanese society, but rather to the fact that until the recent expansion of Japanese broadband options, almost all Japanese internet access was dial-up. And in Japan, dial-up access means an expensive per-minute charge. So it's only natural that until recently most Japanese internet users would limit their use to fairly non-timeconsuming activities. After all, we all know what a waste of time Slashdot can be.

    But man, that sites a mess. It makes this site seem like a super-organized fountain of relevant comentary. Somebody should point him to slash.

    1. Re:why sites like these are appearing now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Haven't you heared about this site? You are still Gaijin. They always try to be nice to Gaijin.

    2. Re:why sites like these are appearing now by Himajin2000 · · Score: 1

      2ch, despite its popularity, is still considered an underground site. Its users are generally otaku to a certain degree, and 2channeler are often considered "haijin" (losers who spend all their time devoted to something essentially worthless).

      For this reason most straight-laced IT people would not be caught dead posting there. It isn't a place that encourages serious, in-depth discussion, and new visitors are often baffled by the 2ch slang.

      There is however no denying the importance of the site as an place for users to share info and blow off steam. Imagine Slashdot, with no moderation, and nobody triple-checking their posts to make sure they haven't made any "noob-slips."

    3. Re:why sites like these are appearing now by BJH · · Score: 1

      Your Japanese friends are lying to you.
      Articles about 2ch appear on Yahoo Japan news about every other day, for God's sake.

      As for 2ch being a mess, only newcomers use browsers - the site actually has an internal format which is more efficient than HTML, and which can be used by specialised reader software to organise it in better ways than can be done in a browser interface.

      There's even reader software written in XUL for Mozilla, and Lisp for Emacs.

    4. Re:why sites like these are appearing now by ProfitElijah · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I think the article greatly exagerates both the audience and the importance of this website.

      I think you greatly overestimate the overlap between your geek circles and otaku (geek) circles. I also live in Japan, but don't move in geeky circles, rather creative ones. Everyone knows ni-channeru because it's one of the central hubs of creativity.

      As anyone who has lived here knows, the scenes in Japan are greatly splintered, and every scene has its own subcultures. In London, someone would say she's a goth. In Japan, the same person might be 'between cyber and lolita.' In the USA, you might be a geek. In Japan, you might be otaku, but you might be a food otaku, a PC otaku, a music otaku, a design otaku etc etc. Ni-channeru is the one place everyone can congregate and mix with those outside their group. As people have said it's also about the only place (apart from their cars) where Japanese will freely demonstrate their true feelings.

      If you think the site is a mess, it's a matter of perspective. Ignoring the fact that almost all Japanese websites are hideous throwbacks to 1998, the chaos of ni-channeru is part of the environment, and it helps the community remain unsplintered.

  31. Re:This is NOT off-topic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All you mod points are belong to us.

  32. Verbal violence in Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "wQáñËéx ÁĽHÆû"

    I wonder if that is kind of like "#%#& %&"/%!/!#% #%!"/4#!("

    %/# it I say :)

  33. Blame the parsing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In english it might be read as self-abuse. IYKWIM.

  34. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Fuck you. You'd better go donate now.

    Asshole.

  35. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    more like geared towards pedophiles.

  36. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's http://www.4chan.net, you say? Perhaps everyone should check out this awesome site right now!

    http://www.4chan.net is great!

  37. The best thing about 2-channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... is all the 2ch ascii art flash movies

    Can't give you most links now, but I can tell you ones I liked most:

    http://yoga.at.infoseek.co.jp/index_e.html -
    Kikkoman sauce fights!

    c-song.swf - A singing cat. Originally all the cats were ascii-art, then redrawn again with photoshop.

    yamanishi.swf - Gumpei Yokoi story. A story about the inventor of Gameboy Advance being unjustly kicked out from Nintendo. Nostalgia.

    seku_su.swf - What this cat really wants is "se"kusu, but he ends always up asking for other words with "se". Full of the wonderful 2ch ascii art.

    wnupld009.swf - Shaolin Soccer in ascii art.

    morning.swf - Sou-Da, we're alive! If you like jpop, you will like this ascii art version of a jpop song :D

    Please note: every link I found before now are closed, so these movies are present only on my hard disk and on obscure pages full of kanjis. Suit yourself ;)

    1. Re:The best thing about 2-channel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll be an anonymous coward here (just like half the users on 2ch!).

      Most of the flash animations above can be found on websites like albinoblachsheep, newgrounds, and various filesharing places.

      Sorry, you fail. :)

    2. Re:The best thing about 2-channel by Dahan · · Score: 1
  38. Anyone else think it was kind of funny by absquatulatrix · · Score: 1

    that while the article waxes hyperbole about how revolutionary and transformative this is, the site's founder is quoted as saying he's gotten bored of it?

  39. Re:This is NOT off-topic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No idea - but I've stopped bothering to post under my account name. The moderators just don't seem to be very bright and have a lot of trouble telling the diference between on and off topics nowadays.

    Not to mention the fact that my karma took a dive for no good reason whatsoever. Of course, if you complained, you'd just be modded down anyhow.

    I mean if this was really "news for nerds", it would have news and there would be nerds. Instead it's more like "hype and pseudo science" over moderated by teenagers who like Star Trek.

  40. uh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    While you can also find useful info such as dinner recipes there, it's almost like Battle Royale came into life as a web site, filled with verbal and physical violence backed by pseudo anonymity.

    Except for the fact that 2ch is nothing at all like Battle Royale. Nobody dies on 2ch and nobody was anonymous in Battle Royale. Nice try there, skippy.

  41. [OT] Why are Japanese websites so ugly? by gilgongo · · Score: 1

    Why is it that whenever I go to a Japanese website, it looks like it was made in 1993? Really - frames, rectangular pixellated graphics slapped around, garish/nutty backgrounds. Urgh.

    --
    "And the meaning of words; when they cease to function; when will it start worrying you?"
  42. Show me, show you! by djshiawase · · Score: 2, Informative
    2ch is, of course, where Kikkoman was invented.

    It's been a great source of material for Japanese assignments over the years, a place where youth vent about society over there.

    Slashdot is big, but it's not on the scale of 2ch. It's a pity it's so poorly organised. Trying to find information without using a search engine is practically useless at 2ch.

    But as long as they keep creating things like Kikkoman, 2ch will keep popping up here in the west!

    --
    they made me do it
  43. read to the end of the article by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful
    best part:
    On Friday, Mr. Nishimura said he paid $20,000 a month to a company in Palo Alto, Calif., to provide a host for the Web site. With the advertisements, Mr. Nishimura said he managed to break even.

    In keeping with his detachment, Mr. Nishimura said he was bored with his Web site and did not believe it was worth enough to attract buyers. Asked about Channel 2's role in Japanese society, he said people used it simply to "kill time."

    "Many people who write on Channel 2 are stupid," Mr. Nishimura said, making a statement that many Channel 2 regulars would agree with but one that will surely draw a flurry of attacks. "They cannot change the world by writing about it. If they really want to have an impact, there are other things they could be doing."

    that's a hilarious and refeshing attitude ;-)
    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:read to the end of the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it is not. There was a time when discussing things in different forums led to revolutions and changes of goverments. That's actually why we think that freedom of speech is so fundamentally important (that, and swapping mp3s I guess).

      So the depressing thing is that he is right in a way. Today these open-minded discussions seems to rarely neither discuss important things nor to lead to any action. There has been inflation on freedom of speech, it's not worth as much as it used to be. Sad.

  44. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that you moot?

  45. HAHAHHA by scosol · · Score: 1

    i love that this is modded "flamebait"...

    anyway, AC is right- you've got a mile-long multi-hundred element narrow text scroll on the left, with pseudonav and some banner ads on the right
    f'ing brilliant

    i've seen better html at the tinfoil hat sites

    --
    I browse at +5 Flamebait- moderation for all or moderation for none.
  46. quentin tarantino certainly saw battle royale by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Informative
    and he liked it so much that he cast Chiaki Kuriyama from Battle Royale as Gogo Yubari in Kill Bill Vol. 1

    and she's also basically the same character in both movies

    tarantino is on record saying he loves Kinji Fukasaku, and both kill bill movies were really nothing more than tarantino's tribute to the film makers and films he's always loved (and well done, i might add)

    here's more:

    TM: The scene where Go Go Yubari (Chiaki Kuriyama) stabs a guy who approaches her for sex...was this from Battle Royale (Kinji Fukasaku, 2000, Japan)?

    QT: I went out to dinner with Kinji Fuaksaku and Kenta (Kinji's son) and I was going "man, I love this movie! It is just so fantastic!" And I said, "I love the scene where the girls are shooting are shooting each other." And then Kenta starts laughing. So I ask, "why are you laughing?" He goes, "the author of the original Battle Royale novel would be very happy to hear that you liked that scene." And I go "why?" And he says, "well, because it's from Reservoir Dogs!" Even when I was watching it I was thinking "God, these 14 year old girls are shooting each other just like in Reservoir Dogs!" And Kenta said, "he took that from Reservoir Dogs, so he'll be very proud that you like that!"
    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  47. Similar Places by chendo · · Score: 1

    There are other similar image boards, like 4chan.net (not direct linking because they're already losing the bandwidth cost war and saturating their 10mbit link) and the new 5chan.net. Both of these are in English, and there are lots of different categories of imageboards (these two are more image-based). I won't go into detail here, but stay away from 'Random' and 'Guro' (and 'Yaoi', if you're straight), since those two can sometimes have things worse than goatse and tubgirl there.

    --
    Founder of Mirror Moon - Tsukihime Game Trans
  48. argh.... even first post wienies by otacookie · · Score: 1

    So I got to any random topic and what's the first comment I see? Yes, a first post declaration. However, they don't call it fp... The stories themselves are considered the first posts, so everyone clamors for second.

    They say "2 get" or "ni getto" It's kind of appropriate I guess.

  49. Japanese Layout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember though, Japanese isn't read left-to-right like English. Rather, it's read diagonally, upper-right to lower-left, with lines "wrapping" to different sections of the text. Your web browser doesn't present it like a Japanese web browser would. So it's understandable they would need a different kind of layout than English websites. Just because it's ugly to native English speakers doesn't mean it's ugly to native Japanese speakers.

    1. Re:Japanese Layout by BJH · · Score: 2, Informative

      Er... no.
      Japanese is laid out in browsers in the same way English is - left to right, top to bottom.

      2ch's layout may look like crap, but nobody uses the top page anyway - anybody serious about it would have installed a specialised 2ch browser that permits easy switching between threads and boards.

    2. Re:Japanese Layout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Remember though, Japanese isn't read left-to-right like English. Rather, it's read diagonally, upper-right to lower-left, with lines "wrapping" to different sections of the text.

      I take it your Japanese language studies are also going diagonally upper-right to lower-left, with exams "wrapping" to different sections of the wombat.

  50. Some 2ch flash art by Himajin2000 · · Score: 1

    Here are a couple of 2ch fan-made flash animations based on comedy sketches by the "Ramens". Both are from the "Japanese School" series of sketches, depicting a demented instructor trying to teach foreign students "useful" Japanese: First one is teaching a class of Italians the prefectures in Japan: http://redioart.hp.infoseek.co.jp/matutake/a.swf In this one the instructor is teaching his students the Yamanote line station names: http://redioart.hp.infoseek.co.jp/matutake/shinbas hi.swf Both are hilarious if you know even a little Japanese... (LÍM)

    1. Re:Some 2ch flash art by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://redioart.hp.infoseek.co.jp/matutake/shinbas hi.swf

      You're right. The first one was rather amusing. However I'm getting a 404 error when I try to access the the second link you provided.

  51. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hay guys this is seem

    im reading a ccs doujin and fapping as i write this

  52. Are you trying to patronize the Japanese? by dwalsh · · Score: 1
    For us, dealing with Trolls and Frames are just annoying necessary evils

    It is spelt "Flames"


    --
    ${YEAR+1} is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop!
  53. If you're confused... by BenBenBen · · Score: 1
    If you're confused about 2ch's actual mode of operation, Wikipedia has this to say:
    "What is unique about this BBS is its scale and its management style. It has more than 100 "board groups" ("ita"(board)) each with its own categorical topic (ex. "Social News", "Computer", "Cooking"). Each "ita" usually has hundreds of "threads", which are actual discussion pages created by anonymous visitors for each detailed topic (ex. "Coming election in Tokyo, 4th vote", "P4 vs. Athlon, overheating 51 times", "Best wheat for making Pizza, 3rd slice"). Every posting in a thread has an "age" (up) and "sage" (down) attribute, and once posted with "age" attribute (default), that thread goes to the top of the recent active thread in its board group. Each thread is limited to 1000 postings at maximum, and must be created again (by some anonymous user, self-elected during discussion) to continue discussion. This prevents the rottening of old threads and keeps active topics refreshed. Most "old" threads will be stored in a thread archive after deprecation for future reference. Nearly everything is done anonymously (and voluntarily).
    So that's that cleared up then...

    --
    The Slashdot Paradox: "100% Overrated"
  54. Police Review by Trailwalker · · Score: 1

    Looks like the police follow this web site closely.

    Neomugicha Incident

  55. must be the assembly programmer in me by prockcore · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But I see 2ch and I don't think "channel 2" I think of a dot.

    2ch is the ascii code for a '.'

    Slashdot should now be known as 2f2ch

  56. An article which introduces 2ch and Ascii Arts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  57. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    were can i dl princes 69? r there ny doujin of it!?

  58. Battle Royale by KidSock · · Score: 1

    ...it's almost like Battle Royale came into life as a web site, filled with verbal and physical violence backed by pseudo anonymity.

    So it's exactly like ./ without the dinner recipes.

  59. Re:We have that in America (and rest of world) too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +5 Great joke!

  60. Load test by t_allardyce · · Score: 0, Troll

    The server is still up after slashdot? they must use a beowulf cluster of bukake!

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Load test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /mind takes of waaaayy to fast, supplying 'lively images'

      I think that that is one of the most disgusting comments I've ever read here .. seriously! :X

      :O

  61. 2Ch animations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check out some of thes animations that originated on the 2ch boards: http://www.karajishi.org/flash/
    I recommend "lesson", if you've ever seen a japanese dating game before it's hilarious. Of course it's even better if you know some basic japanese.

    2Ch is also famous for having a very distinct ascii cat as mascot. You can see it in a lot of the flash animations.

    1. Re:2Ch animations by chrome · · Score: 1

      http://www.karajishi.org/flash/unix.swf

      That was interesting. Always the *nix guys come to save the day ;)

  62. huh? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    freedom of speech is freedom of speech, period

    you are anyone else's judgment as to its quality or lack thereof notwithstanding

    in fact, it is GOOD that usenet, slashdot, this japanese site, kuro5hin, etc. is full of so much trolling and garbage and negativity: it's catharsis

    catharsis: negative emotions that would otherwise find expression in real life, find expression harmlessly in cyberspace

    that's the goodness of free speech in action

    just because everyone isn't delivering abraham lincoln-quality speeches online doesn't mean it isn't important in another way, in a way that you just don't understand

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  63. Re:Meaning of the name 2 chan by Bagels · · Score: 1

    Actually no. It means "2 leaf" - hence the US counterpart, 4chan, using a picture of four leaves for its logo (just look at the icon in the address bar if you've got Mozilla/Firefox).

    --
    --- Bwah?
  64. People Shying Away? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its Alexa rank has been cut in 3 over the past year.

  65. Was it 2ch? by Idou · · Score: 1

    "Later on I googlesearched my name and found a messageboard post with my name mentioned. It turned out that one of those workers was venting about something I said at work, under a nickname on some private message-board."

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
  66. I wish I spoke Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could go there and post my wonderful Hot Grits, Cyborg Donkey and other fp trolls there in front of a 5.1 billion visitors. Woah!

    my efforts were wasted in this stupid forum.

    -1 to YOU

  67. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fuck you, 4chan.net was squatted.

    4chan is now .ORG, because it's free and open, and not proprietary like .NET

  68. It's a BOOK! by Galvatron · · Score: 1
    The movie is based on a book of the same name, written by Koushun Takami. A perfectly acceptable translation is published by Viz here in the States.

    I agree though, the connection between Battle Royale and 2ch seems tenuous at best.

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    1. Re:It's a BOOK! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've read the book and seen the film and they're actually very different animals. The film has much more in the way of dark humour, while the book plays it quite straight. The book can get a lot more emotional impact out of the deaths of minor characters, because it can flesh them out and give them back-story. The film can make more of a visual impression and can convey the absurdity of the situation better.

      They're both good... just different.

      Oh, but don't bother with the second movie. Despite a couple of nice ideas, it's utter tripe. The first film was genuinely shocking, while the second just degenerates into yet another tired, trendy-lefty "OMG Bush sucks" rant.

    2. Re:It's a BOOK! by ^_^x · · Score: 1

      ...just make sure you don't confuse the book with the manga, which is very nearly the worst I've ever read.

  69. Re:Meaning of the name 2 chan by Himajin2000 · · Score: 1

    Erm...2 chan and 2ch are not the same place you know...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2chan

  70. RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Two incidents shortly after Channel 2 started up signaled the birth of a new player in Japanese society. A customer who was verbally abused by a Toshiba service representative recorded the conversation and uploaded it onto Channel 2. Then, a 17-year-old youth, an hour after posting his intentions on Channel 2, hijacked a bus in Fukuoka, stabbing one passenger to death.

    The most popular subjects on the site tend to relate to the news. Information not found anywhere else is leaked here, like the name of a then 14-year-old who decapitated an 11-year-old and left the severed head at a middle school a few years ago.

    1. Re:RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And? What did the bus passenger have to do with 2ch?

  71. Uhh... sure... by BJH · · Score: 1

    "Very active"? I went there and it said "Currently active visitors: 11".

    2ch has somewhere between 3 and 5 million visitors a day.

  72. U.S. women. Japanese in the United States. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    Excellent comment.

    To a lesser degree, American women feel compelled to pretend to agree with the group. So, the same problems occur in the United States. The learn this habit because they want what the U.S. culture supposedly will give them.

    Also, it is good to mention that Japanese who live with the openness of the U.S. culture often learn to like it a lot, and sometimes have difficulty being accepted when they go home.

    The social pressure in Japan is HUGE.

  73. Re:4chan.org by BJH · · Score: 1

    No, 2ch has no image boards.

    There are many areas that link to image boards or images, but the boards not part of 2ch as such.

  74. hai2u by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when pedo bear attacks!

  75. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you know "Futaba-Channel" ?

    it is a different thing in "2ch.net"

  76. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *Swings a flaming torch*

    Back! Back filthy animal! No Linux here, move along!

  77. Writeup not entirely up to date by azaris · · Score: 1

    About 5.4 million people come to this "Channel 2" each month

    Make that 5.4 million minus one.

  78. Easy way to do it by Darthmalt · · Score: 1

    Got to avantgo.com and set up an account for your pda. you get NYT wired, usa today, bbc, reuters etc. plus you see all the stories that are gonna be on /. the next day.

  79. Freedom of Speech, my donkey by Moraelin · · Score: 1

    "And more importantly, it's called Freedom of Speech"

    Oh, flippin' please... For a while it was even funny to hear about how I _have_ to let fuckwits ruin forums, newsgroups, online games, etc, in the name of "freedom of speech." Then even that got old.

    It was also funny for a while to notice how those making the biggest fuss about "fredom of speech", were the ones who had no fscking clue what it means. Or how it's usually the exact same fuckwit group which thrives on ruining everyone else's fun. Then even that got old.

    Dig this: First, and most important, your beloved freedom of speech does not say anyone has to listen to your speech. Second, it only applies to the relationship between you and your government. Nothing more. It also doesn't mean that the owners of a medium, be it a newspaper or TV station or forum, have to publish your speech.

    E.g., if I dropped by and started swearing a storm at your daughter's birthday party, you'd have all the right in the world to tell me to leave. And "Freedom of Speech" would have exactly _nothing_ to do with it.

    E.g., if I don't like what you've said on my private web-site, MUD or IRC channel, I have all the right in the world to delete the message, or ban your IP range, delete your user, or whatever. Even if it's for some utterly stupid reason, such as me not liking name or your choice of online games. Tough luck. It's stupid, but it's got _nothing_ to do with freedom of speech.

    Again: no law or ammendment says that anyone must publish your speech.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Freedom of Speech, my donkey by Skim123 · · Score: 1
      if I don't like what you've said on my private web-site, MUD or IRC channel, I have all the right in the world to delete the message, or ban your IP range, delete your user, or whatever

      From my understanding, though, once a site starts deleting, say, defamatory messages it is reponsible for moving all of them. That is, one strategy would to be to remove no defamatory statements, and say, "freedom of speech." Once you start prohibitng true freedom of speech on your site, though, you are now liable for those defamatory statements you did not remove. At least that is my (mis)understanding of the matter.

      --

      I could not justify my existence if I were a turkey farmer. Would I terminate myself? Undoubtably, yes.

    2. Re:Freedom of Speech, my donkey by Moraelin · · Score: 1

      Again, it's got nothing to do with "Freedom of Speech", as in the ammendment to the constitution.

      It's just an attempt to say "see, I can't possibly moderate all this, so please don't hold me responsible." But even that won't get you as far as some people think.

      It works for ISPs because they can't possibly monitor all packets going through, and find which of them are copyrighted material or libel or whatnot. They have a very good defense there in the fact that it's not even technically possible, and much less economically possible. So, incidentally, they also have no incentive to start trying to prove that it is.

      It also works, to some extent, for IRC servers, for much the same reason. It's (very roughly and incorrectly speaking) just a protocol for routing packets between IRC clients. AND noone's got the manpower or funds to monitor all private conversations, file transfers, private channels, etc. That isn't 100% correct, but as long as the perception is that, it serves as a damn good way to waive any responsibility.

      It doesn't work that well for almost anything else. While "it can't possibly be moderated" does work as a legal defense, "I don't _want_ to moderate it" generally doesn't.

      E.g., Google does routinely get asked to remove warez sites from its searches, and it actually has to comply.

      E.g., think what would happen if (ad absurdum) I were to start uploading something illegal, like kiddie porn, on your site. (Many forums do let you attach pictures or files to the messages.) If you think that "I don't want to moderate that off my site" would get you too far in court, I would strongly suggest consulting with a lawyer first. Not a flame, just a friendly piece of advice.

      And for stuff that's not illegal, nor a direct breach of contract (i.e., as long as you don't explicitly take money for posting on that board), there's no law that says you have to keep it fair.

      Sure, you'll get a gazillion whine threads along the lines of "u suck!!! why did my post get deleted and others didn't?!?!?!?! My dad's a lawyer and I'll sue u!!!" They're tiresome and non-fun, and they can easily get out of hand. But they don't mean anyone can actually sue you for that.

      In the end, the only real consequence is the potential loss of popularity to your site or MUD or whatever. Being fair usually means that you'll lose 100 flaming trolls, but keep the 1000 (or more) people whose life the trolls were making miserable. It may be worth it.

      E.g., by "or more" I mean up to the extent that Ultima Online invented the genre, but it ended up in third place, precisely because of failing to stop the griefers from driving away other players. Its failing to keep the griefers in check has literally cost it hundreds of thousands of subscribers. Much of Everquest's or Asheron's Call's initial claim to fame and way to achieve critical mass was precisely being a safer place than UO.

      On the other hand, being unfair may well mean losing both the griefers _and_ the non-griefers. Not a happy prospect, no doubt, but it definitely doesn't happen in a court of law.

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  80. 2ch viewer sotware "Open Jane" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://sakots.pekori.jp/OpenJane/
    all 2ch user does not see by the web browser.

  81. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and I bet you love the "L" section you sick fuck!

  82. I know it is at troll now, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who the hell modded this up? Did anyone check the list of links after the "click to proceed" link? One of them is "loli" for crying out loud!

    I really hope that isn't the reason someone modded up that comment. I would think people on slashdot would have more morals then the pedophiles that go there.

    1. Re:I know it is at troll now, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me point out some other reasons to hate this site.

      Don't look at the "women" section. The faq says not to post underage stuff, but a lot of the post have any problem with "women" between 10 and 17.

      Another disturbing thing is that the last time they were running out of money for bandwidth the majority of their donations came from the pedophiles in "/l."

  83. Re:4chan.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, fuck you, they shouldn't have to donate. The pedophiles desirve to have their bandwidth eaten up by trolls and slashdoters.

  84. It has too been released in the US by vxvxvxvx · · Score: 1

    It used to be available right here.

    Okay, so it's now "out of stock" -- kinda wishing I had purchased my own copy instead of renting it.

    1. Re:It has too been released in the US by ^_^x · · Score: 1

      Strangely enough, that pic is for the Region 3 Hong Kong release. It may be a region 0, but if there was a US edition, I'd think they'd use the scan from that one. ...btw, there's a UK version from Tartan Video with better video quality.

  85. Re:Meaning of the name 2 chan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "2 leaf" is Futaba Channel.

    I always thought 2ch referred to channel twoon the TV. There's nothing broadcast on channel two, but many Japanese geeks have fond memories of the channel, because we used it to play games.

  86. Yes by banning films by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    instead of banning weapons. "Its not the gun its the person" wins the prize for the most disingenuous statement ever widely defended.

  87. In Japan.. by 2674 · · Score: 1

    ...channel2 is not available when you are channel surfing. This is reason behind the name for the site.

  88. They are contributing to UD Agent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  89. Re:Threat to the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have already surprised you. But you didn't notice.
    Hahahahahahahahaha

  90. Mod up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was actually funny!