Internet Babylon
Along with all the incredible things I somehow missed over the last few years (e.g., the Amazing Mahir), Holden brought to mind a number of wonderful yet somehow forgotten memories (e.g., All Your Base Are Belong To Us). Then there's all the great stuff that, like so much on the Internet, no longer exists but which provided tons of laughs at the time (e.g., Evil Bert). And I never tire of the great web creations that keep on giving, such as the phenomenal Star Wars Kid parodies.
Unlike most of us, Holden didn't just wander willy-nilly all over the Internet -- well, maybe he did, but he put together a well-organized book that breaks his subject down into six parts spread across twenty chapters. First up is "The Rich and (In)famous." Here you can read all about the online doings of celebrities, serial killers, has-beens and wannabes. Holden will lead you to the Partridge Family Temple, introduce you to the unique musical stylings of Star Trek actors, and even point you to refreshers on Manson Family Values.
Next up is "The Afterlife." On the Internet, nothing truly dies. You can explore the mysterious deaths of Elvis and other celebrities, become a knowledgeable amateur sleuth hot on the trail of Jack the Ripper, the Zodiac killer, and other inhuman monsters, help look for ghosts via webcam in haunted buildings, and even watch a body decompose inside a coffin. (Actually, that last idea fell through, but it's sure to happen eventually.) Of course, you might want to get religion before you take your own one step beyond, and the Internet puts a wide variety of "religions" at your fingertips. With the good comes the bad, and the Internet does, unfortunately, have a dark underbelly of criminality and evil; in the section "Bad Boys and Naughty Girls," Holden gives you the scoop on famous hackers and their exploits, viruses and their creators, and the cretins who curse us all with unwanted spam. He basically takes you on a guided tour of the dark side of the World Wide Web.
As we all know, the Internet has revolutionized politics, and Holden devotes three fascinating chapters to political intrigue, scandals, and government secrets online. In the past, politicians could keep their perverted behavior secret from the public, but the Internet has changed all that -- just ask Bill Clinton. In this online age, rumors and scandals can be spread across the entire world in a matter of minutes, and Holden shows us how the Internet has at times shaped the content of traditional journalism (as well as supplying us with some of the funniest jokes and parodies known to man).
Anyone who browses the Internet soon learns that there are people out there who will do anything to get attention, and those with some sort of self-styled mission will stop at nothing to get their points across. This is the realm of flame wars, denial of service attacks, as well as really, really silly web sites you can't believe anyone would ever think of creating. The unlikeliest of Internet heroes are honored in this section: the Amazing Mahir of "I Kiss You!!!!!" fame, the Star Wars Kid (one of my personal favorites), and even one of the little guys - the man who invented the Smiley symbol. It all wraps up with a look at "Big (And Not So Big) Business." Remember the Pets.com Sock Puppet, who enjoyed much more success than Pets.com ever did? That's just one dot-com disaster story; here, you will learn about some of the worst Internet business plans ever put together.
Believe me, I have only scratched the surface of the material covered in this book. Internet Babylon is chock full of fascinating, oftentimes hilarious stories (and pictures) of the continually surprising sites and sounds the Internet has brought to life. You'll learn a little bit about the creation and evolution of the Internet, but mostly you'll revel in all the crazy online manifestations Holden holds under the microscope.
Let me close with a word of warning. I'm a big horror fan, and I've seen some pretty disgusting things in my life; I like to think I'm tough enough to stand anything. Thus, I ignored Holden's warnings about some of the more disturbing web content that can be found out there and rushed right off to one aptly-described shocking site. Let's just say I'll never be able to watch weight lifting again. I know you will want to take a gander at many of the sites Holden refers to throughout this book, so I just want to advise you to proceed carefully: as this fascinating book proves, you can find absolutely anything out there online, and some of it ain't pretty.
You can purchase Internet Babylon: Secrets, Scandals, and Shocks on the Information Superhighway from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
He just trolled (fishing style) the internet for... questionable material, no matter how... disturbing. That's not too hard to do, just type "p0rn" into any search engine.
digging up the goods on some of the Internet's most questionable, fascinating, oftentimes disturbing oddities
Finally a story where goatse link might be appropriate.
FUCK YOUUUUUUUUUUU
At least one teaser link would have been nice
You could write an entire book about the disturbing nature of goatse or tubgirl...yuck
This is slashdot, we know all about the weight lifter, gaping whatnots and projecting whozits.
Short and successful. In summary, I liked the post!
"Thus, I ignored Holden's warnings about some of the more disturbing web content that can be found out there and rushed right off to one aptly-described shocking site. Let's just say I'll never be able to watch weight lifting again."
This one did go browse on Rotten.com I see...
It's not that the internet makes anything elevate in relative importance, it's that it reaches a larger audience so the numbers of folks interested in any given "thing" is higher.
Before, you might reach 5% of the people in your 10,000 person town - or 500 people.
Now, if 5% of people on the internet are interested in what you have done, you might reach 5 million people, but it's still just 5% of the population.
Look at the Nielsen ratings - the highest rated shows actually garner a LOWER percentage of viewership than past shows, but because they reach more people they have more viewers...
Same conecpt applies here.
From the review: "Then there's all the great stuff that, like so much on the Internet, no longer exists..." to which list we can, sadly, add apress.com.
Sailing over the event horizon
I think I know what he is talking about. I thought it was an urban legend, but Snoops says otherwise.
I'd say more, but my guild is raiding.
Will be destroyed in terrorist attacks and the 4th will disappear mysteriously.
replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
mirror
There are others, of course. But I like RWS because it doesn't contain truly obnoxious crap, scat tentacle anime pr0n or anything like that. Just your collection of normal to uber-weird sites. It has a heavy dosage of garage band sites, but even that's good for the occasional good music discovery. Some domains have expired and parked since they were added to the RWS database, so you will see some of those "SEARCH TEH INTERNET FOR FREE!!!" click-n-annoy pages, but they're the exception. In general (at least in my case) you'll find some interesting stuff, like wacky (and some bad) blogs and things like that. I've been hitting it occasionally for a few months and haven't seen a repeat yet.
Anyway, good for a boring afternoon.
"...Holden brought to mind a number of wonderful yet somehow forgotten memories (e.g., All Your Base Are Belong To Us)"
"Forgotten?"
"Wonderful??"
That's some dry wit.
The problem with a book about the "darkest corners of the internet" is that many of the sites decribed will be gone forever by the time it's published.
I like books about strange, forgotten and fringe movies and music. But an anecdotes about how truly weird a band or film is only can go so far-- I'm going to want to see or hear it for myself.
Link is broken?
;)
Slashdotted...?
*sigh* if only it were my blog that got slashdotted
Love it or hate it, rotten.com has some pretty interesting pics.
You can find a variety of Crazies, Wackos, and Tin Foil Hats on the Information Superhighway here.
I just ordered my copy, but I am 100% sure that he managed to miss this guy (registration required, but free as in beer). Where something like this comes from.. I dare not venture.
** "It's not my job to stand between the people talking to me, and the ones listening to me." -- Pego the Jerk
For a fleeting moment he had meaning. As the great Google spotlight flooded his small part of the world, he felt alive. He stood there at the Nexus, information flowing around him, through him, he was some Great Information God. His crappy site/photo/video gave meaning to others. And at the apex, when his Google page-rank was increasing like the US deficit he actually felt its heat, its beauty ...
... and then just as quickly as it came, the light dimmed, the spotlight moved on. The all seeing Eye of Sauron moves away searching, searching, searching. It is all left dim, dark, and hollow ...
"This isn't a study in computer science, its a study in human behavior"
Is yer friend. Who needs a book to find it all?
But the Star Wars kid movie hacks was quiet something - amazing actually.
it's worse than Goatse!
you have been warned
Just view this topic at "-1". You'll get plenty of teasers.
Portal of Evil. I highly recommend checking out random linked sites, too.
WARNING: disgusting, also spawns alot of pops. You have been warned.
For the adventurous only. For ACs who can't see my sig, OH NOES
http://persianews.on.nimp.org/?u=Tar_Baby
The symbol for the Internet is a cloud (WAN link) that says,"Internet." What's really ironic about that is the fact that the Internet can be cloudy and foggy. Truth and fiction sit along side each other and who's telling the truth is anybody's guess. And in the X-Files sense, the truth can be hidden in plain sight on the Internet. (TV tends to be the best place to hide the truth.)
You can find some pretty bizarre stuff if you google on, say, "Hello Kitty Vibrator" or "oo" or "Dolphinsex". I like to google around for the most unrelated concepts I can think of, and more often than not I get hits. Some of the stuff I've turned up is really out there (As you can see.) But that's what makes the Internet great!
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
"disturbing oddities"? I got nine letters and a dot for ya: rotten.com. It's the link I send to people who piss me off. At first you don't quite realize just how bad it is, and by the time you catch on, you can't seem to look away.
"In a 32-bit world, you're a 2-bit user. You've got your own newsgroup, alt.total.loser." -Weird Al
that i just scrolled through this thread looking for new links i haven't been to yet?
--------- unix, because rebooting is for adding new hardware.
I'm pretty sure the weight lifter reference was for rotten.com, pretty disgusting stuff, be warned.
-- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
what about hamster dance?
love is just extroverted narcissism
If an internet oddities book doesnt cover the basics like Little Stalker Boy, it's full of garbage I've seen 100 times and not worth purchasing, much less thumbing through. For the article author, some guy who claims he lives on the web, he sure seems "wowed" by some pretty tired crap.
Often wrong but never in doubt.
I am Jack9.
Everyone knows me.
...for pot smokers and others with massive defects to their short-term memory.
The inventor of the ascii smiley is not "one of the little guys". He is Scott Fahlman, one of the most famous AI researchers and Lisp hackers.
parties). At THE 4.1BSD product, worthwhile. It's Distro is done HeRe Baby take my The curtains flew another troubled to survive at all it. Do not share Design approach. As
One of my favorite corners of the internet has always been http://www.totse.com/ Plethora of random subjects to peruse, with or without my tinfoil hat.
-end of post.
I'm surprised this link hasn't been mentioned - stile project
NOTE: Hardcore gross-out & porn - enjoy!
Fellatio is perverted?
Man, this guy needs to get out more...
Soylent Green is peoplicious!
without it, i would have never discovered such wonderful things as TeleTubby Porn!
I miss the old days where I enjoyed using the "I Feel Lucky" button on Google. They should rename it to say "I Feel Lucky That I Landed On A Link Farm Page".
Ugh.
metadiscussions Ar5eholes at Walnut A super-organiSed [idge.net]
Is www.somethingawful.com not good enough for you people?
You know, sometimes I wish I could erase from my memory the things I have seen on the skinternet. That weightlifter one is on top of the list. Thanks abunch for giving me the visual, jerk.
"Patience is not a virtue, it's a waste of time."
Yeah, it's the study of human nature that renders me mostly immune to shock. Either that, or all of the bizarre requests that come via ICQ...
Doing my level best to piss off the religious right wing...
http://web.archive.org/web/20030727065527/http://w ww.royalcanadianmountedspetsnaz.com/
Share and rate p
Someone explain to me whats on blacksnake.com
I've sent many people their that have never spoken to me again. I'm not going to look at it though. Just wondering what the site had on it.
This is truly the most disgusting thread I've seen on /. and makes SCO-related developments seem delightful in comparison.
If this is what floats your boat, go work for Daryl McBride and keep the fuck away from the rest of us.
In this issue we review:
* A Into a World of Hate: A Journey Among the Extreme Right, by Nick Ryan
* A Hundred Little Hitlers : The Death of a Black Man, the Trial of a White Racist, and the Rise of the Neo-Nazi Movement in America by Elinor Langer
* Inside Organized Racism: Women in the Hate Movement by Kathleen M. Blee
* Contemporary Voices of White Nationalism in America by Carol M. Swain (Editor), Russ Nieli
A Into a World of Hate: A Journey Among the Extreme Right, by Nick Ryan
Overview:
At a time of heightened fears over terrorism and Islam; as frustration builds with immigration and asylum; and as millions vote for far-right political parties, Into A World Of Hate is Nick Ryan's powerful odyssey into the world of the extreme right.
Already being compared to Orwell's non-fiction, Ryan spent six arduous years traveling amongst a huge array of right-wing extremists. Winning the trust of the men and women at the heart of these movements - from bombers to presidential candidates, moving from the backstreets of London through Europe and into the heartlands of the USA - Ryan depicts a frustrated landscape of identity, belonging and belief.
In a blend of adventure and social commentary, Into A World Of Hate charts the flip-side to al-Qaeda: a dark glimpse into the rise of tribalism within our societies.
1.
A Hundred Little Hitlers : The Death of a Black Man, the Trial of a White Racist, and the Rise of the Neo-Nazi Movement in America
by Elinor Langer
Overview:
A riveting account of a skinhead killing and a chilling look at the world in which it happened
On November 12, 1988, a group of Portland, Oregon, skinheads known as East Side White Pride met for an evening of beer and racist banter. Later that night, they encountered three Ethiopians; a street fight broke out and Kenneth Mieske brutally beat Mulugeta Seraw with a bat. In the early-morning hours, Seraw died.
Drawing on more than ten years of original research, award-winning journalist Elinor Langer takes the Seraw case as the occasion for a thorough investigation of the Nazi-inspired racist movement in the United States. She vividly reconstructs the world of the skinheads, both in Portland and nationally: their origins in the punk scene, their basement shrines to Nazi power, their moments of glory on Oprah and Geraldo. She delves into the long-standing radical groups with which the skinheads became allied, tracking the progress of such powerful figures as white Aryan resistance leader Tom Metzger through the stations of the far right, from the Birch Society to Christian Identity to David Duke's Klan. In gripping detail, she follows ambitious civil-rights lawyer Morris Dees's efforts to prove Metzger responsible for the Portland killing-a sensational campaign to curb the growth of neo-Nazism.
Compelling, disturbing, and important, A Hundred Little Hitlers is both an epic account of racism and justice, and a close examination of social forces that loom ever more dangerously today.
3.
Inside Organized Racism: Women in the Hate Movement by Kathleen M. Blee
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In this timely account, based on in-depth interviews with 34 women in organized racist and anti-Semitic groups (Christian Identity, neo-Nazi, white power skinheads, Ku Klux Klan) and a study of their publications between 1993 and 1994, Blee, a sociology professor and author of Women of the Klan, takes a penetrating look at how "ordinary women... become wedded to dangerous and bizarre racist agendas." Blee reveals these woman as monstrous, but not monsters distinguished from mainstream society by their virulent racism and anti-Semitism and their general hostility toward the most benign feminism. They come from every region, and are often educated and middle-class, working in professions like education, nursing and engineering. For women, Blee explains, intense racism is often the result of their participation in r
There is a second person in the world who actually prefers 'Information Superhighway' to 'Internet'.
Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
Any book which has the phrase "Information Superhighway" in the title just CANNOT be worth reading.
I always figured that since my own geek 'world training' included digging into the "what's the grossest thing I can find/think of" territory, that other geeks would do so at some point or another. To me these images; tubgirl, goatse guy, weight lifter, cab driver range from one type of extreme to another, but they aren't nearly as disturbing as some of you make them out to be. "Want to claw my eyes out", "Made me nearly puke", "Slept in a cold sweat"... those kind of comments make me think you folks have been very sheltered. Talk to an EMT, a combat medic, a ER nurse, some nursing home staff. Understand that us meatpuppets (as Bender likes to say) are easily broken. Sometimes that happens accidentally, sometimes by consentual intent, sometimes by malicous acts by other people. Or perhaps I'm the one that is being naive and this is all just being politically correct.. "Oh yeah, we are supposed to be grossed out by this, lets see how shocked we can act"