FACT: The term 'spam' was first used to describe an unsolicited commercial Usenet post.

Blogs and forums are a form of Usenet.
| Terminology relating to Usenet Newsgroups |
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single part binary fileA binary file that is small enough in size to be posted in one article. Many news servers restrict the number of characters allowed in a single article. A single part binary file is one that has fewer characters than the article limit after being encoded for posting. This limit is typically 50,000 characters but can vary depending on the news server. SpamUsenet Spam is generally considered to refer to a mass posting of a single message to 20 or more newsgroups, regardless of content or it may be a single unsolicited post of a commercial nature in any newsgroup, such as an advertisement for medical products, pornography, or money making schemes. Spam is also used to refer to similar phenomena in other electronic mediums. Spam is frequently used to advertise products and services of dubious repute and is successful because of its wide reach and almost inexistent cost to produce. Usenet spamming may also be used as a denial of service attack which serves to make targeted newsgroups unreadable by users. Such methods have been employed by members of entities such as the Church of Scientology to prevent criticism of their organization in alt.religion.scientology newsgroup. This method has also been utilized by commercial pornography vendors in alt.sex newsgroups to prevent the distribution of free pornographic materials to users. The term Spam is thought to have been coined from a skit by Monty Python in which a group of Viking diners at a cafe serving a menu which features SPAM in nearly every entree sing a song expressing their love for the Hormel product and repeatedly repeating the word ""SPAM"". This repetition is what was associated with flooding in chat rooms, mass emailing, and excessive Usenet posting. The widely recognized birth of Usenet Spam is dated to a January 17, 1994 post by Clarence L. Thomas IV entitled ""Global Alert for All: Jesus is Coming Soon"". Thomas, an Andrews University system administrator, claimed that a series of recent (in 1994) events were ""an indication that Jesus is coming soon"". One of the more well known Usenet Spam events, and the first commercial use of Spam, came in the form of an advertisement of legal representation for U.S. immigrants seeking enrollment in a ""Green Card Lottery"". The perpatrators were a husband and wife team of lawyers based out of Arizona who succeeded in posting their advertisement to at least 6,000 Usenet groups. With the onset of Spam in Usenet in the early 1990s came the debate over what to do about such mass repetitive posts and advertisements in newsgroups. Subscribing / UnsubscribingThe process of selecting and monitoring newsgroups that are considered interesting. Most Usenet users subscribe to a handful of newsgroups to regularly read and infrequently subscribe to new newsgroups. Subscribing to a newsgroup makes it easier for the user to access their favorite groups while saving them the trouble of having to manually find them each time they access their news server. The process of subscribing and unsubscribing is usually accomplished easily through a newsreader. Top PostingIncluding one's response above quoted content when replying to an original message. Considered poor netiquette for ostensibly disrupting the flow of the conversation. The majority of users prefer to read the original, quoted, topic before reading the follow-up. TOSTerms Of Service. These are the terms and conditions that a Usenet provider requires its users to conform to in order to receive service. These terms detail what constitutes abuse of the system and what actions will cause users to have their service suspended. A Usenet provider's Terms of Service may reference: Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Downloading Cross Posting Off Topic Posting Billing Flaming Spamming Privacy and Security Illegal Posts Cancellation Always carefully read the TOS of the Usenet provider you wish to use to make sure that their policies match your Usenet needs. TrollA Usenet participant that deliberately attempts to cause conflict and general discontent in a newsgroup. Trolls are generally not interested in any form of discourse and participate only to get a rise out of other users. In most cases, a troll is best dealt with by ignoring them or placing them in a killfile. Because of the negative view that trolls tend to have amongst the Usenet community, the Usenet troll is aligned with the mythical troll of fairytales, usually depicted as ugly and unwelcome. Trolls and flamers have become such common phenomena in the world of Usenet and the internet at large that they have attracted the attention of social scientists; thus, academic research on the psychological and social motivations for the behavior of trolls is widely available. |
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