"Cyberland's politics are 'libertarian,' and its presiding muse is Ayn
Rand.  This is a world with an acronym for "Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt"
(FUD) and another for "Waste of Money, Brains and Time" (Wombat) --- a
Nietzschean world in which leaders are known as "wizards" or "net.gods," and
followers are dismissed as "sheeple."


When the Geeks Get Snide
Computer Slang Scoffs at Wetware (the Humans)
By MICHIKO KAKUTANI

As couch potatoes become "mouse potatoes," as teenagers become "screenagers,"
the once lowly geek has become a cultural icon, studied by the fashionistas
of Seventh Avenue and the Nasdaq watchers of Wall Street alike. And as geek
chic takes hold of the technology-obsessed culture, geek-speak seeps into
everyday language.

Most people now know that "viruses" aren't just germs spread from person to
person but malicious programs that can spread overnight from one computer to
millions of others around the world. "Spam" is no longer a ham product but a
form of computer junk-mail; "toast" refers not to a breakfast choice but to a
state of being dead or burned out; and "cookies" aren't fattening,
chocolate-chip-studded snacks but tiny files containing information about our
computers that can be used by advertisers to track users' online interests
and tastes.

Earlier technological developments left their mark on the language.  The
railroads gave rise to expressions like "going off the rails" and "getting
sidetracked"; the steam engine produced "working up a head of steam" and
"full steam ahead"; and the automobile left us with "pedal to the metal,"
"firing on all cylinders" and "eatin' concrete."  Not surprisingly, phrases
generated by the computer age tend to be more sardonic and pejorative.
"Blamestorming" refers to group discussions devoted to the assignment of
blame; the acronym "kiss" means "keep it simple stupid"; and "ego-surfing"
alludes to Internet searches for one's own name.

So what does cyberslang say about the digerati and the brave new world?  As
collections of slang found in books like "Jargon Watch" (assembled by Gareth
Branwyn), The New Hacker's Dictionary (compiled by Eric S. Raymond) and
"Cyberspeak" (by Andy Ihnatko), as well as a host of online slang sites (most
notably The Microsoft Lexicon, Netlingo and The Ultimate Silicon Valley Slang
Page) readily attest, geek-speak conjures up a chilly, utilitarian world in
which people are equated with machines and social Darwinism rules.

Cyberland has been heavily influenced by pop culture and it boasts its share
of counterculture phrases drawn from comic books, children's stories, sci-fi
movies and New Age movements. "Deep magic" (meaning "an awesomely arcane
technique central to a program or system") comes from C. S. Lewis's "Narnia"
books; the online abbreviation TTFN (meaning "ta-ta for now") comes from
"Winnie the Pooh"; and "fear and loathing" (meaning the state of mind
"inspired by the prospect of dealing with certain real-world systems and
standards that are totally brain-damaged but ubiquitous") comes, of course,
from Hunter S. Thompson.

  --------------------------------------------------------------------------
A world with an acronym for `Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt.'
  --------------------------------------------------------------------------

E-mail abbreviations like "4-ever" and "2B or not 2B" sound like outtakes
from a Prince song, while emoticons (those sideways smiley faces like :-)
used to indicate a user's feelings) summon visions of Hello-Kitty lunchboxes.

But for all its playful love of puns and cool disdain for "suits," the
high-tech world is, at heart, a cruel, unforgiving place ruled by the
merciless dynamics of the marketplace.  There are multiple terms for success
(including "winnage," "winnitude," having an "Elvis year," being "golden" or
"on velvet") and an equally large number of terms for failure ("lossage,"
"lossity," "Big Lose") and stupidity. As the former Wired writer Paulina
Borsook points out in her new book "Cyberselfish," the digital community is
increasingly a world that mirrors our "winner-take-all, casino society," a
community that projects the attitude I've got mine (or certainly intend to if
the bureaucrats don't get in my way)," so you don't matter.

In the looking glass world of high tech, writers and artists are known as
"content providers," and a "showstopper" refers not to a thrilling tour de
force but, as The Microsoft Lexicon notes, to "a function, object or issue
important enough to jeopardize a ship date or schedule" -- in other words, "a
really big bug." "Evil" doesn't have a moral connotation in cyberland but
indicates something "sufficiently mal-designed as to be not worth the bother
of dealing with."  And "elite" suggests something pirated or stolen.

Cyberland's politics are libertarian, as Ms. Borsook observes; and its
presiding muse is Ayn Rand.  This is a world with an acronym for "Fear,
Uncertainty and Doubt" (FUD) and another for "Waste of Money, Brains and
Time" (Wombat), a Nietzschean world in which leaders are known as "wizards"
or "net.gods," and followers are dismissed as "sheeple."  Calling someone a
"404" (from the World Wide Web error message, "404 Not Found") means he is
clueless or has a high "bozon count," while accusing him of being a "BDU"
means he's a "Big Dumb User."

What venerated "alpha geeks" and lowly "smurfs" share is a tendency to talk
about people as if they were machines. To be "uninstalled" means being fired
or dismissed, whereas a "plug-and-play" refers to a new employee who fits in
without any additional training. Doing a "bit flip" means undergoing a
disturbing personality change; indulging in "nonlinear behavior" (NLB) means
acting irrationally; possessing huge "bandwidth" means having lots of talent
or brains.

A "bio-break" refers to a trip to the bathroom, and "client/server action"
refers to sex.  Stress puppies "ramp up" to cope with added work and
"batmobile" -- by putting up defensive emotional shields -- when threatened
with unwanted intimacy.

Such language tends to ratify the unflattering stereotype of the computer
geek, described in The New Hacker's Dictionary as "withdrawn, relationally
incompetent, sexually frustrated and desperately unhappy when not submerged
in his or her craft." And while that book's editor, Eric Raymond, observes
that such stereotypes are "far less common than mainstream folkore" would
have it, he adds that "hackers have relatively little ability to identify
emotionally with other people," so accustomed are they to spending hours and
hours at the computer keyboard.

It is a view echoed by Ms. Borsook, who writes that techies are uncomfortable
"with squishy stuff and the intangible and that which can't be reduced to
formulae" or programs.

Indeed geek-speak is flush with disparaging or defensive references to the
real world and flesh-and-blood human beings. The nonvirtual world, so much
messier than the one on line, is derogatorily referred to as a "carbon
community" or "meatspace." Individuals who aren't online are shrugged off as
PONA's ("persons of no account"); printed magazines and newspapers, as
"treeware" or "dead tree editions." "Analog" is an adjective used to refer to
things in the "real world" (defined in "Cyberspeak," as "that which cannot be
accessed via a keyboard"), but it's also used to describe things that are
sloppy or graceless.

For geeks who prefer "text sex" to physical encounters, e-mail to "facemail,"
e-commerce to "bricks and mortar" shopping, the human body is nothing but
"wetware" -- a fragile, inefficient alternative to the shiny hardware of
their computers.

This outlook, Mark Dery notes in his book "Escape Velocity," is reflected in
those cyberpunk stories in which the human mind is downloaded into computers
and thus liberated from "meat-jail," and cyborgs herald a future in which the
body is redefined as a "warmblooded machine."

This cybertopian world would eliminate "PEBCAK" (tech support shorthand for
"Problem Exists Between Chair And Keyboard"), but then it would also
eliminate "meatbots" -- or human beings, as they are still currently known.


Reply via email to