Is IRC All Bad? 461
An anonymous reader writes "IRC is often portrayed by the media as a haven for illegal activity. The author of IRC Hacks set out to find whether or not this was true. His conclusions are quite alarming, suggesting that 99.9% of IRC usage is illegal although he backs up IRC by saying that it is also used for lots of constructive purposes and is used by open source software developers." Update: 01/21 05:17 GMT by P : The author claimed it was merely 99.9% of traffic "to the top 60 channels" that is illegal, not 99.9% of all IRC traffic.
IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually I read the article, and he says that "99.9% of IRC traffic to the top 60 channels is 'illegal.'" Which doesn't surprise me; all 60 of them are warez channels. But overall, this is a drop in the IRC ocean.
There is far too much legal conversation going on that he completely ignored in this study, choosing to focus on the top 60 warez channels to the exclusion of all else. Is it any wonder he found what he found? If you go looking for warez, you're probably going to find warez.
In other words, this is a bunch of lies, damn lies and statistics. I didn't even have to think hard about this one to realize it's a bunch of bullshit.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Interesting)
The old Napster (Score:2)
If the files themselves are not transfered over IRC, then how are any of the discussions illegal? I the address off a copyrighted file illegal?
A&M Records v. Napster should help you find your own answer to that question.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Informative)
nevertheless, you are still using IRC to search, even though the connection is direct and not over the server.
what he probably wanted to say was
"99% of all remaining IRC usage" rather than transfer
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Interesting)
It can breach the IRC network's terms of usage where "warez" channels are prohibited, but breaking those rules are not a crime
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Insightful)
people just sit idle in warez channels, letting bots run, stuff like that. if this study used the smallest 60 channels, i think the results would be the opposite. its like judging the crime rate of the entire nation by taking the average of the largest several cities.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Funny)
i think this persons "study" was just based on how many times someone said something that seemed to be "illegal" or "legal" based on keywords in what they have to say.
Well, with names like #nethack, of course the channel is devoted to illegal activities. ;)
No, it's more flawed than that (Score:3, Insightful)
So it's not just like doing a crime-rate study on the 10 largest city. It's like doing a study on the 10 largest _prisons_ and concluding that 99.9% of them are criminals (or at least have commited at least one major crime in their lifetime), hence the whole country is a country of criminals.
Or it's like doing a web study based on Slashdot and concluding that world-wide 99% o
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if you assume that those 10 channels has 1000 users each, that's 10000 users doing illegal stuff. Well, that's a spit in the bucket. If you list the channels on, say, Quakenet, there are an order of magnitude more _channels_ than those 10000 users.
The study is also flawed from the start because any channel that big is mostly just populated by bots. How do those count as users, it's beyond me.
And it's useless for anything _but_ binary transfers. Try having a conversation with more than 100 people in a channel, and it already is impossible. With 1000 it's simply out of the question.
So such big channels are if anything the _least_ representative of IRC, _and_ a minority of users. A study based on them is plain old bogus.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Insightful)
Now maybe they still would be somehow representative if it weren't for point C above. I don't know by what criterion a channel with 1000 bots i
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2)
I see this as a far more nefarious use of the protocol than people swapping warez.
Ignorant, more like it (Score:3, Insightful)
And then some! (Score:5, Insightful)
He didn't look at the vast majority of IRC channels, and of those he did, he didn't consider the vast majority of the traffic within them -- just those four words. Additionally, he failed to observe any distinction between engaging in an illegal activity and simply mentioning it.
This is a bit like visiting the 60 largest train stations, measuring how many times the word "score" is used in relation to illegal activity, and concluding that 99.9% of the world's public transport users are drug trafficking.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2)
Sorry... I can't help but laugh.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Funny)
The remaining wonderful conversation is fully documented here [bash.org].
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Insightful)
But seriously, you can make statistics say anything. apparently 85% of grads at the college I went to get jobs in thier field. Unfortunatly I keep in touch with about 20% of my graduating class. (10-12 ppl) and 3 of us are programming professionally.
Ahhh IRC is evil... (Score:5, Informative)
I've been an oper on DALnet for six years now, and I currently lead up their coding team, so allow me to shed some light on this - assuming this makes me qualified.
The top 60 channels. Who goes to huge channels to chat? Ever tried talking in a channel with 20 active users? Try 800 active users. Nobody goes to large channels to chat, its pointless to even try. The folks that join these channels join looking for something specific, or to offer something. They find what they are looking for, and move on.
On DALnet, we've taken agressive action against warez, child porn, and drones. Drones are unfortunately the only item that I can speak on authoritively - we reject about 300 drones per second on any given server on our network. This is done through pattern matching in their registration. Drones is a serious problem on any network. A while back (five years or so), dianora of efnet did some drone hunting, and concluded that around 60% of "users" on irc were accually drones - hacked end-user computers. Drones are a far worse problem than people realize.
A few years ago, DALnet was seriously DDOS'd - we went from the top network in the world (around 140,000) to next to nothing. Our servers sometimes got hit with DDOS attacks in the range of 60 Gigabits per second. We shut down major providers, rendered entire datacenters useless, and obviously lost servers quickly. We've since changed our routing methods to rely heavily on anycast, and changed a lot of other things.
In my mind, DALnet is one of the networks that accually has one of the lowest noise ratios around. Quakenet, the current leader in usercount, raises questions with me. Their usercount rose very fast, and I wonder about their userbase. I personally know only -one- person who uses quakenet. You mention DALnet, Undernet or EFnet and people identify much more readily. Even more people use small IRC networks with 50-500 users.
99.9% for illegal purposes - bullshit. If you go to irc only to look for warez, then I think you are in the minority. I'd put illegal purposes around 5% at best. And that means real, live people at the keyboard, looking for illegal material.
Re:Ahhh IRC is evil... (Score:4, Informative)
The idea is that when a box - almost always a domestic DSL-connected windows machine - is compromised by a worm or trojan it is quite common for part of the payload that is installed on the machine to include at least one IRC bot. The bot will attempt to connect to a prearranged network and channel and sit and wait for instructions. At some point the owner of the zombies comes into the channel and passes instructions to the bots, telling them to attack a certain IP, update themselves or pretty much anything you can think of that can be easily automated.
Steve Gibson may be somewhat... overzealous (I'm picking my words carefully)... but this page [grc.com] on his site has a fairly good explanation of what these things are and what they can do.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, this is an extreme example of how NOT to conduct a study. He started by chosing the 60 most popular channels - by definition they were not typical. There are 50,000 channels on undernet alone with an average of about 3 users each. Then he chose 4 keywords that are likely to be used much more for warez than legitimate conversation. The results would have been very different if the channels and keywords had been chosen randomly. Of course, if he had chosen a small number of keywords randomly, the results would probably have been 0.00% illegal traffic since the vast majority of the words used on IRC don't name products that are pirated, so the approach of examining the relative rates of legal and illegal use of particular keywords is itself flawed even if your choice of keywords isn't. Relative frequency of many different keywords in some cases could give some clues though there are statistical problems with this. "ROFLMAO" is more likely to be found in legitimate messages whereas "systemworks" is more likely to be found in piracy or SPAM (though it can occur in many legitimate contexts as well). A bayesian filter that looked at ALL keywords could have been used to separate the legal from illegal traffic after extensive training and used to extend the study over more messages and channels than could be done by hand.
And of course, his statistics (or even much better ones) won't tell you if, for example, 37% of the bots offering downloads are run by BSA, RIAA, and MPAA so they can collect IP addresses of pirates and 87% of the download requests are dummy requests they generate to make it look like everyone is doing it (to make it look like it is safe to download so they can entrap people as well as inflating statistics they can trot out later).
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Funny)
It is reasonable to assume that smaller mailing lists and one-on-one email communications will not contain a significant number of users, so I did not bother to include them in my study.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2, Insightful)
If the top 10 movies were all action movies, would someone try to claim nearly all movies are action movies?
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:3, Insightful)
* = I'd love to know what "official" definitions of this term exist. Some Googling seemed to show that both *definitions* are used by voting systems.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:5, Insightful)
Warez channels tend to be huge, so no surprise it'd be easy for them to make the top 60.. But what if there are 10 times as many legit channels, but they only average half as many users per channel. Now we've suddenly gone from 99% to 20%...
On that same note you need to figure in how many users are being counted more than once by being in more than one warez channel. Perhaps it's different on other networks, but people that come into channels I op in that have warez channels in their whois list tend to have a dozen or more warez channels listed, while those in only legit channels usually have 3 or less.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2, Informative)
RTFA fools! (Score:3, Informative)
The article is ment as a joke, as it is now even mentioned in the article itself.
I know this is slashdot and that reading full articles isn't really what people do here, but "Hey slashdot readers. This is a joke about bad journalism." is actually the first thing you would see, if you read TFA.
Jeez, this is a none-case. Wisen up.
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2)
Re:IRC analysis fatally flawed (Score:2)
I do think his methodology is flawed though. I am sure his stats also show that bots are the majority users of irc because they talk the most in those channels. But that does not mean that same % of all IRC conversations are from bots.
IRC (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, I buy 99%, although the last time I logged on it was for help with my Slackware box.
If nothing else, IRC has given us bash.org.
Re:IRC (Score:3, Funny)
Not all are sent from the FBI. Some men act like 14-year girls just for help in #windows.
Re:IRC (Score:3, Informative)
For the slashdot populace:
[KBC] brb, i think i heard a girl say "desperate" about 3 miles away
Re:IRC (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a sad sad day... (Score:5, Funny)
I have a theory (Score:5, Funny)
Wow (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow (Score:3, Insightful)
so your viewpoint depends on what YOU use it for i guess..
Not so (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm an oper on efnet, so I'm well aware of the fact illegal activity goes on on IRC. Depending on the illegal activity, we can and do take action. We regularly remove drone runners, hacked bots (drones or XDCC), spammers, and other malicious users. Do we actively pursue copyright infringers? Not generally. Besides the fact there's simply too many of them, they're generally not harming our network or each other so they're a low priority.
Me? I use IRC for chat primarily, and most people I know do the same.
Re:Not so (Score:2)
generated the traffic in question. Was it just 5% of the
thousands? 90%? My gut tells me the former is more likely
right.
Also don't forget there are smaller IRC nets dedicated to
specific areas of interest and have nothing at all to to
with warez or other illegal activities.
Hi. (Score:2)
Re:Not so (Score:2)
anyhow.. the author knows it i'm sure.
and most of the more public easy to get into warez rings seem to have scattered into other irc networks than the most popular 3. just take a look at networks + most popular channels listing [netsplit.de]. the most popular channels on other networks than quakenet, ircnet and efnet are pretty much
Re:Not so (Score:2)
Yes! (Score:2)
by gosh! (Score:2, Funny)
Nice reading there, CowboyNeal (Score:5, Insightful)
From TFA: Based on those keywords being monitored, 99.9% of IRC traffic to the top 60 channels is "illegal".
Clearly, (all) IRC usage != IRC traffic to the top 60 channels.
Allow me to quote from bash.org (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sorry, but (Score:5, Funny)
Most people use IM now, so there's less need for the casual user to read the following:
captnitro: hey whats goin on
ice8229: no fuck that
captnitro: what?
peebles: your mother is a whore, you know it
ice8229: i'm not going to buy a goddamn program just to rip
ice8229: anybody know of an open one?
fisher0: i kno cuz i fuckerd her d00d
captnitro: what the hell is going on here?
adbot: MP3Z MOVIEZ WAREZ BAGELZ go to 62.182.100.10
binaryman: 1000100011110101
captnitro: huh?
binaryman: 1001111010111110
sharky: get out n00b
fisher0: i am not a virgin i so fskced her! in the ears
pornking: anybody want to cyber?
10yearold: yes
Clearly the domain of kings.
Bad analysis (Score:5, Interesting)
Whats new? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Whats new? (Score:2)
Ads and spams (Score:3, Insightful)
In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
O' Big Brother, where art thou?
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
"I believe that you have an old-fashioned idea about law, Miss Taggart. Why speak of rigid, unbreakable laws? Our modern laws are elastic and open to interpretation according to . . . circumstances." --Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged, book 2, chapter 8.
ah, sensationalism (Score:3, Funny)
Max
Comments on his statistics (Score:4, Interesting)
First of all, the author asserts, "Based on [statistics extrapolated from the arbitrary] keywords being monitored, 99.9% of IRC traffic to the top 60 channels is "illegal"
Which is arbitrary but interesting. I bet he might get different statistics if he monitored keywords unrelated to popular software programs. Or if non "top 60 channels" were monitored. Or if some more specific traffic-based analysis was carried out (cut messages by bots, etc).
Secondly, and this is a place where he doesn't go, is IRC an encourager of illegal activity or just an outlet for it (i.e. if all IRC servers quit today, would all the illegal activity just shift to other parts of the 'net?)-- it's probably somewhere in the middle, but where, exactly? In other words, what does his study imply?
I'd love to see more analysis on this.
Re:Comments on his statistics (Score:2)
hell, direct connect program and servers are ALMOST "irc-warez-made-easy".
Internal Development (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Internal Development (Score:2)
Free software??? (Score:3, Funny)
(Seriously, though... PSP is in the top four requests? Really?)
IRC is.. (Score:3, Interesting)
1 message = 1-10kb
1 movie file = 900mb (30 minutes = 200 mb so I'm assuming a movie is about that)
Now then, I have to sent 1024 messages to make 1/900 or 1/90 of that same thing. So any way you look at it, you will still end up with "broadband is faster then my fingers."
IRC is just free speech in a free place, it can be abused just as any where else can. I'm sure theres alot of child pornography on IRC, but I'm also sure theres alot of it being handed to "clients" in McDonalds and coffee shops. It's how the world works, only it's hidden better in that case.
What a silly boy (Score:3, Insightful)
This Guy's a Moron (Score:2, Insightful)
Possibly. (Score:3, Insightful)
99.9% of what? Alcoholics Anonymous' IRC meetings? The Linux channel? The Star Trek channel?
Most of the other channels are sex lines. Sure, there's probably illegal stuff going on in some, but it's mostly people pretending to have a social life.
99.9% of what's left, after you get rid of all that, is probably illegal. I'll accept that. It's just not a very useful figure, at that point.
Re:Possibly. (Score:2)
27.4% of all statistics are completely made up.
ponder (Score:2)
This line from the article made me laugh.Pondering over it which IM protocol supports this ?
Entertainment. (Score:2, Interesting)
Clarification (Score:5, Informative)
"Conclusions Two rather surprising observations can be made from this ad-hoc analysis of the 60 largest IRC channels: Based on those keywords being monitored, 99.9% of IRC traffic to the top 60 channels is "illegal". Norton products are more popular than Microsoft products (perhaps IRC users have more need for virus scanners?)
Which is definitely not the same as saying 99.9% of "all" irc traffic is illegal. Which the story leader tends to imply. As we know there's a whole lot more than 60 channels available and many of them engage in perfectly legal activities.
Has to be said (Score:5, Insightful)
http://bash.org/ [bash.org]
what crap (Score:2)
Infact, the worst case of anything illegal going on was when my friends little brother chatted on MS net meeting, with the video confrence, dressed up with some fake boobs and got some elderly pervert to masturbate.
I've only experienced dick heads on IRC. No doubt there is a lot of illegal stuff going on, but 99.9%? Get off it!
IRC builds community (Score:2, Interesting)
I idle on an IRC network where I've known the members for several years now. Yes, I will probably never meet them in real, but you have a sense of community. Is it illegal to have a sense of community?
Hoky Carp! (Score:2)
This is not the channel you are looking for... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually to be honest, I've taken to calling it the "wastelands". If there is something I want, its google first. Bittorrent second. Kazaa-lite third. If all that fails, then its IRC. Usually if I get to that point, I'd rather give up before treking through that sludge.
Re:This is not the channel you are looking for... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually to be honest, I've taken to calling it the "wastelands". If there is something I want, its google first. Bittorrent second. Kazaa-lite third. If all that fails, then its IRC. Usually if I get to that point, I'd rather give up before treking through that sludge.
That's because you are warezing.
Now, lets say you have an obscure question about a technical subject. Then the route tends to go TFM first, google second, and the appropropriate IRC channel third. (Always RTFM first, just to avoid pissing off the channel by asking the same damn questions over and over again).
Flawed Data Gathering Methods.... (Score:3, Informative)
This is a crap analysis (Score:2)
If he had instead wrote a simple script for his IRC client that would get a list of channels and randomly join say 10 of them with atleast say 10 people in them, then he could start citing numbers as his test cases would have been random, possibly. But the fact is, he completely ignores that the number of small channels is massively larger than the number of gi
Word Analysis (Score:5, Insightful)
He then determines that out of 10588 instances of those words, they were only used 10 times legally. Based on this, he concludes that 99.9% of all IRC traffic is illegal. But he doesn't define what is illegal (other then mention that he's monitoring for warez). He doesn't mention what percentage of these "key words" were in relation to the rest of the conversations. He also doesn't take into account what percentage of the traffic these 60 channels make up out of all of the IRC traffic.
And this study was for his Ph.D. thesis. I really hope he fails. We don't need Ph.D's that come to wild conclusions based off of the poor analysis of data.
As someone else mentioned, he went looking for warez and found it.
Doctorate, schmoctorate... (Score:3, Interesting)
Really, this article makes me mad. Big time.
I have met too many cool people through IRC who have become real life buddies to see IRC as what this dumbass says it is. I know for a fact IRC has saved one life that I know of...one of my chat buddies sent a suicide note via email and between the rest of the regulars in the channel I was a regular on we were able to get paramedics from her town there at her doorstep in time to save her.
Note well: I abandone
I use IRC everyday at work (Score:3, Interesting)
So 99% of IRC traffic is bad? Maybe the bandwidth, because text doesn't use much at all... But I would argue there are many that are using it for legit purposes!
I use IRC (Score:2)
I contribute some to mozilla, so I'm there quite a bit...
but other than that... IRC is just creepy these days.
I've never used IRC for anything questionable... (Score:2)
Not everyone uses IRC for illegal things... (Score:3, Insightful)
1. FreeMatrix radio chat for the radio shows
2. No lame fonts and other stupid things like sound effects - easy to strip out the colors too from the AOL newbies who don't realize how rude it is
3. No bulky chat clients. Can IRC using only a text based interface if I want to, or even mIRC or the java chat client I have on my website
4. Ignore, kick, ban, kline, gline, need I say more?
5. Ability to communicate with alot of the people I work with who normally I can't get in touch with due to distance or expense.
Theres ALOT of good things going on IRC if you take the time and look. But of course, the GOOD things on IRC wouldn't make for a very interesting or popular story would it?
Who's bad? (Score:2)
99.9% is misleading (Score:4, Informative)
So at the very least, that means that 10% of the channels he looked at aren't used for illegal purposes (presumably he used something like netsplit.de to determine the 10 largest networks, so we'd be in that list).
I seem to recall that DAL changed their policies to disallow file-sharing channels a while ago. If they're enforcing that, there goes another 10%. A quick glance on netsplit.de shows that the biggest QuakeNet channels aren't for warez either. I didn't check the other networks, but there's probably a couple more that are clean.
I'll admit it's likely that the biggest channels on some of the other networks will be like he writes, but surely not 99.9%. Less than 70% even!
Circa 1989 (Score:3, Interesting)
Every spare minute I had between class, I spent asking what he thought would happen, heard he was scared because the doubts of what would happen next and felt REAL glad I stumbled on IRC while most everyone else was using it to try and scam a date.
Knowing that something like this tool was able to bring people together across the world for such a world changing event just made me feel unbelievably privileged.
And I beat CNN with the news. Thanksgiving just meant more that year.
My use is legal (Score:2)
Hi I use IRC legitimately for business purposes (Score:3, Interesting)
On friday/saturday nights I run a karaoke show where I stream video live over the internet
I just stretch a bx client across the bottom of the screen, and let folks on the net hang out in a chatroom. What they say in the chatroom, goes up on the screen right below the lyrics for the singers to read.
Sometimes we get jerks in there. Our #1 rule is no heckling the singers. We figure it takes guts to get up on stage and sing in front of the world, so we try to take care of our singers.
Luckily, I have a lot of good people watching it for me. The occasional bad comment slips through, but part of the fun is in the banning.
No warez, none of that junk. Just a cool place.
irc.landoleet.org #karaoke
www.7bamboo.com
Re:Hi I use IRC legitimately for business purposes (Score:3, Interesting)
I can honestly say I've never done anything on IRC illegal (unless sedition counts).
Re:Hi I use IRC legitimately for business purposes (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, I thought it was sponsored by viewers like you [7bamboo.com].
a. I define karaoke as a parody, and im sure others would agree with me.
While it's true that few people would enjoy ripping karaoke versions of Garth Brooks for their IPods, it certainly isn't legal parody.
b. Do tribute bands pay licensing fee's?
Absolutely! But that money goes to a different set of agencies, primarily Harry Fox [nmpa.org].
c. Karaoke tr
What about private channels? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's also use it for illegal stuff too, like finding weed... (Most people already know who they are dealing with)
Most of the legit chat is going on in private channels that a circle of friends inhabit that will never show up on
MSN has put a big dent in the number of new IRCers, a few years ago IRC was growing big time but then people started to switch to MSN and the newbies followed likeing the simpler(?) interface.
Warez, MP3's and movies have moved off IRC for the most part and onto the p2p networks for the masses. Its only a few 1000 kids left running xdcc bots and fservs. Then you have the release groups who you will never meet on IRC unless you know someone. I'd have to guess there are a few IRC servers only accessable over SSH where the real big shit is going down.
Depends on the application. (Score:2)
Most of the time it's us BSing around, but when I was green, I was told by people within my office that the error, "Operation was performed on something that is not a socket" wasn't winsock and we had to refer customers back to thier OEMs for OS repair.
That was quickly fixed.
Don't Fall For This Trick! (Score:5, Insightful)
Obviously large file transfers are going to consume more bandwidth than casual chatting. But what about other metrics? How about if they counted the number of human users on IRC performing illegal activities versus those users that are just there to communicate? How about if it counted the number of connected hours used for legal communication as opposed to number of connected hours used to initiate DCC transfers (not monitored or controlled by IRC ops) of illegally copied material? My guess is that the study would show the opposite result.
It's just like the old statistic that airline travel is the safest. You'll hear that quoted a lot, but no one ever mentions the metric. It just so happens the metric is "safest per mile traveled." An airliner designed to go long distances at 550 mph obviously has the advantage here. Compare it by number of individual trips or hours spent traveling, and it turns out that the chance of fatality is about the same (or more).
Positive use of IRC (Score:3, Interesting)
The chatroom usually has around 100-150 people, except for when the The Screen Savers is taped live every day at 4PM PST where the room spikes at 300-400 people. Users in the chatroom interact with the hosts on live TV and the live show incorporate user comments from the channel.
I'd say we definitely make good use, legal and positive, of IRC!
IRC is not a "city", it's many cities and towns. (Score:3, Interesting)
From the article:
This is misleading nonsense because IRC is a protocol, not a community. There are hundreds or thousands of IRC networks out there, including a few big ones. IRC is a number of big cities plus lots of small towns. I happen to frequent this nice small town [starlink-irc.org] where people are mostly friendly, children are welcome, and warez and sex channels are forbidden (this is enforced). Just goes to show that the article is one big misleading generalization with sensationalism as its only purpose.
Re:Portrayed by the media? (Score:5, Funny)
No kidding. Mention this to someone who has been on the Internet a few times and they're liking to say:
"I recall correctly?"
Re:IRC is great! (Score:2, Informative)
I've even found professional job headhunters online looking for talent in certain rooms. Thats pretty cool actually.
I think IRC still retains a good deal of an entrance barrier (in the way of either knowing it exists or how to get on something that's not on the "internet explorer" (web)) and thus remains the grounds of the computer semi-skilled at the least.
Re:Misleading 99% Figure (Score:2)
What he found was that, in the top 60 channels, 99.9% of occurances of four carefully-selected keywords were in an "illegal" context. Those keywords -- "Norton", "Symantec", "Jasc", and "Microsoft" -- don't exactly make up the bulk of normal people's conversation. Indeed, of the four, "Microsoft" is the only one I'd personally expect to come up in anything but a piracy conte
Re:Is IRC all bad? (Score:4, Insightful)
Further, this tells more about you than about the overall "population" of Undernet. You've self-selected who you got in contact with by your choice of channels, by your choice of nick, and by choosing who you talk to. It's perfectly possible to find civilised and "normal" conversations on Undernet, as on most IRC networks. But contrary to the physical world where people with unconvential or perverse fantasies are to a certain extent forced to hide their fantasies, anonymous networks gives them a chance to explore in the open - as a result, if you look you most likely will find.
Another point you need to realise, is that allthough there are many truly disturbed people out there, there's also a great many that just enjoy playing out roles that they in many cases would never dream of living out for real. A significant part of the "nutcases" you've run into on IRC have probably been laughing their ass off from having gotten you to believe what they're writing.