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Revision as of 21:27, 12 January 2006 editUncle G (talk | contribs)Administrators52,482 edits 'Spelt' vs 'Spelled'?: No.← Previous edit Revision as of 23:16, 12 January 2006 edit undoSwatjester (talk | contribs)Administrators27,539 edits origin of !!!!111!!111: gonifNext edit →
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:: http://www.bbsmates.com/ doesn't seem to be helping much here, maybe you'll have more luck (or more luck elsewhere?) ] 12:21, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC) :: http://www.bbsmates.com/ doesn't seem to be helping much here, maybe you'll have more luck (or more luck elsewhere?) ] 12:21, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)


:::Addendum: even if it can be broven that a user called "The Gonif" typed "!!11!!11" sometime in 1986, there is still no proof whatsoever that nobody before him typed the same thing, and we still don't know anything about Gonif except his 1980s BBS handle. Wouldn't it be sufficient to say that overexclamation dates back to the 1980s BBS era? -- ] ] 12:27, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC) :::Addendum: even if it can be br oven that a user called "The Gonif" typed "!!11!!11" sometime in 1986, there is still no proof whatsoever that nobody before him typed the same thing, and we still don't know anything about Gonif except his 1980s BBS handle. Wouldn't it be sufficient to say that overexclamation dates back to the 1980s BBS era? -- ] ] 12:27, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)


::::Apparently the Gonif's real name was . -] 00:57, Dec 7, 2004 (UTC) ::::Apparently the Gonif's real name was . -] 00:57, Dec 7, 2004 (UTC)

Apparently The gonif is still around, under the name SchvartzGonif. He plays DR. ] 23:16, 12 January 2006 (UTC)





Revision as of 23:16, 12 January 2006

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Is it just me?

Is it just me, or are the words "thats n00b" by the Battlefield part of the article near the bottom vandalism?

Correct spelling of "leet"

Since the inception of "leet" it has always refered to itelf as l33t... not 1337. I do not know why, but that's the way it is. If someone would please take the time to replace the "1337s" with the correct spelling "l33t" (L 3 3 T), that would be appriciated. -Masterpsyker 08:42, 30 December 2005 (EST)

Please Cite your sources --Slashme 11:41, 31 December 2005 (UTC)

Cans of Pwnage

This should really be in the pwn article. It's only of tangential relevance to 1337. --Slashme 07:25, 15 December 2005 (UTC)

Strange error in the 'Leet Slang' Section

I am a bit confused : "Baka also means "Bastard" in french." Where did that come from ? This is absolutely false. I removed the sentence, and I'd be glad to know why it was posted.

abbreviations: leet or not?

4 u ppl who no... the article starts out saying leet is NOT to be confused with the abbreviated writing style which was common in MUDs in the early '90s (referred to here as 'AOLish' I think. Then it changes and includes it. As I am of teh 1337-impaired, I ask: is it or isn't it? I think they're definitely seperate, but someone out there knows more than me! Edit, oh 31337 w0|\|z!!111!!!

-EArmata

The real backstory of how leet came to be

While I appreciate the large entry on "Leet", I do not feel that the actual history of how "leet" evolved is explained very well. There is more reason and explanation than gaming and reasons that should really be appreciated more than mocked. It actually has nothing to do with gaming until it was adopted by gamers more recently. I do not know if it is out of line to post this here, but I think my article that was published in 2002 in 2600 magazine gives it proper respect while still maintaining the humor and modern day use.

This is my article from 2600 (I release all of my articles under a creative commons license so there are no copyright issues) that I feel explains some of the history that was omitted here.

http://www.docdroppers.org/index.php?title=A_history_of_31337sp34k

-StankDawg

Best. Comment. Evar

"Leetspeak is however, extremely common in "gamr" groups in high schools. It is used for emphasis and is often considered "hot," or cool. It has simply become the gangsta-style black slang-to-the-izzo of the white/Asian-dominated gamr communiteh."

So much humour packed into that. Not very encyclopedic (my wiki gland was commanding me to edit it at first), but it's got to stay, surely? Sockatume, Talk 03:39, 8 Jan 2005 (UTC)


Funny, i always thought leet ,,..,, for lit, like a person who has achieved (technical) enlightnment. Though surely someone like that could be considered as being from an elite. :)


Might want to included students/schools (or parents) along with employees/companies - a lot of leet are kids, after all, and they more often have to contend with censorware. Also, what about the multitude of abbreviations, from "a/s/l?" to the old standbys, LOL, ROTFL, BTW, etc... -- April

I wouldn't class LOL, BTW, etc as part of leet, they're standard net abbreviations, along with emoticons. AOL has helpfiles explaining them. I might put a list of the standard ways to represent letters. I saw somewhere there's a Windows keyboard definition file that does leet. /\/\3 15 7h3 1337! ;-) -- Tarquin


j00 5|_|x><0|25, 7|2|_||_'/ |_||\||_337. \/\/3r|} there j00 go l33tness at its most l33t.

wow

You suckers, truly unleet. Werd(,) there you go(,) leetness at its most leet.
Shouldn't that read "You suck", to give the full translation from leet, not just a transliteration? Also, maby not "werd" but "Word"?
|}`/(_)z7 |\/|3 $(1024^0.1)/100 --Slashme 07:39, 13 December 2005 (UTC)


this being an encyclopedia, please give a translation of the above before it goes back in the article! -- Tarquin 19:04 Oct 16, 2002 (UTC)


This article has been cited by Cecil Adams of The Straight Dope! w00t! - Montréalais

Cool! sorry. I mean |<3\/\/1!! -- Tarquin 17:14 Jan 10, 2003 (UTC) ( 74®qu1|\| )

I would say r for are or possibly our, u for you, and 2 for to and too belong to "AOL speak" and general Internet chat shorthand, not the more often than not wannabee l33tsp34k.

Is the exclamation point really part of the name? If so, the article title should be changed accordingly. -- Zoe

No, it's not -- Tarquin 13:29 Mar 3, 2003 (UTC) ( 74rqu1|\| )



The article suggest the term leet originated in 1980s but I can't seem to find any evidence of pre-1990 usage, does anyone know of any ?

Journey's album "Escape"' cover is written E5C4P3 , does that help? Rhymeless 22:59, 9 Aug 2004 (UTC)

No, It doesn't I would not consider that as an example.
BTW, I change your comment SYSS Mouse 20:49, 17 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Textfiles has plenty of proof, just read around.

1 r 1337

3'/3 4r3 73h l337 /\/|/\/j4

all your bases are belong to us...

4LL j00r B4§3$ r B3L0/\/g +\/\/0 |_|§. . .



l337 15 5uk1n9 b4115,

"root" for adminstrator privileges (from the Unix administrator account)

That's not l33t at all. Taw 18:49 Apr 25, 2003 (UTC)

but to access someone elses root privaledges w/o their permission is very l337. w0()t


All i got to say is your all nerds.-UnknownDefiler

4LL 3'/3 G()t 7\/\/0 §4y |$t, j00 4r3 73|-| G4'/.

I had always thought the term "woot" came from a game where when you got an invincibility powerup, the game made a sound that sounded kinda like "woot!". So when people got it, they'd say the word "Woot" on chat, as a way of telling people about it. That just evolved into the general "woohoo" meaning that it has now. None of this is verified, and n00b that I am, I don't even know what game it was. If anybody can back me up on this, might as well throw it in. Etaoin 02:30, 10 Nov 2003 (UTC)


Yes, it's Quake, but that's only a theory. There are also theories of origination of woot from Latin and Daffy duck; for more information, look at our very own Misplaced Pages entry woot.

Znode Productions 09:27, 2004 Jan 1 (UTC)


There's some pretty specious claims on this entry. The whole "it conserves bandwidth!" argument is right next to a mangling of frequently asked questions that takes rather more space and relies on extended ascii that in the dark ages didn't transfer well between platforms or even clients.

Practically, there are very few if any people who ever actually TALKED like that. It would be used for names on some game servers, used for spam sometimes, but never for actual talking. The practical dialects of leet tended to be the pwn, ownz0red, teh, 1337, etc. numbers get used a lot, but mangling of words with |< and /-\ and stuff didn't happen much in my experience. It wasn't ever a hierarchy thing, the upper classes of the game servers I was on looked down on people who did that sort of thing. Formal leet has always been a sort of joke, while casual leet of the 0wnz class gets used mostly because it sounds sort of cool. Written speech loses a lot of its flavor when it's seperated from speech and body language, so people need new ways to spruce things up. That's why this happens.


In my admittedly small experience, it seems that writing "one" after a string of !!!!!111 started as a joke, making fun of people who use such excessive punctuation seriously. I don't know enough on the topic to edit the article, but it's worth mentioning. It could also account for why the "one"s are not rendered in leet themselves.

It more likely comes from 'lamers' releasing the shift key before the 1/! key because they forgot to take their ritalin.

I always thought that "Woot!" was a creative mispelling of "What!", as an expression of surprise. It seems more likely to me than a derivation of "Whew" (an expression of relief), but I don't know the history.

--62.64.202.114 04:25, 8 Mar 2004 (UTC)


"b4k4^2 or |34|<4^2 for "baka Ni." Ni is the Japanese word for "two", so it is meant to be read as "Baka raised to the second power" or "baka squared" (meaning quite stupid) (see Baka-Ni t-shirt). Note that this is not gramatical Japanese and is not Japanese slang. This term probably originated entirely at megatokyo."

IMO the phrase j00 4r3 l00k|ng ph0r |§t Baka-Ne or you idiot. B4k4^2 is just an online phrase used to insult people
This is incorrect. The term "baka^2" is derived from the anime character Ruri from Nadesico, who often says "baka baaka." This can be interpreted as "baka baka" (saying "baka" twice), or the contraction of "baka bakkari" ( only ). While no doubt MegaTokyo brought the usage (relatively) mainstream, it's quite clear that it didn't originate there. Other Nadesico influences on MT includes the occational "Naze Nani MegaTokyo" panels, which mimics "Naze Nani Nadesico" from one of the episodes.
Aha! Thanks for the enlightenment. I should have known, lots of things in megatokyo are spoofs on diverse animes. Kim Bruning 17:33, 22 Mar 2004 (UTC)

l33t

Though this article was very well written, one of the largest mistakes that I found was the meaning of the word "l33t" the word "l33t" does not mean "leet" it actually means "Elite" as in the "l" produces a sound of "El" and "33t" produces "eet" or "ite" so insted of Eleet, you end up with "Elite" Sincerely, Alan out_snowboardingAThotmailDOTcom

You don't need to put a line break between everything. Also I fixed your email address, now you won't get spam. Are you sure that the article doesn't mention that?

Annoyance value

Don't suppose a bit could be added to this article to say that l33t annoys many people?

(Seriously-- I've seen high school teachers blow their tops when presented with a paper that has l33t in it.)

Berrik

Shouldn't English teachers blow their tops when they see Leet?

I'd like to know if anybody still uses 'leet' for anything other than comedic value?

I don't know about other things, but in Runescape it's still used frequently because of expletives. - mathx314

It annoys the crap outta me. Still, that may not merit a mention. Twilight Realm 03:57, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
What I really find annoying is when people have the audacity to use stuff like "teh" and "pwn" and "OWNZERED!" in real life. These people rank down there with those who spout(ed) "I'm Rick James, bitch!" and Quagmire's too-overused-to-be-funny "Giggidy-giggidy-giggidy-giggidy-goo!" and "Hoo' righhht!" If possible, I would like to vouch for the systematic destruction of these social miscreants. The Trashman 06:24, 7 December 2005 (UTC)
You actually mean people use 1337 in their ENGLISH PAPERS? O_oWorldmaster0

Teh

Anyone else think the bulk of teh ought to be moved here, and the rest to Wiktionary?

teh is culturally distinct from l33t, at least as I understand it. It doesn't date to the 1980s or early 1990s, and is used by a different group of people. --Delirium 18:25, Jun 17, 2004 (UTC)
There's a cultural continuum. Your statement also applies to many things used in here, and "leet" itself isn't defined as being from the 1980s/1990s, it's evolving continuously. --Random|832 11:35, 19 Jun 2004 (UTC)

el1te

First, the first kinda of quasi-elite spelling variation was mixed case. Which usually had vowels as small characters and all others as large: THiS iS eLiTe. The first alternative spelling that I can remember, and I could find by searching usenet by date is el1te (pre 1995). This spelling quickly went into 3l1t3, and then to the over-the-top parody 31373 (in 1995), a phenomena that spread through IRC rather than BBS. Mixed Case was a bigger phenomena, and there was utilities made to convert to Mixed Case. --BernieLomax 18:20, 17 Jun 2004 (UTC)


brings back memories

Well this certainly brings back memories of my old bbs back in 1988 if memory serves me correctly 133t or 1337 waz c00l. There is (however) something about this article which doesn't have the right feel to it (I'm not sure... maybe it's seeing dictionaries of tryhard phrases as it escaped it's initial variants and moved into the more mainstream.

it is wierd to see essentially an unwritten law written down. . .


--This is absolutely true. 1337 was not used on bbs's during the early 90s, and certainly not the 80s. It WAS mostly mixed case.

History

The only time I've seen leet used other than by patent idiots or ironically was in warez boast files. It fits with hackerish keystroke saving, trying to fit boast messages into non-relocatable code, and trying to find alternative spellings for one's handle that aren't already taken on BBS. Perhaps someone (somefew) can provide a definitive history from archived files. ISTR a few samples in early 2600's but again, mostly ironic. Rich Farmbrough 21:43, 15 Sep 2004 (UTC)

MegaTokyo

I think we should yank the MegaTokyo section and replace it with a SomethingAwful comment as a lot of the leetspeak and JeffK come from that community -though it may not be known to many MegaTokyo readers since you have to pay to be a member of the SA forums -and you used to have to pay to read them.

-Seconded, although Megatokyo deserves a 1-sentence blurb.

just b/c of l33t master largo, you have to leave the MT referance in there. Really tho, MT is the best example of leet in use IMO.

n00b

"...newbies (which may be written n00bs, possibly from "new one on the block")..."

This is the worst kind of backronym from someone with too much time on their hands. Here follows origin of n00b: newbie -> newb -> noob -> n00b. Not that difficult to swallow. The backronym should be removed unless defended. --Air 17:48, 10 Nov 2004 (UTC)

DoneMcKay
Clearly incorrect too. Although...it does work, sort of.... Worldmaster0 14:59, 23 December 2005 (UTC)

Cleanup/Featured

Maybe I'm being a bit presumptuous, but it looks like a whole bunch of script kiddies came through here and edited to their hearts content. I've tried to clean up a little bit, but the article needs a lot of work. I feel really bad deleting entire sections of new content, but I almost did it today. this article was probably a lot better off before it got featured because now everyone has (anonymously for the most part) added their little two bits. I added the cleanup tag too. LMK what you think. McKay 21:38, 5 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Adding a photoshopped picture, 1 Isn't necessary, and 2. Doesn't mean this article doesn't need cleanup.
clean-up yes, deltion. maybe not. evne if some1 tosses in their two bit, it may thier two bits that make the buck.

n00b . again

Noob != Nobody. Unless the usage has really changed, which is concievable, but I think is HIGHLY unlikely. Proof? Until I get such, I'm going to say that this is someone trying to introduce a new concept, not show an existing concept (reminder -- Misplaced Pages is not a place for original research)

No, sorry, but n00b realy does mean inexperienced. It's an insult used on forums (vBBs), IRC and especially online gaming. In a game if you call someone a n00b, noob, newb or newbie, they are usually on your team, and have exhibited lack of experience. For example, if you and I are in a game, on the same team, and you team-kill me (TK, Friendly Fire), I would call you a n00b and you would be duly offended. Poorsod 11:22, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

Cleanup: Words

The Example Words section contains rambling definitions of Internet Slang, for which we already have an article. We are only illustrating leet usage, not discussing the etymology of woot (Want One Of Those?? urgh).--Air 17:01, 17 Nov 2004 (UTC)

You're right. This article needs a lot of cleanup. Stuff like this. Feel free to take a stab at it. If there's already an entry in Misplaced Pages, merge the content and keep the link. If something doesn't have an article, make a decision. Be Bold McKay

Test

origin of !!!!111!!111

Doesn't The Gonif deserve recognition for being the 'inventor' of what has become an all too commonly overused practise? The fact that we actually know who invented it should be include. I'm putting it back in until we decide otherwise. HawkeVIPER 01:42, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)

  • Hmm...the problem with the anecdote is that it is a) completely unverifiable and b) I guess nobody outside of a very small circle of friends will knwo who "The Gonif" is and what the "Adventurer's tavern" is/was. As ist stands, it's just a story about some random BBS user 20 years ago who allegedly typed something, but we don't know his real name, and there is absolutely no way of verifying that any of this is true. So I say we're better off without the anecdote - I won't remove it for the moment as I'd like to hear others' opinions, but in my opinion, it borders on nonsense. -- Ferkelparade π 07:28, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)
I agree totally with Ferkelparade. There have been several instances of this in the past, along the lines of "I invented the word LOL on such-and-such BBS in 1978". In my opinion, without any evidence or references or they actually detract from the credibility of the article. They come across as implausible vanity additions. As they are almost inherently unprovable (how do you know no one else was using !!!111!!!11 ?) assertions of this sort are damaging and should be removed. --Air 17:27, 25 May 2005 (UTC)
i say you leave the anecdote in, but label it as such, w/ the addendum that, if anyone can prove a verifyable earlier account, then the title ist theirs.
The BBS might have been keeping some kind of log perhaps? We'd have to contact the sysop for the BBS. HawkeVIPER, I take it you know more about this, or would you be willing to track it down? Kim Bruning 12:18, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)
http://www.bbsmates.com/ doesn't seem to be helping much here, maybe you'll have more luck (or more luck elsewhere?) Kim Bruning 12:21, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Addendum: even if it can be br oven that a user called "The Gonif" typed "!!11!!11" sometime in 1986, there is still no proof whatsoever that nobody before him typed the same thing, and we still don't know anything about Gonif except his 1980s BBS handle. Wouldn't it be sufficient to say that overexclamation dates back to the 1980s BBS era? -- Ferkelparade π 12:27, 6 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Apparently the Gonif's real name was Jeff. -Sean Curtin 00:57, Dec 7, 2004 (UTC)

Apparently The gonif is still around, under the name SchvartzGonif. He plays DR. Swatjester 23:16, 12 January 2006 (UTC)


j00 r teh n00blerz

l33t and uber-l33t

I was impressed that someone has already begun the work on describing l33t, but there are some serious problems, not only with the examples given, but with some of the linguistic terms that have been used. For instance, 'leet' is not a phonetic version of elite (this would be eleet), it is rather an abbreviated form of the phonetic version, however the term "phonetic version" also lacks specification.

I am currently working on a more in-depth description of the term and its associated language use. <crispy.pie>

t3h cr1spmast4h pwnz j00 n00bz!!!1 TEH NEW L33T PAGE WILL B TEH SECHHHS!!!!11ONEHUNDREDANDELEVEN

Pronounciation of '0' in 'x0r' as 'Œ'

I've noticed that hax0r can be pronounced both hacker and hacksor. I'm just wondering if the 'e' and 'o' sounds can be interpolated to prononce hax0r with an ']' sound (in the German language, 'Œ' is written ']', and in some Scandinavian languages, 'Œ' is written ']') so that it is pronounced 'hackœr'.

In old in old-style ASCII graphic character sets, '0' is displayed with a slash through it (this is known as a slashed zero). This slashed zero looks the same as the 'Ø' in some Scandinavian languages which is pronounced 'Œ'. So I'm wondering whether this is coincidental, or if whoever invented 'x0r' was aware that it would look like 'hackør'.

I've not been able to find anything to back up my claim, and it is just a theory, but I have heard someone (who can be considered a hax0r) pronounce 'hax0r' as 'hackœr' (although they did speak in a Northern English accent).

Ae-a 08:43, 1 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Bearing in mind that 1337 was never meant to be pronounced in most cases, I think you should pronounce it as the base word. In this case HaXX0r is 'hacker', because that is what it means. SuXX0r means 'Sucker', so say 'Sucker'. If you really want to clarify that you are talking in 1337 (whatever type of person talks in 1337), pronounce it how it is spelled. So Hacksor or sucksor. But everyone wil think you very odd. Poorsod 11:28, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

Mircosoft

This article seems to have copied some sentences 1:1... http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/children/kidtalk.mspx

Let's just hope it's not the other way round. ;-) Misza13 21:04:23, 2005-09-01 (UTC)

Reconsider the "Journey" connection

I'm only going by my own anecdotal evidence, but some one here had brought up the Journey album cover of "Escape" ( E5C4P3 ), which was a very popular cultural reference in the early eighties. That album was released, I think, in late 1981. It sold quite well (and still sells).

I would plead its case as a remote cousin, maybe not a direct precursor of Leet, but being an example of using existing typography to "generate" a synthetic typeface from an existing one. While the group Journey had no need to do so except as artistic statement, I do believe its example was POSSIBLY picked up by numerous computer users who felt a need to "escape" the strictures of ASCII-only "straight" text. I also believe the lineprinter-based "ASCII Art" which depicted Snoopy, Neil Armstrong and so many pinups inspired careful use of the set of displayable characters to "substitute" for the angles, curves and shapes of typography-- hence the more arcane examples of leet you cite late in the article.

In the early "BBS" days, when ASCII was, more often than not, displayed variously on terminals and tv screens in some crude font generic to the display device, there were no universally-adopted ANSI bold/dim, underline, italic, color or other attributes to rely upon; similarly, no set of typefaces like Times or Trebuchet to select from (the fanciest terminals could do these, but nothing but the ASCII characters themselves would make it between users of the BBS system. Indeed, individual communites often had "formatting commands" relevant to the BBS software being run, so you had to be aware of the potential effect of certain character combinations. (Hey, even Wiki has these!)

So your choices of emphasis in writing a missive to friends mostly were:

1. CAPS {often referred to as "shouting"},
2. lowercase,
3. **punctuation**,
4.  +============+
    | separation |
    +============+
5. W H I T E S P A C I N G.

Now, to an extent, there is still some use to be had of these tricks, as "board" software and blog servers sometimes deliberately restrict use of attributes to a small subset of what a user might otherwise embed into a web entry, supposedly to prevent someone from running amuck with HTML and blowing the page into the undisplayable zone. But in the early eighties, you could pretty much assume that whatever was displayed to you or what you could display to others was essentially ONLY what you could type on a Selectric with one available ball. (Of coincidence only: the most popular Selectric ball was called "Elite".)

Other restrictions of computer-communication peculiar to that time were also important: logon names were often limited to eight or so characters, sometimes only rendered in caps, and often no spaces or "normal" punctuation beyond dash or underscore (',/?:;"'\|+={}) were allowed in their construction. So, like auto license vanity plates, sometimes you had to be creative to get a logon name that suited. Since real names were an impediment anyway to striking a pose or character of choice, thanks to the anonymity of the modem, users often relied on expressions drawn from fantasy or culture: Bilbo, Falcon, JREwing, paladin-- rather than John Smith, Jenny Brill, etc.

In pre-www(!) days, a collection of LOTS of local and some national BBS services were still far more accessible to the nascent "surfer" generation than the actual internet. ISPs were few and tended to be expensive except in business and grad-level scholastic contexts. An example of a service which attempted to bring the BBS world to "all of us" was U.S. Videotel, which sold a cute little black-and-white video terminal with a built-in modem that dialled directly to the server farm they ran. I am told that this was an attempt to bring the technology of the french post-office-run Minitel network to American consumers. It worked, for a few years, until the Internet and Internet-proxy providers like AOL, Compuserve, and Prodigy changed the economics of building a user community and USVideotel folded. It was at USVideotel in 1984 that I first ran into extensive use of StUdLyCaPs by the users-- which I thought were really annoying. (I still do.)

AOL, Compuserve, Prodigy, the Source; initially these were, as you'll remember, time-based services. Ten minutes on one, you'd have just spent a buck. The initial come-ons of 50 free hours would expire about the time you had got the hang of the place; then you would begin to realize just how much of a communication junkie you were becoming. Needless to say, Terseness was a virtuous style to adopt.

For those of us with our own computers and terminals and modems, even 300-baud ones, membership in local BBSes was a better deal. Some were even free! Unlike the internet user, who was online with others interacting, most local BBSes were telephonically bound to one user at a time. So you'd log on, get an hour to read and send mail, look at the chess game, make a move, then get logged off when your time expired. So you'd dial another local BBS and hang out there, checking out the messages left since the last time you were there... all like a bumblebee making the rounds and cross-pollenating as you went!

Local BBSes which had interactivity were rare, but available: they tended to be monthly membership-based (to pay for the multiple phone lines into them). This brought about the first "chat rooms". People would drift in and out of them, limited only by the ultimate number of phone lines of the board. One I was a member of ultimately had 72 lines; it was often quite a party there.

Oh, the Journey connection:

Album cover art in general tended to have a more pronounced influence on style back in the days when it was reproduced in the jumbo-size, for LP slipcases. Printed fullscale and wholesale on teeshirts and posters and mirror tiles and surfboards, most rock aficianados knew the covers on sight, even if they'd never listen to the whole record. Modern CD covers do not carry similar totemic power-- they are simply too small to serve as really accessible "art". But the cover of Journey's "Escape" album certainly was one of rock's more identifiable icons of the early eighties.

I remember friends specifically commenting to me on the typographical amusement of E5C4P3 on the cover-- it striking them as a novelty. Though I didn't particularly care about Journey at the time (I find them much better now on the radio than I did then), I had to admire the beautifully-executed cover art and the clever "pun" on fantasy starships and their usually-depicted nomenclature conventions.

I myself was to experiment with this "innovation" on my own keyboard, only to conclude it was not very easy to express anything very useful or accessible-- I decided it was futile and looked like a faulty disk-drive sector had mangled my text.

But I did have to try it-- just as someone else I saw had worked up a tagline using ASCII in another "abnormal" way: "umop apisdn w,i aw dlaH". Stupid ASCII tricks?

Maybe. How you get from there to "suxxors" or "w00t" I do not know. Desire to be perceived as someone in that "elite" group has never possessed me. I've looked at the occasional word like "Pr0n" and wondered if my eyes were crossed. But I do believe that, even if the connection is not direct inspiration by the authors of Leet, an antecedent fossil, "prior art" if you will, IS still there in that Journey album cover.

Just my opinions. Thanks. 08057evalsyttik at oohay dot moc <<don't you just hate spam?>>

AOL ISP=n00b?

This doesn't seem right. The people who use AOL speak usually are users of AIM, but not nessecarily users of the AOL ISP. Maybe I'm just crazy. Phoenix Hacker

"The people who use AOL speak usually are users of AIM, but not nessecarily users of the AOL ISP." Actually, this could be said of many things. The users of of aim are a superset of those who use the AOL ISP. See, the thing is, is that a lot of people use AIM. A LOT. I use AIM. So the people who use AOL will likely use AIM. Some because they don't know what it is their doing and somehow people are just able to talk to them through their UI. The fact of the matter is that AOL=n00b. Because no one in their right mind will pay more than $20 for dialup. (oh, and the non-Internet internet part of AOL, isn't really valuable). And lots of people use AIM. McKay 05:20, 15 Apr 2005 (UTC)

I think AOL was also n00b because n00bs didn't mind using AOL Explorer (that was what the ?compulsory client was called, iirc), but l33t h4x0rs wanted the choice, and didn't like being constrained to a specific client by their isp. Willkm 18:03, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

AOL speak is still derided among the "uber" because it gives an impression of a "giddy-teenage" mindset of the person using it. A lot of people consider anything produced by AOL as being braindead. The AIM client is a very retarded, half-broken, and altogether rude program, and anyone who considers the program as valuable falls into the category of n00b (although i really hate that word.) AOL was given n00b status long before one could even use it to connect to the internet -- It wasn't always an ISP. AOL and people who use AOL products extensively are delegated to their status by experienced and intelligent users completely via the mindset/implied intelligence level of their users. It is a trait which is forever linked to the name so long as AOL continues to dumb down computers for the rest of us. Not meant to sound harsh, just an explicit affirmation of some subtleties of the situation.
Yes, AOL speak is derided. Yes, people who use the AOL isp are considered n00bs, definitely not 1337. Yes, AOL's first services did not include the Internet (it was an internet tho), and were subscription based, much like they are today. But the real reason I write is that AIM isn't considered n00bish. Maybe by you, but I wonder what you use? ICQ? no one's on it anymore. MSN? Popular, but probably derided more. Y!? worthless. Jabber is pretty 1337, and because GTalk has jumped on, we may get somewhere, but it isn't very feature rich. The fact of the matter is is that AIM is considered the service (though not necessarily the client) of choice for instant messaging. Especially by those people who really are the elite ones on the Internet. In fact, the only reason I use AIM, is beacuse the people I know who know the most about what's going on in several computer fields use AIM. All my close friends use MSNIM, but AIM is the IM service of the truly elite. McKay 06:59, 17 October 2005 (UTC)

Request for references

Hi, I am working to encourage implementation of the goals of the Misplaced Pages:Verifiability policy. Part of that is to make sure articles cite their sources. This is particularly important for featured articles, since they are a prominent part of Misplaced Pages. The Fact and Reference Check Project has more information. Thank you, and please leave me a message when you have added a few references to the article. - Taxman 20:00, Apr 21, 2005 (UTC)

???

I think the article needs modification - only /\/008s use automated l33t translators.

Pronunciation

Si "leet" really pronounced "elite", with the "e" sound at the start? I've always been pronouncing it "leet" without the initial "e" sound. I simply assumed it was a contracted form. JIP | Talk 8 July 2005 09:25 (UTC)

Elite --> 'lite --> leet --> 1337. So I'd pronounce it leet. Especially seeing as it is often written l33t. Poorsod 11:32, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

Dreadful paragraph

The second sentence in the following paragraph from the intro is dreadful. Once I figure out what it is supposed to mean, I'll try cleaning it up. Robert A West 8 July 2005 21:50 (UTC)

Spellings do not always follow a set convention, the same word may be spelled differently by different people, indeed by the same person. This is symptomatic of the desire, or affected desire or desire for an appearance of either a desire or affected desire, to elude comprehension by others unfamiliar with the art form.

leetspeak v. aol speak

I'd really like to add a more comprehensive explanation about the differences between leetspeak and aol speak, but haven't really done any editing to speak of on wikipedia.

As described in the article leetspeak originated as a method of circumventing word filters and as a cipher whereas AOL speak seems mainly to be borne of the desire to shorten the written language (American English, for the most part) in order to communicate more quickly.

I don't think it's much of a stretch to assert that the average person does not have nearly the typing skills as people who are very familiar with computers and that prior to the popularity of the internet the average person's typing experiences on computers fell exclusively within the domain of creating formal documents for work or school. With the surging popularity of e-mail, instant messaging, and chatrooms, the average person began to type in casual contexts on the computer with much more frequency and did not have a pressing need to conform to the somewhat strict standards of written language. There has never been a time in the history of mankind where so much 'written' communication has been possible for casual conversation, and it has never been in real-time.

I think those factors, along with the average person's sluggish typing (and other unnamed variables) contributed to the formation of AOL speak. I think the AOL part of AOL speak we can all agree is attributed to how masterful AOL was at attracting to its service people whom often had never owned a computer, used a computer since enrollment in school, or used a computer much outside of its very limited role in their work. (N00bs.)

Also I think it's notable that many of the alternate spellings of words in AOL speak (including words bearing leetspeak's influence on AOLspeak) do little to obscure the language for someone who is unfamiliar with AOL speak. Nearly all of the difficulty in reading AOL speak stems from the abbreviation and shortening of words. I think that illustrates a somewhat dialectal relationship with standard American English rather than the cipher-like characteristics leetspeak has traditionally exhibited.

confirm/deny

OMGWTFBBQ

Has anyone heard of this term? "Oh my God, what the fuck, barbecue"? Rickyrab | Talk 02:14, 17 July 2005 (UTC)

I have heard of that term. It is meant to make fun of all those internet abbreviations that are common place among users of IM programs. It would belong on the Internet Slang page. --cheese-cube 02:12, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
See http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=omgwtfbbq --Eliezer | £€åV€ m€ å m€§§åg€ 11:54, 19 July 2005 (UTC)
Yes thats what I meant, only more coherently. --cheese-cube 04:58, 20 July 2005 (UTC)
The "BBQ" part is just an intensifier, I think. There's also "OMGWTFNIPPLE." It's probably just something that was made to make fun of n00bs trying to use as many acronyms as possible. Worldmaster0 15:01, 23 December 2005 (UTC)

Dyslexia and Frequent Misspellings in l33t

Is it possible that all these misspellings represent dyslexia more than anything? Perhaps many of the mosy enthusiastic users of l33t are also more likely to be dyslexic than the normal population. Dyslexic people may have trouble with sequencing, and typing characters in the wrong order is just another sign of that.

"I'm not dyslexic, I'm l33t!--cheese-cube 03:44, 24 July 2005 (UTC)
I must say that I disagree--I would imagine that 7331 er... 1337 would be more difficult for someone who was dyslexic because there are not only letters, but numbers as well. I could be wrong--I'm not dyslexic, but I've got a feeling that l33t really does have it's 'r00ts' in hacking, trying to get past language filters, and making fun of common misspellings. authraw 20:40, 23 December 2005 (UTC)

Cyncical Extensions of l33t and 'Netspeak

Trolls have taken l33t and 'Netspeak to a new level on websites like Kuro5hin. They are responsible for such phrases as "l0llercoaster!!!!1one" and worse.


language box.

I removed the right box from the article. It is a hoax. SYSS Mouse 02:42, 26 July 2005 (UTC) error: ISO 639 code is required (help)

Should ISO 639-2 designation in the language box on the version of the article page really be "art" as it is now? An artificial language is one "whose phonology, grammar and vocabulary are specifically devised by an individual or small group, rather than having naturally evolved as part of a culture as with natural languages." l33t started off as a way to avoid text filters, and evolved into its current form over time as a part of Internet Culture, and is still evolving. As such, it should be a natural language. Specifically a primarily written dialect of English, similiar in relationship to Ebonics (although not genetically related.) Or perhaps an encoding of the English language, but alone it is certainly not any form of standard English. Perhaps someone with a greater knowledge of linguistics can better classify it?
It should also be noted that I do pronounce some of the new forms introduced through l33t speak along with some AOL speak when speaking with someone who'll know what I'm talking about. So, l33t is not completely written despite what the article may say. Particularly, I can use -x0rz and -4g3 or as a productive affixes in certain contexts. Examples of things I can sometimes be heard saying: h4x0rz , pwn3d , lol , brb , keke as a series of velar affricates I don't know how to transcribe, etc. With the exception of new forms unique to l33t, in my experience l33t is usually pronounced the same as the original English it encodes. --j0no 18:47, 18 December 2005 (UTC)

The letter translations jumped the shark

I'm not sure if the above comment is referring to what I'm referring to, but the I find the "Kusachu" table not very visually comprehensible (some columns are randomly squished). Perhaps a <dl>-style list would be better? Decklin 13:35, 8 August 2005 (UTC)

Make sure you are using the default text size on your browser. It looks fine to me on both IE and Firefox. Changing the text size (which can easily be done accidentally) can screw with the appearance and layout of highly formatted pages such as W--Oni Ookami Alfador 02:45, 19 December 2005 (UTC)ikipedia.

b6 or b7???

ähm?, is the & really above the 7 in american keyboards? i didn'T knw that, till yet. THX LOL

Leet translation

Someone took the time to convert the entire article into Leet. Here 's a link http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Leet&oldid=21226208 to that revision. Lisiate 02:33, 18 August 2005 (UTC)

I'm sure they just used an automatic translator. God damn vandals. --cheese-cube 09:32, 18 August 2005 (UTC)

Republic Commando

I've played through the game and asked on the forums and no one recalls that happening. Can anyone confirm the validity of this? --Phoenix Hacker 06:55, September 11, 2005 (UTC)


Brian Bell?

I notice there is a sentence "Brian Bell is gay" contained within the article. Is this some sort of an in-joke or graffiti?

About Greeklish

The section greeklish doesnt belong in that article. It came about as a means to be able to comunicate in Greek since most electronic devices have a poor support for the Greek language. Almost all Greek speakers who use technology (most people) have had this problem and therefore especially in the early days of the net needed to invent a way to communicate. Presumably the only similarity except from the fact that it is a transliteration is it´s use of numbers for characters that doesn exist in the "correct" Greeklish, for example the use of 8 in place of "theta" (θήτα) or the use of 3 in place of "xi" (x pronounced like the x in exodus, Ξί in Greek). It is not a way to create an elite, and it came about presumably by some form of trade war on protocols and standards of the kind that occured at the time that DVDs and CDROMs were to be standardised, hence the Greek codepage can be either ISO-8859-7 or "wingreek"(win-1253) or MacGreek (don´t ask). There was an effort to standardise with Unicode but this seems to be ignored by most software makers even nowdays.

--Vousmanos 08:10, 5 October 2005 (UTC) "Common sense is what makes you think that the world is flat"

First Usage of Leetspeak

An anon IP (User:65.33.207.254) contributed this (now first) chapter of Leet. I fail to see any relevance (read: 1337|\|355) of this Doomish fact for the article. Anyone else agrees that "First Usage of Leetspeak" should be made an e><ample of and promptly o|3137eo|? --Misza13 19:04, 8 October 2005 (UTC)

  • Deleted

McKay being bold

Noobishness

I've reverted quite a bit, (be bold) First was for the most recent edit abotu the math. That was unimportant, irrelevant, and unhelpful. Leet can also be used to make fun of his mom, but we don't add that in here.

Also, I've reverted a bunch of additions to the noob section. (which actually reverts over a vandalism revert). First I think that these kinds of remarks belong in the article for noob. Only but the most basic comments regarding noobishness belong here. Second, it didn't seem very accurate (original research only?). As far as I can tell:

  • noober is used either to rhyme with uber, or with an -er modifier for noob.
  • nubian is possibly real, but given the edit history of this user on this article, I've decided to blanket revert for safety. It could very well, just be used to describe the things noobs do, not referencing the noobs themselves.
  • nubnuts 0 google hits (I was expecting at least something)
  • noobnuts appears to be a username on several forums. The first google hit might be something, but seems very much a neologism.

So if you've any questions about any of this, feel free to contact me, but I (for the moment) stand my ground). McKay 03:02, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

Frequent misspellings

This list is long, redundant, and hard to verify. Can we just list the extremely common ones (e.g. teh, pwn), and say that adjacent letters are commonly transposed for effect (like->liek, lame->laem)? With a constantly evolving language like leet where the emphasis is on generalization, it seems silly to list frequent misspellings, since any word can be turned into leet by deliberate misspelling. e.g. any person familiar with leet would know waht I maent if I wroet thsi, but it doesnt maen we haev to list "waht", "maent", "wroet", "thsi", "maen", and "haev". Kjl 18:44, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

Stuff changed today

Paragraph on misspellings in Overview removed words without value:

  • fuxored (self explanatory)
  • l@@k (self explanatory)
  • l4m3 (self explanatory), l3m (not notable, doesn't even appear in UrbanDict, most related hits are WikiPedia),
  • rape (self explanatory, not L33t)
  • üb3rly 1337 (duplicate)
  • r0x0r, suxx0r (already a -x0r section)

removed comment on w00t. Discussion on the word should go there. edited the "jaja" stuff. Batman Begins -> Batman Begins (video game)

Origins of -8- ("l8r", "gr8", etc.)

As soon as the early 90's, word formations involving substitutions of "8" for "ate" (such as l8r, gr8, and so forth) were already part of BBS message boards; thus, such words should not be considered a part of "AOL/IM speak", as they are not an invention of the AOL community. It has been thus edited.

Comedic value?

I have not read the article very thoroughly, but I haven't seen mentioned that these days almost everyone uses 1337 for its comedic value (well, except those annoying 12-year-olds in multiplayer games). I think that the majority (myself included) uses it to annoy and joke about than for any of the reasons in the article. Poromenos 00:23, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

'/34/-/, !7 |2311'/ (4/\/ |33 /-/!14|2!0|_|5. Feel free to add stuff. Matt Yeager 05:07, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

Use of x0r

I added "The term "r0x0r j00r b0x0r" itself probably relates to hacking itself, with a person being able to gain access to and, from there, "rock their box". It is also possible that it is a derivation from ".

I'm pretty sure that "r0x0rz j00r s0x0rs" didn't come in until way after *"b0x0rz". But I left the other explanation because I don't think this can be proven.

-Fishdinner 10.21.05

Jeopardy

Should this article mention the time on Jeopardy that a CMU student wagered $1337? --NeuronExMachina 02:17, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

Move/redirect

Either redirect from 1337 or move to 1337 with a redirect in place. What do you think? Poorsod 11:39, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

You know 1337 was a year, right? I think it takes precedence.--Alhutch 08:02, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
Plus, there's already a disambig in place at the top of the year 1337 page that leads people to this article if they want.--Alhutch 21:06, 30 November 2005 (UTC)

typing non-latin languages leet-like language

some languages use number combined with special characters in addition to charachters to provide readable non-latin languages, for example, in arabic 9aba7 instead of the similar prounciation " sabah " or " ba6i7' " instead of the similar prounciation "batikh" which are the words صباح and بطيخ respectivily. it is usually used to represent sounds that dont map correctly to the sounds of english: 2(a') 3{A'a) 6(Tta) 6'(Th'a) 5(Kh'a) 9(Ssa) 9'(Dha) 3'(Gha') 7 (H-ha) $ (Sh'a) are examples, what article matches that? (Unattributed comment)

I suggest that you go ahead and add a section on Arabic under the heading "leet in other languages", next to the subsections on Japanese, Cyrillic and Greek practices. --Slashme 07:32, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

Cryptography

Recently the label of cryptography as a setting for 1337 was removed. I replaced it along with a comment instructing anyone wishing to change it to see this page first. The reason for that is that it does appear to qualify under the current definition, as layed out in Cryptography. Cryptography does not require any form of Encryption. It is simply a method of either authentication information, or limiting the number of people able to interpret the message. 1337 does just that.--Oni Ookami Alfador 16:59, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

You're missing something here. Leet is used for fun (mostly). Now imagine that someone starts writing lojbanic (for example) - also just for amusement. Under your interpretation this would also qualify as cryptography (not many people speak lojbanic), but is it really? I guess the actual question is whether Leet is a constructed language. I wouldn't say it is - in which case the cryptography-argument would be valid - some people think different though. --Misza13 18:51, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
Leet is used by spammers as a constructed language to fool spam filters (as per article) AzaToth 18:58, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
Yeah, thats what I'm going at with this. In this article, it states that leet was essentially direived from the English language for the purpose of bypassing filters and for being able to talk essentially in front of someone without them knowing what it means.--Oni Ookami Alfador 19:21, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

Misplaced Pages in Leet?

I've been thinking... if Leet is a constructed language, then why shouldn't we have a Leet Misplaced Pages? (1337 \/\/ | |< | P 3 |> | 4) After all, major websites like Google already have a leet translation. Uncyclopedia, a website inspired on Misplaced Pages, has articles on leet as well. What do you think? Who joins me? |-|4|1 j00! Ruela 01:26, 27 Dec 2005 (UTC)

It's not a spoken language. It's like latin--though many people can speak it, it's not used, for practical purposes. Second of all, there is no regulated spelling of leet words, so there wouldn't be an easy way to regulate it. In my opinion, a leet wikipedia would just be difficult to regulate and messy. authraw 04:29, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
Well, we *do* have a Latin wikipedia. However, Wikimedia is less accepting of constructed languages in general. It might link to a l33t-language Misplaced Pages if you hosted it independently. -Tim Rhymeless (Er...let's shimmy) 04:41, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
Ok, maybe it's not a good idea... but if anyone has any interest in a Leet Misplaced Pages, contact me. Like Tim said, it could be hosted independently (Wikicities already hosts a Tokipona Misplaced Pages, which was locked as a regular Misplaced Pages). There has been a request for a Pig Latin Wikicity, but it was denied because it should be at Conlang Misplaced Pages, so probably a Leet Misplaced Pages should apply there. Happy new year everyone! Ruela 14:44, 28 Dec 2005 (UTC)

Another origin of the term 'elite'.

I suspect that another contributing source for the term 'elite' in this context will have come from the Elite series of computer games.

There is a wikipedia article covering the series here: http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Elite_%28computer_game%29

Elite is perhaps not as well known now but was one of the best selling and most highly respected games of the 8 bit home computer era.

The scoring system of Elite assigned the player a rank. The starting rank was 'harmless'. After the first couple of succesful kills, the player received a rating of 'mostly harmless' (HHGTTG refs). The final player rank was Elite.

It is quite common that a phrase can have more than one source. For example, the phrase 'saved by the bell' is a boxing expression but also has an earlier origin connected with the practice of burrying people with a bell. The bell was included so that a person who had been inadvertantly burried alive could signal for help.

Be careful of such folk-etymologies. Check this out

--Slashme 10:15, 29 December 2005 (UTC)

The ZIP Code 31337

What town has the zip code of 31337? Based on the numbering, it's somewhere on the East Coast. Have tech companies settled there to slowly grow it into "The Silicon Valley of the East" due to its ZIP Code's meaning? --Shultz 05:16, 5 January 2006 (UTC)

'Spelt' vs 'Spelled'?

Isn't 'spelt' a British term? Seeing as the rest of this article is written using the American spellings of various words, shouldn't we be using 'spelled'? authraw 01:43, 7 January 2006 (UTC)