982 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
982 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
Computer underground Digest Sun Mar 6, 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 21
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe (He's sorting thru the files)
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Acting Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Copita Editor: Sheri O'Nothera
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CONTENTS, #6.21 (Mar 6, 1994)
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File 1--"A Rape in Cyberspace" (by J. Dibble / Village Voice Reprint)
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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Or, to subscribe, send a one-line message: SUB CUDIGEST your name
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Send it to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET or LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
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The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
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or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
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60115, USA.
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (141.211.164.18) in /pub/CuD/
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EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud/ (Finland)
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[nic.funet.fi does NOT have phrack either]
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 19 Jan 1994 18:14:30 -0500 (EST)
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From: Julian Dibbell <julian@PANIX.COM>
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Subject: File 1--"A Rape in Cyberspace" (by J. Dibble / Village Voice Reprint)
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following article may not be reproduced without
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the author's permission))
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(c)1993 by Julian Dibbell
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(This article originally appeared in The Village Voice, December 21,
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1993, 38(51): pp 36-42).
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A Rape in Cyberspace
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or
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How an Evil Clown, a Haitian Trickster Spirit, Two Wizards,
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and a Cast of Dozens Turned a Database Into a Society
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By Julian Dibbell (julian@panix.com)
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They say he raped them that night. They say he did it with a cunning
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little doll, fashioned in their image and imbued with the power to
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make them do whatever he desired. They say that by manipulating the
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doll he forced them to have sex with him, and with each other, and to
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do horrible, brutal things to their own bodies. And though I wasn't
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there that night, I think I can assure you that what they say is true,
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because it all happened right in the living room--right there amid the
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well-stocked bookcases and the sofas and the fireplace--of a house
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I've come to think of as my second home.
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-----
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Call me Dr. Bombay. Some months ago--let's say about halfway between
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the first time you heard the words _information_superhighway_ and the
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first time you wished you never had--I found myself tripping with
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compulsive regularity down the well-traveled information lane that
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leads to LambdaMOO, a very large and very busy rustic chateau built
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entirely of words. Nightly, I typed the commands that called those
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words onto my computer screen, dropping me with what seemed a warm
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electric thud inside the mansion's darkened coat closet, where I
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checked my quotidian identity, stepped into the persona and appearance
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of a minor character from a long-gone television sitcom, and stepped
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out into the glaring chatter of the crowded living room. Sometimes,
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when the mood struck me, I emerged as a dolphin instead.
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I won't say why I chose to masquerade as Samantha Stevens's
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outlandish cousin, or as the dolphin, or what exactly led to my mild
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but so-far incurable addiction to the semifictional digital
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otherworlds known around the Internet as multi-user dimensions, or
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MUDs. This isn't my story, after all. It's the story of a man named
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Mr. Bungle, and of the ghostly sexual violence he committed in the
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halls of LambdaMOO, and most importantly of the ways his violence and
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his victims challenged the 1000 and more residents of that surreal,
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magic-infested mansion to become, finally, the community so many of
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them already believed they were.
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That I was myself one of those residents has little direct bearing
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on the story's events. I mention it only as a warning that my own
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perspective is perhaps too steeped in the surreality and magic of the
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place to serve as an entirely appropriate guide. For the Bungle Affair
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raises questions that--here on the brink of a future in which human
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life may find itself as tightly enveloped in digital environments as
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it is today in the architectural kind--demand a clear-eyed, sober, and
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unmystified consideration. It asks us to shut our ears momentarily to
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the techno-utopian ecstasies of West Coast cyberhippies and look
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without illusion upon the present possibilities for building, in the
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on-line spaces of this world, societies more decent and free than
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those mapped onto dirt and concrete and capital. It asks us to behold
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the new bodies awaiting us in virtual space undazzled by their phantom
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powers, and to get to the crucial work of sorting out the socially
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meaningful differences between those bodies and our physical ones. And
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most forthrightly it asks us to wrap our late-modern ontologies,
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epistemologies, sexual ethics, and common sense around the curious
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notion of rape by voodoo doll--and to try not to warp them beyond
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recognition in the process.
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In short, the Bungle Affair dares me to explain it to you without
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resort to dime-store mysticisms, and I fear I may have shape-shifted
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by the digital moonlight one too many times to be quite up to the
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task. But I will do what I can, and can do no better I suppose than to
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lead with the facts. For if nothing else about Mr. Bungle's case is
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unambiguous, the facts at least are crystal clear.
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-----
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The facts begin (as they often do) with a time and a place. The time
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was a Monday night in March, and the place, as I've said, was the
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living room--which, due to the inviting warmth of its decor, is so
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invariably packed with chitchatters as to be roughly synonymous among
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LambdaMOOers with a party. So strong, indeed, is the sense of
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convivial common ground invested in the living room that a cruel mind
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could hardly imagine a better place in which to stage a violation of
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LambdaMOO's communal spirit. And there was cruelty enough lurking in
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the appearance Mr. Bungle presented to the virtual world--he was at
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the time a fat, oleaginous, Bisquick-faced clown dressed in
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cum-stained harlequin garb and girdled with a mistletoe-and-hemlock
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belt whose buckle bore the quaint inscription ``KISS ME UNDER THIS,
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BITCH!'' But whether cruelty motivated his choice of crime scene is
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not among the established facts of the case. It is a fact only that he
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did choose the living room.
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The remaining facts tell us a bit more about the inner world of
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Mr. Bungle, though only perhaps that it couldn't have been a very
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comfortable place. They tell us that he commenced his assault entirely
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unprovoked, at or about 10 p.m. Pacific Standard Time. That he began
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by using his voodoo doll to force one of the room's occupants to
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sexually service him in a variety of more or less conventional ways.
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That this victim was legba, a Haitian trickster spirit of
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indeterminate gender, brown-skinned and wearing an expensive pearl
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gray suit, top hat, and dark glasses. That legba heaped vicious
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imprecations on him all the while and that he was soon ejected bodily
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from the room. That he hid himself away then in his private chambers
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somewhere on the mansion grounds and continued the attacks without
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interruption, since the voodoo doll worked just as well at a distance
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as in proximity. That he turned his attentions now to Starsinger, a
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rather pointedly nondescript female character, tall, stout, and
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brown-haired, forcing her into unwanted liaisons with other
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individuals present in the room, among them legba, Bakunin (the
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well-known radical), and Juniper (the squirrel). That his actions grew
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progressively violent. That he made legba eat his/her own pubic hair.
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That he caused Starsinger to violate herself with a piece of kitchen
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cutlery. That his distant laughter echoed evilly in the living room
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with every successive outrage. That he could not be stopped until at
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last someone summoned Zippy, a wise and trusted old-timer who brought
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with him a gun of near wizardly powers, a gun that didn't kill but
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enveloped its targets in a cage impermeable even to a voodoo doll's
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powers. That Zippy fired this gun at Mr. Bungle,
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thwarting the doll at last and silencing the evil, distant
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laughter.
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These particulars, as I said, are unambiguous. But they are
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far from simple, for the simple reason that every set of facts
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in virtual reality (or VR, as the locals abbreviate it) is
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shadowed by a second, complicating set: the ``real-life'' facts.
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And while a certain tension invariably buzzes in the gap between
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the hard, prosaic RL facts and their more fluid, dreamy VR
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counterparts, the dissonance in the Bungle case is striking. No
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hideous clowns or trickster spirits appear in the RL version of
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the incident, no voodoo dolls or wizard guns, indeed no rape at
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all as any RL court of law has yet defined it. The actors in the
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drama were university students for the most part, and they sat
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rather undramatically before computer screens the entire time,
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their only actions a spidery flitting of fingers across standard
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QWERTY keyboards. No bodies touched. Whatever physical
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interaction occurred consisted of a mingling of electronic
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signals sent from sites spread out between New York City and
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Sydney, Australia. Those signals met in LambdaMOO, certainly,
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just as the hideous clown and the living room party did, but
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what was LambdaMOO after all? Not an enchanted mansion or
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anything of the sort--just a middlingly complex database,
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maintained for experimental purposes inside a Xerox Corporation
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research computer in Palo Alto and open to public access via the
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Internet.
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To be more precise about it, LambdaMOO was a MUD. Or to be
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yet more precise, it was a subspecies of MUD known as a MOO,
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which is short for ``MUD, Object-Oriented.'' All of which means
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that it was a kind of database especially designed to give users
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the vivid impression of moving through a physical space that in
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reality exists only as descriptive data filed away on a hard
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drive. When users dial into LambdaMOO, for instance, the program
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immediately presents them with a brief textual description of
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one of the rooms of the database's fictional mansion (the coat
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closet, say). If the user wants to leave this room, she can
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enter a command to move in a particular direction and the
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database will replace the original description with a new one
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corresponding to the room located in the direction she chose.
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When the new description scrolls across the user's screen it
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lists not only the fixed features of the room but all its
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contents at that moment--including things (tools, toys, weapons)
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and other users (each represented as a ``character'' over which
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he or she has sole control).
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As far as the database program is concerned, all of these
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entities--rooms, things, characters--are just different
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subprograms that the program allows to interact according to
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rules very roughly mimicking the laws of the physical world.
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Characters may not leave a room in a given direction, for
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instance, unless the room subprogram contains an ``exit'' at
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that compass point. And if a character ``says'' or ``does''
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something (as directed by its user-owner), then only the users
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whose characters are also located in that room will see the
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output describing the statement or action. Aside from such basic
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constraints, however, LambdaMOOers are allowed a broad freedom
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to create--they can describe their characters any way they like,
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they can make rooms of their own and decorate them to taste, and
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they can build new objects almost at will. The combination of
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all this busy user activity with the hard physics of the
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database can certainly induce a lucid illusion of presence--but
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when all is said and done the only thing you _really_ see when
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you visit LambdaMOO is a kind of slow-crawling script, lines of
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dialogue and stage direction creeping steadily up your computer
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screen.
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Which is all just to say that, to the extent that Mr.
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Bungle's assault happened in real life at all, it happened as a
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sort of Punch-and-Judy show, in which the puppets and the
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scenery were made of nothing more substantial than digital code
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and snippets of creative writing. The puppeteer behind Bungle,
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as it happened, was a young man logging in to the MOO from a New
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York University computer. He could have been Al Gore for all any
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of the others knew, however, and he could have written Bungle's
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script that night any way he chose. He could have sent a command
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to print the message ``Mr. Bungle, smiling a saintly smile,
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floats angelic near the ceiling of the living room, showering
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joy and candy kisses down upon the heads of all below''--and
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everyone then receiving output from the database's subprogram
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#17 (a/k/a the ``living room'') would have seen that sentence on
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their screens.
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Instead, he entered sadistic fantasies into the ``voodoo
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doll,'' a subprogram that served the not-exactly kosher purpose
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of attributing actions to other characters that their users did
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not actually write. And thus a woman in Haverford, Pennsylvania,
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whose account on the 'MOO attached her to a character she called
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Starsinger, was given the unasked-for opportunity to read the
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words ``As if against her will, Starsinger jabs a steak knife up
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her ass, causing immense joy. You hear Mr. Bungle laughing
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evilly in the distance.'' And thus the woman in Seattle who had
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written herself the character called legba, with a view perhaps
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to tasting in imagination a deity's freedom from the burdens of
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the gendered flesh, got to read similarly constructed sentences
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in which legba, messenger of the gods, lord of crossroads and
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communications, suffered a brand of degradation
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all-too-customarily reserved for the embodied female.
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-----
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``Mostly voodoo dolls are amusing,'' wrote legba on the evening
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after Bungle's rampage, posting a public statement to the widely
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read in-MOO mailing list called *social-issues, a forum for
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debate on matters of import to the entire populace. ``And mostly
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I tend to think that restrictive measures around here cause more
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trouble than they prevent. But I also think that Mr. Bungle was
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being a vicious, vile fuckhead, and I...want his sorry ass
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scattered from #17 to the Cinder Pile. I'm not calling for
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policies, trials, or better jails. I'm not sure what I'm calling
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for. Virtual castration, if I could manage it. Mostly, [this
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type of thing] doesn't happen here. Mostly, perhaps I thought it
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wouldn't happen to me. Mostly, I trust people to conduct
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themselves with some veneer of civility. Mostly, I want his
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ass.''
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Months later, the woman in Seattle would confide to me that
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as she wrote those words posttraumatic tears were streaming down
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her face--a real-life fact that should suffice to prove that the
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words' emotional content was no mere playacting. The precise
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tenor of that content, however, its mingling of murderous rage
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and eyeball-rolling annoyance, was a curious amalgam that
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neither the RL nor the VR facts alone can quite account for.
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Where virtual reality and its conventions would have us believe
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that legba and Starsinger were brutally raped in their own
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living room, here was the victim legba scolding Mr. Bungle for a
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breach of ``civility.'' Where real life, on the other hand,
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insists the incident was only an episode in a free-form version
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of Dungeons and Dragons, confined to the realm of the symbolic
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and at no point threatening any player's life, limb, or material
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well-being, here now was the player legba issuing aggrieved and
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heartfelt calls for Mr. Bungle's dismemberment. Ludicrously
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excessive by RL's lights, woefully understated by VR's, the tone
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of legba's response made sense only in the buzzing, dissonant
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gap between them.
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Which is to say it made the only kind of sense that _can_ be
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made of MUDly phenomena. For while the _facts_ attached to any
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event born of a MUD's strange, ethereal universe may march in
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straight, tandem lines separated neatly into the virtual and the
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real, its meaning lies always in that gap. You learn this axiom
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early in your life as a player, and it's of no small relevance
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to the Bungle case that you usually learn it between the sheets,
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so to speak. Netsex, tinysex, virtual sex--however you name it,
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in real-life reality it's nothing more than a 900-line encounter
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stripped of even the vestigial physicality of the voice. And yet
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as any but the most inhibited of newbies can tell you, it's
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possibly the headiest experience the very heady world of MUDs
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has to offer. Amid flurries of even the most cursorily described
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caresses, sighs, and penetrations, the glands do engage, and
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often as throbbingly as they would in a real-life
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assignation--sometimes even more so, given the combined power of
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anonymity and textual suggestiveness to unshackle deep-seated
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fantasies. And if the virtual setting and the interplayer vibe
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are right, who knows? The heart may engage as well, stirring up
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passions as strong as many that bind lovers who observe the
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formality of trysting in the flesh.
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To participate, therefore, in this disembodied enactment of
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life's most body-centered activity is to risk the realization
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that when it comes to sex, perhaps the body in question is not
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the physical one at all, but its psychic double, the bodylike
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self-representation we carry around in our heads. I know, I
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know, you've read Foucault and your mind is not quite blown by
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the notion that sex is never so much an exchange of fluids as as
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it is an exchange of signs. But trust your friend Dr. Bombay,
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it's one thing to grasp the notion intellectually and quite
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another to feel it coursing through your veins amid the virtual
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steam of hot netnookie. And it's a whole other mind-blowing trip
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altogether to encounter it thus as a college frosh, new to the
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net and still in the grip of hormonal hurricanes and high-school
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sexual mythologies. The shock can easily reverberate throughout
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an entire young worldview. Small wonder, then, that a newbie's
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first taste of MUD sex is often also the first time she or he
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surrenders wholly to the slippery terms of MUDish ontology,
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recognizing in a full-bodied way that what happens inside a
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MUD-made world is neither exactly real nor exactly make-believe,
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but profoundly, compellingly, and emotionally meaningful.
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And small wonder indeed that the sexual nature of Mr.
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Bungle's crime provoked such powerful feelings, and not just in
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legba (who, be it noted, was in real life a theory-savvy
|
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doctoral candidate and a longtime MOOer, but just as baffled and
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overwhelmed by the force of her own reaction, she later would
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attest, as any panting undergrad might have been). Even players
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who had never experienced MUD rape (the vast majority of
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male-presenting characters, but not as large a majority of the
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female-presenting as might be hoped) immediately appreciated its
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gravity and were moved to condemnation of the perp. legba's
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missive to _*social-issues_ followed a strongly worded one from
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Zippy (``Well, well,'' it began, ``no matter what else happens
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on Lambda, I can always be sure that some jerk is going to
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reinforce my low opinion of humanity'') and was itself followed
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by others from Moriah, Raccoon, Crawfish, and evangeline.
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Starsinger also let her feelings (``pissed'') be known. And even
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Jander, the Clueless Samaritan who had responded to Bungle's
|
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cries for help and uncaged him shortly after the incident,
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expressed his regret once apprised of Bungle's deeds, which he
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allowed to be ``despicable.''
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A sense was brewing that something needed to be done--done
|
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soon and in something like an organized fashion--about Mr.
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Bungle, in particular, and about MUD rape, in general. Regarding
|
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the general problem, evangeline, who identified herself as a
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survivor of both virtual rape (``many times over'') and
|
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real-life sexual assault, floated a cautious proposal for a
|
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MOO-wide powwow on the subject of virtual sex offenses and what
|
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mechanisms if any might be put in place to deal with their
|
|
future occurrence. As for the specific problem, the answer no
|
|
doubt seemed obvious to many. But it wasn't until the evening of
|
|
the second day after the incident that legba, finally and rather
|
|
solemnly, gave it voice:
|
|
|
|
``I am requesting that Mr. Bungle be toaded for raping
|
|
Starsinger and I. I have never done this before, and have
|
|
thought about it for days. He hurt us both.''
|
|
|
|
That was all. Three simple sentences posted to _*social_.
|
|
Reading them, an outsider might never guess that they were an
|
|
application for a death warrant. Even an outsider familiar with
|
|
other MUDs might not guess it, since in many of them ``toading''
|
|
still refers to a command that, true to the gameworlds'
|
|
sword-and-sorcery origins, simply turns a player into a toad,
|
|
wiping the player's description and attributes and replacing
|
|
them with those of the slimy amphibian. Bad luck for sure, but
|
|
not quite as bad as what happens when the same command is
|
|
invoked in the MOOish strains of MUD: not only are the
|
|
description and attributes of the toaded player erased, but the
|
|
account itself goes too. The annihilation of the character,
|
|
thus, is total.
|
|
|
|
And nothing less than total annihilation, it seemed, would
|
|
do to settle LambdaMOO's accounts with Mr. Bungle. Within
|
|
minutes of the posting of legba's appeal, SamIAm, the Australian
|
|
Deleuzean, who had witnessed much of the attack from the back
|
|
room of his suburban Sydney home, seconded the motion with a
|
|
brief message crisply entitled ``Toad the fukr.'' SamIAm's
|
|
posting was seconded almost as quickly by that of Bakunin,
|
|
covictim of Mr. Bungle and well-known radical, who in real life
|
|
happened also to be married to the real-life legba. And over the
|
|
course of the next 24 hours as many as 50 players made it known,
|
|
on _*social_ and in a variety of other forms and forums, that
|
|
they would be pleased to see Mr. Bungle erased from the face of
|
|
the MOO. And with dissent so far confined to a dozen or so
|
|
antitoading hardliners, the numbers suggested that the citizenry
|
|
was indeed moving towards a resolve to have Bungle's virtual
|
|
head.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
There was one small but stubborn obstacle in the way of this
|
|
resolve, however, and that was a curious state of social affairs
|
|
known in some quarters of the MOO as the New Direction. It was
|
|
all very fine, you see, for the LambdaMOO rabble to get it in
|
|
their heads to liquidate one of their peers, but when the time
|
|
came to actually do the deed it would require the services of a
|
|
nobler class of character. It would require a wizard.
|
|
Master-programmers of the MOO, spelunkers of the database's
|
|
deepest code-structures and custodians of its day-to-day
|
|
administrative trivia, wizards are also the only players
|
|
empowered to issue the toad command, a feature maintained on
|
|
nearly all MUDs as a quick-and-dirty means of social control.
|
|
But the wizards of LambdaMOO, after years of adjudicating all
|
|
manner of interplayer disputes with little to show for it but
|
|
their own weariness and the smoldering resentment of the general
|
|
populace, had decided they'd had enough of the social sphere.
|
|
And so, four months before the Bungle incident, the archwizard
|
|
Haakon (known in RL as Pavel Curtis, Xerox researcher and
|
|
LambdaMOO's principal architect) formalized this decision in a
|
|
document called ``LambdaMOO Takes a New Direction,'' which he
|
|
placed in the living room for all to see. In it, Haakon
|
|
announced that the wizards from that day forth were pure
|
|
technicians. From then on, they would make no decisions
|
|
affecting the social life of the MOO, but only implement
|
|
whatever decisions the community as a whole directed them to.
|
|
>From then on, it was decreed, LambdaMOO would just have to grow
|
|
up and solve its problems on its own.
|
|
|
|
Faced with the task of inventing its own self-governance
|
|
from scratch, the LambdaMOO population had so far done what any
|
|
other loose, amorphous agglomeration of individuals would have
|
|
done: they'd let it slide. But now the task took on new urgency.
|
|
Since getting the wizards to toad Mr. Bungle (or to toad the
|
|
likes of him in the future) required a convincing case that the
|
|
cry for his head came from the community at large, then the
|
|
community itself would have to be defined; and if the community
|
|
was to be convincingly defined, then some form of social
|
|
organization, no matter how rudimentary, would have to be
|
|
settled on. And thus, as if against its will, the question of
|
|
what to do about Mr. Bungle began to shape itself into a sort of
|
|
referendum on the political future of the MOO. Arguments broke
|
|
out on _*social_ and elsewhere that had only superficially to do
|
|
with Bungle (since everyone agreed he was a cad) and everything
|
|
to do with where the participants stood on LambdaMOO's
|
|
crazy-quilty political map. Parliamentarian legalist types
|
|
argued that unfortunately Bungle could not legitimately be
|
|
toaded at all, since there were no explicit MOO rules against
|
|
rape, or against just about anything else--and the sooner such
|
|
rules were established, they added, and maybe even a full-blown
|
|
judiciary system complete with elected officials and prisons to
|
|
enforce those rules, the better. Others, with a royalist streak
|
|
in them, seemed to feel that Bungle's as-yet-unpunished outrage
|
|
only proved this New Direction silliness had gone on long
|
|
enough, and that it was high time the wizardocracy returned to
|
|
the position of swift and decisive leadership their player class
|
|
was born to.
|
|
|
|
And then there were what I'll call the technolibertarians.
|
|
For them, MUD rapists were of course assholes, but the presence
|
|
of assholes on the system was a technical inevitability, like
|
|
noise on a phone line, and best dealt with not through
|
|
repressive social disciplinary mechanisms but through the timely
|
|
deployment of defensive software tools. Some asshole blasting
|
|
violent, graphic language at you? Don't whine to the authorities
|
|
about it--hit the @gag command and the asshole's statements will
|
|
be blocked from your screen (and only yours). It's simple, it's
|
|
effective, and it censors no one.
|
|
|
|
But the Bungle case was rather hard on such arguments. For
|
|
one thing, the extremely public nature of the living room meant
|
|
that gagging would spare the victims only from witnessing their
|
|
own violation, but not from having others witness it. You might
|
|
want to argue that what those victims didn't directly experience
|
|
couldn't hurt them, but consider how that wisdom would sound to
|
|
a woman who'd been, say, fondled by strangers while passed out
|
|
drunk and you have a rough idea how it might go over with a
|
|
crowd of hard-core MOOers. Consider, for another thing, that
|
|
many of the biologically female participants in the Bungle
|
|
debate had been around long enough to grow lethally weary of the
|
|
gag-and-get-over-it school of virtual-rape counseling, with its
|
|
fine line between empowering victims and holding them
|
|
responsible for their own suffering, and its shrugging
|
|
indifference to the window of pain between the moment the
|
|
rape-text starts flowing and the moment a gag shuts it off. From
|
|
the outset it was clear that the technolibertarians were going
|
|
to have to tiptoe through this issue with care, and for the most
|
|
part they did.
|
|
|
|
Yet no position was trickier to maintain than that of the
|
|
MOO's resident anarchists. Like the technolibbers, the
|
|
anarchists didn't care much for punishments or policies or power
|
|
elites. Like them, they hoped the MOO could be a place where
|
|
people interacted fulfillingly without the need for such things.
|
|
But their high hopes were complicated, in general, by a somewhat
|
|
less thoroughgoing faith in technology (``Even if you can't tear
|
|
down the master's house with the master's tools''--read a slogan
|
|
written into one anarchist player's self-description--``it is a
|
|
damned good place to start''). And at present they were
|
|
additionally complicated by the fact that the most vocal
|
|
anarchists in the discussion were none other than legba,
|
|
Bakunin, and SamIAm, who wanted to see Mr. Bungle toaded as
|
|
badly as anyone did.
|
|
|
|
Needless to say, a pro-death penalty platform is not an
|
|
especially comfortable one for an anarchist to sit on, so these
|
|
particular anarchists were now at great pains to sever the
|
|
conceptual ties between toading and capital punishment. Toading,
|
|
they insisted (almost convincingly), was much more closely
|
|
analogous to banishment; it was a kind of turning of the
|
|
communal back on the offending party, a collective action which,
|
|
if carried out properly, was entirely consistent with anarchist
|
|
models of community. And carrying it out properly meant first
|
|
and foremost building a consensus around it--a messy process for
|
|
which there were no easy technocratic substitutes. It was going
|
|
to take plenty of good old-fashioned, jawbone-intensive
|
|
grassroots organizing.
|
|
|
|
So that when the time came, at 7 p.m. PST on the evening of
|
|
the third day after the occurrence in the living room, to gather
|
|
in evangeline's room for her proposed real-time open conclave,
|
|
Bakunin and legba were among the first to arrive. But this was
|
|
hardly to be an anarchist-dominated affair, for the room was
|
|
crowding rapidly with representatives of all the MOO's political
|
|
stripes, and even a few wizards. Hagbard showed up, and Autumn
|
|
and Quastro, Puff, JoeFeedback, L-dopa and Bloaf, HerkieCosmo,
|
|
Silver Rocket, Karl Porcupine, Matchstick--the names piled up
|
|
and the discussion gathered momentum under their weight.
|
|
Arguments multiplied and mingled, players talked past and
|
|
through each other, the textual clutter of utterances and
|
|
gestures filled up the screen like thick cigar smoke. Peaking in
|
|
number at around 30, this was one of the largest crowds that
|
|
ever gathered in a single LambdaMOO chamber, and while
|
|
evangeline had given her place a description that made it
|
|
``infinite in expanse and fluid in form,'' it now seemed
|
|
anything but roomy. You could almost feel the claustrophobic air
|
|
of the place, dank and overheated by virtual bodies, pressing
|
|
against your skin.
|
|
|
|
I know you could because I too was there, making my lone and
|
|
insignificant appearance in this story. Completely ignorant of
|
|
any of the goings-on that had led to the meeting, I wandered in
|
|
purely to see what the crowd was about, and though I observed
|
|
the proceedings for a good while, I confess I found it hard to
|
|
grasp what was going on. I was still the rankest of newbies
|
|
then, my MOO legs still too unsteady to make the leaps of faith,
|
|
logic, and empathy required to meet the spectacle on its own
|
|
terms. I was fascinated by the concept of virtual rape, but I
|
|
couldn't quite take it seriously.
|
|
|
|
In this, though, I was in a small and mostly silent
|
|
minority, for the discussion that raged around me was of an
|
|
almost unrelieved earnestness, bent it seemed on examining every
|
|
last aspect and implication of Mr. Bungle's crime. There were
|
|
the central questions, of course: thumbs up or down on Bungle's
|
|
virtual existence? And if down, how then to insure that his
|
|
toading was not just some isolated lynching but a first step
|
|
toward shaping LambdaMOO into a legitimate community?
|
|
Surrounding these, however, a tangle of weighty side issues
|
|
proliferated. What, some wondered, was the real-life legal
|
|
status of the offense? Could Bungle's university administrators
|
|
punish him for sexual harassment? Could he be prosecuted under
|
|
California state laws against obscene phone calls? Little
|
|
enthusiasm was shown for pursuing either of these lines of
|
|
action, which testifies both to the uniqueness of the crime and
|
|
to the nimbleness with which the discussants were negotiating
|
|
its idiosyncracies. Many were the casual references to Bungle's
|
|
deed as simply ``rape,'' but these in no way implied that the
|
|
players had lost sight of all distinctions between the virtual
|
|
and physical versions, or that they believed Bungle should be
|
|
dealt with in the same way a real-life criminal would. He had
|
|
committed a MOO crime, and his punishment, if any, would be
|
|
meted out via the MOO.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, little patience was shown toward any
|
|
attempts to downplay the seriousness of what Mr. Bungle had
|
|
done. When the affable HerkieCosmo proposed, more in the way of
|
|
an hypothesis than an assertion, that ``perhaps it's better to
|
|
release...violent tendencies in a virtual environment rather
|
|
than in real life,'' he was tut-tutted so swiftly and
|
|
relentlessly that he withdrew the hypothesis altogether,
|
|
apologizing humbly as he did so. Not that the assembly was
|
|
averse to putting matters into a more philosophical perspective.
|
|
``Where does the body end and the mind begin?'' young Quastro
|
|
asked, amid recurring attempts to fine-tune the differences
|
|
between real and virtual violence. ``Is not the mind a part of
|
|
the body?'' ``In MOO, the body IS the mind,'' offered
|
|
HerkieCosmo gamely, and not at all implausibly, demonstrating
|
|
the ease with which very knotty metaphysical conundrums come
|
|
undone in VR. The not-so-aptly named Obvious seemed to agree,
|
|
arriving after deep consideration of the nature of Bungle's
|
|
crime at the hardly novel yet now somehow newly resonant
|
|
conjecture ``all reality might consist of ideas, who knows.''
|
|
|
|
On these and other matters the anarchists, the libertarians,
|
|
the legalists, the wizardists--and the wizards--all had their
|
|
thoughtful say. But as the evening wore on and the talk grew
|
|
more heated and more heady, it seemed increasingly clear that
|
|
the vigorous intelligence being brought to bear on this swarm of
|
|
issues wasn't going to result in anything remotely like
|
|
resolution. The perspectives were just too varied, the
|
|
meme-scape just too slippery. Again and again, arguments that
|
|
looked at first to be heading in a decisive direction ended up
|
|
chasing their own tails; and slowly, depressingly, a dusty haze
|
|
of irrelevance gathered over the proceedings.
|
|
|
|
It was almost a relief, therefore, when midway through the
|
|
evening Mr. Bungle himself, the living, breathing cause of all
|
|
this talk, teleported into the room. Not that it was much of a
|
|
surprise. Oddly enough, in the three days since his release from
|
|
Zippy's cage, Bungle had returned more than once to wander the
|
|
public spaces of LambdaMOO, walking willingly into one of the
|
|
fiercest storms of ill will and invective ever to rain down on a
|
|
player. He'd been taking it all with a curious and mostly silent
|
|
passivity, and when challenged face to virtual face by both
|
|
legba and the genderless elder statescharacter PatGently to
|
|
defend himself on _*social_, he'd demurred, mumbling something
|
|
about Christ and expiation. He was equally quiet now, and his
|
|
reception was still uniformly cool. legba fixed an arctic stare
|
|
on him--``no hate, no anger, no interest at all.
|
|
Just...watching.'' Others were more actively unfriendly.
|
|
``Asshole,'' spat Karl Porcupine, ``creep.'' But the harshest of
|
|
the MOO's hostility toward him had already been vented, and the
|
|
attention he drew now was motivated more, it seemed, by the
|
|
opportunity to probe the rapist's mind, to find out what made it
|
|
tick and if possible how to get it to tick differently. In
|
|
short, they wanted to know why he'd done it. So they asked him.
|
|
|
|
And Mr. Bungle thought about it. And as eddies of discussion
|
|
and debate continued to swirl around him, he thought about it
|
|
some more. And then he said this:
|
|
|
|
``I engaged in a bit of a psychological device that is
|
|
called thought-polarization, the fact that this is not RL simply
|
|
added to heighten the affect of the device. It was purely a
|
|
sequence of events with no consequence on my RL existence.''
|
|
|
|
They might have known. Stilted though its diction was, the
|
|
gist of the answer was simple, and something many in the room
|
|
had probably already surmised: Mr. Bungle was a psycho. Not,
|
|
perhaps, in real life--but then in real life it's possible for
|
|
reasonable people to assume, as Bungle clearly did, that what
|
|
transpires between word-costumed characters within the
|
|
boundaries of a make-believe world is, if not mere play, then at
|
|
most some kind of emotional laboratory experiment. Inside the
|
|
MOO, however, such thinking marked a person as one of two
|
|
basically subcompetent types. The first was the newbie, in which
|
|
case the confusion was understandable, since there were few
|
|
MOOers who had not, upon their first visits as anonymous
|
|
``guest'' characters, mistaken the place for a vast playpen in
|
|
which they might act out their wildest fantasies without fear of
|
|
censure. Only with time and the acquisition of a fixed character
|
|
do players tend to make the critical passage from anonymity to
|
|
pseudonymity, developing the concern for their character's
|
|
reputation that marks the attainment of virtual adulthood. But
|
|
while Mr. Bungle hadn't been around as long as most MOOers, he'd
|
|
been around long enough to leave his newbie status behind, and
|
|
his delusional statement therefore placed him among the second
|
|
type: the sociopath.
|
|
|
|
And as there is but small percentage in arguing with a head
|
|
case, the room's attention gradually abandoned Mr. Bungle and
|
|
returned to the discussions that had previously occupied it. But
|
|
if the debate had been edging toward ineffectuality before,
|
|
Bungle's anticlimactic appearance had evidently robbed it of any
|
|
forward motion whatsoever. What's more, from his lonely corner
|
|
of the room Mr. Bungle kept issuing periodic expressions of a
|
|
prickly sort of remorse, interlaced with sarcasm and
|
|
belligerence, and though it was hard to tell if he wasn't still
|
|
just conducting his experiments, some people thought his regret
|
|
genuine enough that maybe he didn't deserve to be toaded after
|
|
all. Logically, of course, discussion of the principal issues at
|
|
hand didn't require unanimous belief that Bungle was an
|
|
irredeemable bastard, but now that cracks were showing in that
|
|
unanimity, the last of the meeting's fervor seemed to be
|
|
draining out through them.
|
|
|
|
People started drifting away. Mr. Bungle left first, then
|
|
others followed--one by one, in twos and threes, hugging friends
|
|
and waving goodnight. By 9:45 only a handful remained, and the
|
|
great debate had wound down into casual conversation, the
|
|
melancholy remains of another fruitless good idea. The arguments
|
|
had been well-honed, certainly, and perhaps might prove useful
|
|
in some as-yet-unclear long run. But at this point what seemed
|
|
clear was that evangeline's meeting had died, at last, and
|
|
without any practical results to mark its passing.
|
|
|
|
It was also at this point, most likely, that JoeFeedback
|
|
reached his decision. JoeFeedback was a wizard, a taciturn sort
|
|
of fellow who'd sat brooding on the sidelines all evening. He
|
|
hadn't said a lot, but what he had said indicated that he took
|
|
the crime committed against legba and Starsinger very seriously,
|
|
and that he felt no particular compassion toward the character
|
|
who had committed it. But on the other hand he had made it
|
|
equally plain that he took the elimination of a fellow player
|
|
just as seriously, and moreover that he had no desire to return
|
|
to the days of wizardly fiat. It must have been difficult,
|
|
therefore, to reconcile the conflicting impulses churning within
|
|
him at that moment. In fact, it was probably impossible, for as
|
|
much as he would have liked to make himself an instrument of
|
|
LambdaMOO's collective will, he surely realized that under the
|
|
present order of things he must in the final analysis either act
|
|
alone or not act at all.
|
|
|
|
So JoeFeedback acted alone.
|
|
|
|
He told the lingering few players in the room that he had to
|
|
go, and then he went. It was a minute or two before ten. He did
|
|
it quietly and he did it privately, but all anyone had to do to
|
|
know he'd done it was to type the @who command, which was
|
|
normally what you typed if you wanted to know a player's present
|
|
location and the time he last logged in. But if you had run a
|
|
@who on Mr. Bungle not too long after JoeFeedback left
|
|
evangeline's room, the database would have told you something
|
|
different.
|
|
|
|
``Mr. Bungle,'' it would have said, ``is not the name of any
|
|
player.''
|
|
|
|
The date, as it happened, was April Fool's Day, and it would
|
|
still be April Fool's Day for another two hours. But this was no
|
|
joke: Mr. Bungle was truly dead and truly gone.
|
|
|
|
-----
|
|
|
|
They say that LambdaMOO has never been the same since Mr.
|
|
Bungle's toading. They say as well that nothing's really
|
|
changed. And though it skirts the fuzziest of dream-logics to
|
|
say that both these statements are true, the MOO is just the
|
|
sort of fuzzy, dreamlike place in which such contradictions
|
|
thrive.
|
|
|
|
Certainly whatever civil society now informs LambdaMOO owes
|
|
its existence to the Bungle Affair. The archwizard Haakon made
|
|
sure of that. Away on business for the duration of the episode,
|
|
Haakon returned to find its wreckage strewn across the tiny
|
|
universe he'd set in motion. The death of a player, the trauma
|
|
of several others, and the angst-ridden conscience of his
|
|
colleague JoeFeedback presented themselves to his concerned and
|
|
astonished attention, and he resolved to see if he couldn't
|
|
learn some lesson from it all. For the better part of a day he
|
|
brooded over the record of events and arguments left in
|
|
_*social_, then he sat pondering the chaotically evolving shape
|
|
of his creation, and at the day's end he descended once again
|
|
into the social arena of the MOO with another history-altering
|
|
proclamation.
|
|
|
|
It was probably his last, for what he now decreed was the
|
|
final, missing piece of the New Direction. In a few days, Haakon
|
|
announced, he would build into the database a system of
|
|
petitions and ballots whereby anyone could put to popular vote
|
|
any social scheme requiring wizardly powers for its
|
|
implementation, with the results of the vote to be binding on
|
|
the wizards. At last and for good, the awkward gap between the
|
|
will of the players and the efficacy of the technicians would be
|
|
closed. And though some anarchists grumbled about the irony of
|
|
Haakon's dictatorially imposing universal suffrage on an
|
|
unconsulted populace, in general the citizens of LambdaMOO
|
|
seemed to find it hard to fault a system more purely democratic
|
|
than any that could ever exist in real life. Eight months and a
|
|
dozen ballot measures later, widespread participation in the new
|
|
regime has produced a small arsenal of mechanisms for dealing
|
|
with the types of violence that called the system into being.
|
|
MOO residents now have access to a @boot command, for instance,
|
|
with which to summarily eject berserker ``guest'' characters.
|
|
And players can bring suit against one another through an ad hoc
|
|
arbitration system in which mutually agreed-upon judges have at
|
|
their disposition the full range of wizardly punishments--up to
|
|
and including the capital.
|
|
|
|
Yet the continued dependence on death as the ultimate keeper
|
|
of the peace suggests that this new MOO order may not be built
|
|
on the most solid of foundations. For if life on LambdaMOO began
|
|
to acquire more coherence in the wake of the toading, death
|
|
retained all the fuzziness of pre-Bungle days. This truth was
|
|
rather dramatically borne out, not too many days after Bungle
|
|
departed, by the arrival of a strange new character named Dr.
|
|
Jest. There was a forceful eccentricity to the newcomer's
|
|
manner, but the oddest thing about his style was its striking
|
|
yet unnameable familiarity. And when he developed the annoying
|
|
habit of stuffing fellow players into a jar containing a tiny
|
|
simulacrum of a certain deceased rapist, the source of this
|
|
familiarity became obvious:
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bungle had risen from the grave.
|
|
|
|
In itself, Bungle's reincarnation as Dr. Jest was a
|
|
remarkable turn of events, but perhaps even more remarkable was
|
|
the utter lack of amazement with which the LambdaMOO public took
|
|
note of it. To be sure, many residents were appalled by the
|
|
brazenness of Bungle's return. In fact, one of the first
|
|
petitions circulated under the new voting system was a request
|
|
for Dr. Jest's toading that almost immediately gathered 52
|
|
signatures (but has failed so far to reach ballot status). Yet
|
|
few were unaware of the ease with which the toad proscription
|
|
could be circumvented--all the toadee had to do (all the
|
|
ur-Bungle at NYU presumably had done) was to go to the minor
|
|
hassle of acquiring a new Internet account, and LambdaMOO's
|
|
character registration program would then simply treat the known
|
|
felon as an entirely new and innocent person. Nor was this ease
|
|
generally understood to represent a failure of toading's social
|
|
disciplinary function. On the contrary, it only underlined the
|
|
truism (repeated many times throughout the debate over Mr.
|
|
Bungle's fate) that his punishment, ultimately, had been no more
|
|
or less symbolic than his crime.
|
|
|
|
What _was_ surprising, however, was that Mr. Bungle/Dr. Jest
|
|
seemed to have taken the symbolism to heart. Dark themes still
|
|
obsessed him--the objects he created gave off wafts of Nazi
|
|
imagery and medical torture--but he no longer radiated the
|
|
aggressively antisocial vibes he had before. He was a lot less
|
|
unpleasant to look at (the outrageously seedy clown description
|
|
had been replaced by that of a mildly creepy but actually rather
|
|
natty young man, with ``blue eyes...suggestive of conspiracy,
|
|
untamed eroticism and perhaps a sense of understanding of the
|
|
future''), and aside from the occasional jar-stuffing incident,
|
|
he was also a lot less dangerous to be around. It was obvious
|
|
he'd undergone some sort of personal transformation in the days
|
|
since I'd first glimpsed him back in evangeline's crowded
|
|
room--nothing radical maybe, but powerful nonetheless, and
|
|
resonant enough with my own experience, I felt, that it might be
|
|
more than professionally interesting to talk with him, and
|
|
perhaps compare notes.
|
|
|
|
For I too was undergoing a transformation in the aftermath
|
|
of that night in evangeline's, and I'm still not entirely sure
|
|
what to make of it. As I pursued my runaway fascination with the
|
|
discussion I had heard there, as I pored over the _*social_
|
|
debate and got to know legba and some of the other victims and
|
|
witnesses, I could feel my newbie consciousness falling away
|
|
from me. Where before I'd found it hard to take virtual rape
|
|
seriously, I now was finding it difficult to remember how I
|
|
could ever _not_ have taken it seriously. I was proud to have
|
|
arrived at this perspective--it felt like an exotic sort of
|
|
achievement, and it definitely made my ongoing experience of the
|
|
MOO a richer one.
|
|
|
|
But it was also having some unsettling effects on the way I
|
|
looked at the rest of the world. Sometimes, for instance, it was
|
|
hard for me to understand why RL society classifies RL rape
|
|
alongside crimes against person or property. Since rape can
|
|
occur without any physical pain or damage, I found myself
|
|
reasoning, then it must be classed as a crime against the
|
|
mind--more intimately and deeply hurtful, to be sure, than cross
|
|
burnings, wolf whistles, and virtual rape, but undeniably
|
|
located on the same conceptual continuum. I did not, however,
|
|
conclude as a result that rapists were protected in any fashion
|
|
by the First Amendment. Quite the opposite, in fact: the more
|
|
seriously I took the notion of virtual rape, the less seriously
|
|
I was able to take the notion of freedom of speech, with its
|
|
tidy division of the world into the symbolic and the real.
|
|
|
|
Let me assure you, though, that I am not presenting these
|
|
thoughts as arguments. I offer them, rather, as a picture of the
|
|
sort of mind-set that deep immersion in a virtual world has
|
|
inspired in me. I offer them also, therefore, as a kind of
|
|
prophecy. For whatever else these thoughts tell me, I have come
|
|
to believe that they announce the final stages of our
|
|
decades-long passage into the Information Age, a paradigm shift
|
|
that the classic liberal firewall between word and deed (itself
|
|
a product of an earlier paradigm shift commonly known as the
|
|
Enlightenment) is not likely to survive intact. After all,
|
|
anyone the least bit familiar with the workings of the new era's
|
|
definitive technology, the computer, knows that it operates on a
|
|
principle impracticably difficult to distinguish from the
|
|
pre-Enlightenment principle of the magic word: the commands you
|
|
type into a computer are a kind of speech that doesn't so much
|
|
communicate as _make_things_happen_, directly and ineluctably,
|
|
the same way pulling a trigger does. They are incantations, in
|
|
other words, and anyone at all attuned to the technosocial
|
|
megatrends of the moment--from the growing dependence of
|
|
economies on the global flow of intensely fetishized words and
|
|
numbers to the burgeoning ability of bioengineers to speak the
|
|
spells written in the four-letter text of DNA--knows that the
|
|
logic of the incantation is rapidly permeating the fabric of our
|
|
lives.
|
|
|
|
And it's precisely this logic that provides the real magic
|
|
in a place like LambdaMOO--not the fictive trappings of voodoo
|
|
and shapeshifting and wizardry, but the conflation of speech and
|
|
act that's inevitable in any computer-mediated world, be it
|
|
Lambda or the increasingly wired world at large. This is
|
|
dangerous magic, to be sure, a potential threat--if misconstrued
|
|
or misapplied--to our always precarious freedoms of expression,
|
|
and as someone who lives by his words I do not take the threat
|
|
lightly. And yet, on the other hand, I can no longer convince
|
|
myself that our wishful insulation of language from the realm of
|
|
action has ever been anything but a valuable kludge, a
|
|
philosophically damaged stopgap against oppression that would
|
|
just have to do till something truer and more elegant came
|
|
along.
|
|
|
|
Am I wrong to think this truer, more elegant thing can be
|
|
found on LambdaMOO? Perhaps, but I continue to seek it there,
|
|
sensing its presence just beneath the surface of every
|
|
interaction. I have even thought, as I said, that discussing
|
|
with Dr. Jest our shared experience of the workings of the MOO
|
|
might help me in my search. But when that notion first occurred
|
|
to me, I still felt somewhat intimidated by his lingering
|
|
criminal aura, and I hemmed and hawed a good long time before
|
|
finally resolving to drop him MOO-mail requesting an interview.
|
|
By then it was too late. For reasons known only to himself, Dr.
|
|
Jest had stopped logging in. Maybe he'd grown bored with the
|
|
MOO. Maybe the loneliness of ostracism had gotten to him. Maybe
|
|
a psycho whim had carried him far away or maybe he'd quietly
|
|
acquired a third character and started life over with a cleaner
|
|
slate.
|
|
|
|
Wherever he'd gone, though, he left behind the room he'd
|
|
created for himself--a treehouse ``tastefully decorated'' with
|
|
rare-book shelves, an operating table, and a life-size William
|
|
S. Burroughs doll--and he left it unlocked. So I took to
|
|
checking in there occasionally, and I still do from time to
|
|
time. I head out of my own cozy nook (inside a TV set inside the
|
|
little red hotel inside the Monopoly board inside the dining
|
|
room of LambdaMOO), and I teleport on over to the treehouse,
|
|
where the room description always tells me Dr. Jest is present
|
|
but asleep, in the conventional depiction for disconnected
|
|
characters. The not-quite-emptiness of the abandoned room
|
|
invariably instills in me an uncomfortable mix of melancholy and
|
|
the creeps, and I stick around only on the off chance that Dr.
|
|
Jest will wake up, say hello, and share his understanding of the
|
|
future with me.
|
|
|
|
He won't, of course, but this is no great loss.
|
|
Increasingly, the complex magic of the MOO interests me more as
|
|
a way to live the present than to understand the future. And
|
|
it's usually not long before I leave Dr. Jest's lonely treehouse
|
|
and head back to the mansion, to see some friends.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*********************************************************************
|
|
Julian Dibbell julian@panix.com
|
|
*********************************************************************
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #6.21
|
|
************************************
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