TOTSE
Type of site | Internet forum |
---|---|
Dissolved | January 17th, 2009 |
Owner | Jeff Hunter |
Revenue | Graphical advertisements (AdBrite) |
URL | totse.com, totseans.com/totse (Archive) |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Closed |
Launched | 1989 (dial up BBS) 1997 (UBB) 2007 (vBulletin) |
Current status | Closed as of January 17, 2009 |
TOTSE (/ˈtɒtsi/ ⓘ,[1]) was a San Francisco Bay Area website and former BBS dedicated to storing text files on a variety of subjects and viewpoints, many of which were unusual or controversial. The name is an acronym for Temple of the Screaming Electron.
The TOTSE forum has been described as part of the early "proto-troll" phenomenon, predating but overlapping with 4chan. It has also been compared to shock sites such as Rotten.com, Stile Project and Something Awful.[2]
History
[edit]TOTSE was founded by the pseudonymous Jeff Hunter and J.C. Stanton. Jeff Hunter was a founding member of NIRVANAnet,[1] which began in 1989 as a dial-up BBS originally named "& the Temple of the Screaming Electron". The original &TOTSE specialized in small text files. Hunter had an old 8088 PC XT clone with limited hard drive space; small text files were the only data he could store in reasonable quantity.[1] The identity of J.C. Stanton is even more obscure than that of Jeff Hunter; he is described as being an "intensely private person".[3]
TOTSE became available on the Internet in 1997, and the dial-up BBS system was discontinued in the spring of 1998. TOTSE was closed on January 17, 2009, after a goodbye message was posted on the front page of the website by Jeff, thanking the users for the last 20 years.[4] The website was considerably popular, receiving 38,000,000 hits in February of 2003; averaging more than 89,000 hits per hour.[3]
Text files
[edit]J.C. Stanton claimed that TOTSE was the largest text file repository on the internet.[3] The text files spanned a wide range of controversial and criminal subject matter, and included numerous instruction manuals for making street drugs, particularly methamphetamine.[5]
Media attention
[edit]TOTSE has been featured in the media, usually for members committing crimes or for its controversial text files. A 1993 article in the Contra Costa Times described TOTSE (and other NirvanaNet BBS nodes) as "an information network providing criminal insights to anyone with a phone, personal computer and modem... offer[ing] hundreds of files providing instructions on credit card fraud, money laundering, mail fraud, counterfeiting, drug smuggling, cable-tv theft, bomb-making and murder."[6] Another feature was due to the "hacking" of an electronic parking lot sign in Crawley, England, designed to display the number of spaces left in each lot. The top two displays were replaced with "Fuck" and "Off", while the lower display read "totse".[7][8]
The site also appears on a 2006 Australian anti-terrorism poster[9] and a television advertisement.
A number of TOTSE members placed prank telephone calls to Live Prayer with Bill Keller starting on November 21, 2006. When another TOTSE member reported them to Keller via email, he threatened legal action against TOTSE, specifically stating that the prank calls amounted to "conspiracy to obstruct commerce".[10] This raid resulted in procedural changes to the Live Prayer show, including a three-second delay for callers.[11]
Community
[edit]The community of TOTSE was an Internet forum and IRC channel. Some users of the community referred to themselves as "Totseans". Members engaged in discussion about a wide variety of topics including but not limited to religion, sex, politics, poetry, humanities, weapons, explosives, drugs, illegal activities, technology, music, metaphysics, sub-culture activities, the environment, mechanics, food, and do it yourself projects. TOTSE is affectionately referred to by the users as &T, &TOTSE, and "The Temple". Although Hunter had an account[12] he rarely posted on the TOTSE forums as himself. Before closing, Hunter stated that he conceived TOTSE as "a place where all types of ideas could be spoken, traded, and exchanged, where no topic was off-limits or forbidden" in the early days of the Internet; and, as demonstrated in the scope of TOTSE text file archive, he felt this was only a part of the community by 2009.[4][13][clarification needed]
The forum software was running a highly modified version of UBB 5.47a, which has been heavily criticized by several readers due to its age. Hunter purchased a copy of vBulletin 3.12a, with the eventual upgrade occurring on April 4, 2007.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c TOTSE FAQ - Mythos
- ^ Phillips, Whitney (20 March 2015). This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Mapping the Relationship between Online Trolling and Mainstream Culture. MIT Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-262-32900-2.
- ^ a b c Braswell, Sterling R. (September 2008). Crazy Town: Money. Marriage. Meth. Kallisti Publishing. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-9678514-6-4.
- ^ a b Closing Announcement
- ^ Finley, Laura L. (2008). Hawking Hits on the Information Highway: The Challenge of Online Drug Sales for Law Enforcement. Peter Lang. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-8204-8600-0.
- ^ Liedtke, Michael (28 July 1993). "MODEM OPERANDI: Tips on crime go on-line". Contra Costa Times. Retrieved 2013-01-25.
- ^ Acford, Louise (27 October 2006). "Rude awakening for dawn drivers". The Argus. Retrieved 2006-10-30.
- ^ Payne, Stewart (28 October 2006). "Rude road signs tell drivers where to go". Telegraph. Archived from the original on 17 October 2007. Retrieved 2006-10-30.
- ^ Australian Government (2005-08-30). "HELP PROTECT AUSTRALIA FROM TERRORISM" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-12-19. Retrieved 2007-01-22.
- ^ Live Prayer show archives: November 28th 2006
- ^ "4chan wages war against a Florida televangelist". The Daily Dot. 13 February 2014.
- ^ Jeff Hunter's profile
- ^ totse.com | FAQ
- ^ Replacement for UBB announcement