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Last Independent Linux Site Sold To Commercial Interests
Bernhard Rosenkraenzer, bero@redhat.de
July 4, 2000

During the past year, the founders of Linux websites have
been getting rich by selling their sites to commercial
interests stuffed with Venture Capital. We here at Humorix
were the last holdout -- until today. VA Linux, hot on the
heels of acquiring the last two-letter Top Level Domain,
announced today that they had acquired Humorix, the last
independent Linux portal site, for an undisclosed sum of
US$10,000,000,000 (oh, that was supposed to be
undisclosed... Oops!).

Humorix is to be merged with Slashdot to create a new
mega-portal site, called Slashdotix.  With a motto of "Fake
news for nerds. Stuff that would matter if it were true",
the new site is the logical continuation of Slashdot. As
part of the merger, Jon Katz will be fired in favor of Jon
Splatz and Roblimo will be demoted to limosine driver for
James Taco.

Said one head honcho at VA Linux, "Slashdot has always been
accused of running unconfirmed rumors or obviously false
articles. With this strategic partnership, that's no longer
a problem, because everything will be fake. Of course, some
idiot will probably start posting 'Hey, this article is
true!' comments, but those can be safely ignored."

The community doesn't seem all that thrilled about the
merger. Said Mr. A. Coward, Slashdot's most famous and
active poster, while pouring a bowl of hot grits down his
pants,  "Darn! Now I won't be able to score first posts
stating that the article needs better research!  What am I
going to do now?"  He then added coyly, "Oh, by the way,
First Interview!"

During the last month, VA Linux has acquired two dozen
remaining Linux sites ranging from
YetAnotherLinuxNewbieSite.org to PenguinPorn.com to even
the Linux Kernel Mailing List itself. They also host a huge
percentage of Open Source projects on SourceForge. "Who
says you can't make money from Open Source?" asked one VA
Linux executive. "Let's just hope a killer backhoe doesn't
take out our SourceForge Net backbone connection, or else
free software development would halt..."

Other IPO-rich companies such as Internet.com and Red Hat
have been busy snatching up Linux properties as well. "Back
in the bad old days," explained one industry observer,
"everybody wanted to launch a start-up and then sell out to
Microsoft for beaucoup bucks. Now the hot strategy is to
create a Linux website and sell-out to VA Linux or
Internet.com within a month. Man I love this new economy!"

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Fri Jul  7 20:31:53 2000
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Subject: [humorix] "Freedom to Innovate Network" Raided By The Feds
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"Freedom to Innovate Network" Raided By The Feds
July 7, 2000

REDMOND, WA -- In a surprise move, agents from the FBI,
NSA, and DOJ launched a surprise raid on the headquarters
of the "grass-roots" pro-Microsoft FIN.  Nearly 500 members
of the organization have been arrested and charged with, in
the words of Janet Reno, "providing aid and assistance to
Microsoft, a company that has been declared a convicted
felon by the Court for anti-trust violations."  

"This is organized crime, plain and simple," announced Reno
at a press conference held outside of the prison where the
top 25 FIN members were temporarily being held. "Godfather
Gates must be stopped before he violates even more
anti-trust violations and commits murder... er,
anti-competitive acts against his rivals."

The raid came just days after the Feds intercepted an
internal Microsoft memo entitled, "How to employ a fake
grass-roots organization to gain positive PR via astroturf
and media manipulation techniques". This memo, along with a
roster of all FIN members, was found in the dumpster of
Informix. Apparently Informix's corporate spies had gone
dumpster diving at Oracle, their competitor, and discovered
these documents which Oracle had originally obtained from
the trash cans outside the FIN offices.

Court hearings for the 500 FIN members should begin next
month. Their defense lawyer issued a public statement
saying, "This is an outrage. During the Cold War, McCarthy
went after Communists; now in the Microsoft Vigilante War,
Reno is going after Microserfs. Has anyone ever heard of
'freedom of assembly'?"

The Linux community is severly torn over the issue. Said
Mr. A. Coward, "Well, we all know that what's bad for
Microsoft is good for the country. However, the opposite is
also true: what's good for the government is bad for the
country. If the government tramples upon Microsoft's
freedom to innovate creative public relations schemes, then
that means the government will soon trample on the rights
of everyone. But if the government doesn't do anything,
then Microsoft will be free to trample on the rights of
every computer user and competitor. What the heck is a
Microsoft basher but freedom lover supposed to do?"

Indeed, many geeks who have pondered this paradox have
entered into a mental infinite loop.  Thankfully, the
average geek brain has a built in SIGCAFFEINE signal that
the kernel (brain stem) uses to halt any runaway processes
when it's time yet again to injest more caffeine. This is a
survivial trait; if the brain is overloaded, then it is
unable to search for caffeine, which means that the body
will soon fall asleep, causing the geek to lose his job,
thus resulting in a lack of money, and preventing him from
buying cool toys and high-speed Internet access, ultimately
forcing him to (oh the humanity!) re-enter the offline
meatspace world (which is nearly synonomous with death).

However, some hardcore geeks and ardent Microsoft haters
have sided with the Feds in this matter. "The FIN is a
scam," said one. "They relay your comments to elected
represenatives, but not without making a few 'innovative'
changes to them. For instance, if you post the comment,
'Keep up the good work, DOJ... Microsoft sucks', it
becomes, 'Keep up the good work [in beating up a
defenseless company], DOJ... Microsoft sucks [only because
you have taken away their freedom to innovative]'." He
added, "Sure, the FIN is a non-partisan organization...
they'll gleefully give campaign contributions to any
party."

Many Pointy Haired Bosses, on the other hand, are
vehemently opposed to the actions of the DOJ. Said one
Assistant Vice Undersecretary Upper Manager at a Fortune
500,000 company, "Everybody uses astroturf and fake
grass-roots organizations. Nobody would complain, either,
if it wasn't for Microsoft who keeps screwing up. But
what's wrong with a little political activity by a
corporation? I mean, Starbucks does it: they secretly
sponsor the 'Association of Citizens for the Monopolization
of the Coffee Industry Worldwide'. And AOL, Disney, and
others support the 'Parents for the Dumbing-Down of
American Culture' organization."

The US Senate responded to the government raid with a "Bad
Reno, No Biscuit" resolution chastising the DOJ.  It was
spearheaded by Sen. Fattecat (R-Washington) who said, "I
can't believe this is happening in my home state! This is
obviously a conspiracy concocted by the Helsinkian
Underground and the GNUist Revolutionaries." Some Senators
did vote against the measure; Sen. Phil E. Buster
(D-Minnesota) said, "I've lost track of the number of times
my Windows laptop has crashed during this session.
Microsoft is a menace that must be stopped." He added under
his breath, "Besides, I haven't receieved any campaign
contributions from them this year. What do I care?"

In related news, hired thugs showed up at the door of
Oracle chief Larry Ellison earlier today, and announced,
"The Godfather has taken an interest in your health. You
better behave. We don't like it when people rummage through
our garbage. We'll leave you alone now just as we settle
the little matter of a... um, bribe."

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Sun Jul  9 00:58:47 2000
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An Epidemic Of Honor System Viruses 
July 8, 2000

Linux users have always laughed at the Windows lusers who
have to put up with macro viruses. But now a new breed of
virus has emerged in the Unix world -- and it's spreading
like wildfire. These "honor system" viruses, which first
popped up during the Love Bug debacle, request the user to
perform some act and then pass the virus on to friends and
colleagues.  Over the past two months these memes have
mutated and propagated at a fantastic rate.

The original honor system virus told recipients to
"randomly delete numerous files from your system".  Indeed,
many people did obey that command by wiping out their
Windows partition or deleting all of those unreadable .doc
files that clueless friends like to send.

Said one "victim" of this virus, "I've been using Linux for
so long that I completely forgot I even had an
electron-wasting Windows partition.  Thanks to this virus,
and its helpful reminder to delete files, I was able to
free up beaucoup space on my drive to make room for even
more pirated MP3's. You can be sure I passed on this virus
to everyone I knew -- it's the least I could do to help out
the Linux community."

Other variations have entered into the wild, including
"Newbie Nabber", designed to teach a lesson to
inexperienced Linux converts. The message coaxes the
recipient into executing the attached Perl script to "fix a
serious security hole in the Linux kernel that has just
been uncovered by security professionals at Red Hat." As
you can imagine, the script is a Trojan horse that actually
patches the user's mail client to automatically execute
Perl and shell script attachments (hey, if it works for
Microsoft...). It then greps the luser's hard drive for
email addresses and sends a copy of itself to each of them.

Finally, the virus/Trojan outputs this message... "Security
hole found between chair and monitor. Please contact your
system administrator and request a "cluestick" in order to
fix this gaping hole. Have a nice day. Oh, and by the way,
I just deleted your hidden cache of pornography."

Our Vast Spy Network(tm) located the friend of the friend
of the girlfriend of the person who supposedly created the
Newbie Nabber script. He said, "Well, it's Darwin in
action. The naive users victimized by this meme will either
learn a valuable lesson or get fed up with Linux and return
to Windows. Either way we thin out the herd."

A similar virus has also been found in the wild that
targets 31337 Script Kiddies by enticing them to run an
attached script (as root) that will "hack into the
Microsoft website and retrieve the Windows Millennium
source code". This Trojan actually replicates itself and
then commits suicide by  executing "mke2fs /dev/hda1", the
Linux equivalent of FORMAT C:, but without the "Are you
sure?" prompt.

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Sat Jul 15 08:40:58 2000
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Corporate Surveillance HOWTO
July 11, 2000

Back in the old days, many businessmen believed the saying,
"The customer is always right."  The rules have changed
since then. Nowadays, the customer is a potential enemy,
capable of spreading truthful information about your
company at the speed of light.  

The truth is the last thing any large corporation wants the
public to know.  You only want your supplicants to be
exposed to the pravda that's been sifted and churned
through your public relations department and then properly
spun, slanted, and buzzword-enhanced.  Anything less could
be spell disaster for your bottom line.

In this HOWTO, we provide some guidelines for how you, the
corporate executive, can put a stop to disgruntled
truth-spreading customers.

Now you could use some service like eWatch to track down
your enemies and "re-educate" them.  But they want an
outrageous amount to cleanse the truth spread by each
"screenname".  But why pay all that money for somebody else
to use a search engine and  then fire off a couple bark
letters?  Save your precious Venture Capital for some more
worthwhile project, such as installing a fifth pool table
in the game room next to the bowling alley. (But don't ever
consider improving your product or customer service; that's
just like throwing money away.)

You might consider striking a deal with a government agency
that employs wiretapping, email sniffing, or other
Echelon-like surveillance activities. This shouldn't be too
difficult; every government body from the FBI down to the
Boondock County Trash-Pickup Authority practice espionage
on their own citizens.  Just make a few well-placed bribes,
and you'll be able to tap into their taxpayer-funded spy
network to track your enemies.

On the other hand, cozying up to the Feds might be overkill
for your purposes.  Armed with a search engine, you might
be able to do the dirty work yourself.  Indeed, you might
hit paydirt just by browsing the typical hangouts for
anti-corporate truth-mongers, such as Slashdot, Yahoo
message boards, Usenet, or humor sites.  Once you've
tracked down the little twerp, then it's time for action.  

Have your legal department send them some threatening
letter (email or snail mail) about how they are violating
your intellectual property rights and, if they persist,
they could face immediate jailtime.  Your crafty lawyers
will be able to conjure up something; it doesn't have to be
true, just as long as your enemy falls for it.

You might not be able to locate their email address,
though.  Especially if it's one Mr. Anonymous Coward, the
nefarious yet untrackable Slashdot denizen who has a beef
against every company in existence.  Many corporate spies
have spent countless man-hours tracking down this
mega-disgruntled customer, but to no avail.  Your only
recourse might be to employ an Astroturf campaign to
neutralize AnonCow by posting lots of positive hype-filled
comments about your company.

If you are unable to uncover the identity of your enemies,
you can always buy a court judge into issuing a subpeona
forcing the website owners to fork over their server logs. 
It worked against Yahoo, after all.  The logs will tell
you, among other things, the twerp's IP number.  You can
then cross-reference this datum against the FBI's
sorta-secret Echelon database to reveal the Social Security
number, postal address, shoe size, DNA sequence,
fingerprint, and PGP private key of your enemy.

With that information in hand, you can then step up the
pressure:

1. Contact their employers.  Tell the boss that your
   targets are emotionally unbalanced and need to be fired
   immediately before they cause any irreperable PR
   damage.  After all, if they are capable of spreading
   unauthorized information about your company, then surely
   they could snap at any time and distribute truths about
   their own employer.

2. If they maintain their own website that has information
   critical of your company, then send a nice little
   threatening letter to their ISP.  As before, have your
   lawyers fill it with obtuse legalese and vague
   references to the "DMCA" while making veiled threats of
   lawsuits or imprisonment unless the unauthorized
   material is immediately deleted.

3. Don't forget about hired goons.  Ever since the early
   1900's, usage of hired thugs has dropped off, which
   means that many businesses are missing out on this
   wonderful tool.  Goons, when hired through an anonymous
   third party, are a wonderful way to scare the living
   daylights out of your truth-spreaders since the stooges
   can't be traced back to you. Of course, which type of
   hired thugs you choose (muscle-building gun-slinging
   athletes or briefcase-pushing fast-talking lawyers) is
   entirely up to you.

4. Offer to hire them at your company.  This might sound
   absurd, but it could work as a last result.  Everybody
   has a price -- even the most ardent Linux zealot would
   gleefully become a Microsoft employee if enough money
   were waved in his face.  And once these people are
   assimilated (and re-educated) into your corporate
   culture, they shouldn't present any more trouble.  For
   instance, if some low-budget humor site keeps poking fun
   at your company by way of sarcastic HOWTO guides, you
   could always co-opt the webmaster with a load of money
   and stock options, and he'll never give you any trouble
   again.

The promotional materials for the eWatch monitoring and
re-education service state that, "It is unfortunate that
companies are being targeted by entities whose motives are
fraudulent, deceptive, or criminal."  (In other words,
people who publish unauthorized criticisms of your company
on the Internet, a medium which was intended by its
founders as the exclusive domain of large corporations).

But armed with the suggestions in this HOWTO, you and your
company's legal department should be able to effectively
stamp out this menace once and for all, thus ensuring that
everything said about your company in public has been
pre-approved by your marketing department.

---

P.S. I'm going to be gone on vacation for two weeks starting
tommorrow (July 12th)... which means there won't be any new
articles for awhile.  Ta ta.

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Sat Jul 15 11:05:03 2000
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The Geek Independence War (Part 1)
Jon Splatz, jonsplatz@i-want-a-website.com
July 10, 2000

Americans celebrate their independence day on July 4th, but
this is not correct. The Declaration of Independence wasn't
actually signed and shipped off to England until July 10th.
Why? Take a guess.  Lawyers were to blame, as always.

The same is true of Humorixia, that independent geek
paradise in the Pacific. The lawyers, politicos, and
marketers acted fast to thwart Geek Independence. They
almost succeeded.


   "We the Geeks of Humorixia, in Order to form a more
   perfect, bullshit-free Society, establish real Justice,
   insure domestic Freedom, provide for the common defense
   of Geeks, promote the general Quality of Software, and
   secure the Blessings of Free Software to ourselves and
   our Posterity, do ordain and establish this... Nation of
   Humorixia..."

       -- Preamble to the General Social License of
          Humorixia


Ever since the founding of the first law college in the
1500s, the legal "profession" has been steadily increasing
in power. In 1776, several attorneys held up American
Independence by bickering over the exact wording of the
Declaration.  Lawyers were overheard saying,
"'Inalienable'? Is that even a word?", "This sentence in
paragraph 3 isn't gramatically correct!" and "How much of a
contingent legal fee will I receive if this Revolution is
successful?"

It wasn't until Thomas Jefferson threatened to throw the
lawyers into the Hudson River that they finally capitulated
and allowed the Declaration to be signed on July 10th. 

History has a tendency to repeat itself. Humorixia declared
its independence on December 17, 1999, only to be dealt
setback after setback by hordes of lawyercrats. Naturally,
the idea that geeks could form their own nation without a
lawsuit-happy court system scared them to death.

But I'm getting ahead of myself. I need to go back to
October of 1999, when the island of Humorix didn't exist
yet and I was an unpaid pundit for a lame humor site
instead of the esteemed Benevolent Dictator of the world's
first meritocracy.  

I was sitting in my rat-infested apartment one day,
dreaming of forming my own independent nation (little did I
know that the "Royal Family" of Sealand had already
achieved this), when word came via my Neural Implant From
the Future(tm) of an astounding discovery made by the
Humorix Vasy Spy Network(tm).

Microsoft was planning to form their own island nation to
escape from US anti-trust laws.  Forget Canada, Bill Gates
wanted to live on "Innovationia", a Pacific enclave for
Microserfs.  But all the good islands were already taken by
American billionaires and multinational corporations.  

It was Humorix Operative Double-Oh-Zero who uncovered their
plan when he intercepted yet another internal Microsoft
memo (Why do they even bother with security?). According to
this document, Microsoft had captured the Anomolous Sewage
Lagoon #5 in Roswell, Georgia. This lagoon contains a
temporal singularity that periodically spits out items from
the 24th Century.  Apparently one of those items was a
terraforming machine.

Their objective was to use this ActiveTerraforming(tm)
device to create a new island in the international waters
of the Pacific.  It should come as no surprise that this
new island would be in the shape of the Windows logo.
Bill's new mansion would sit at the southwest corner, while
the thirty square mile Microsoft Campus/Sweatshop would
occupy the northeast part.

Once built, Innovationia Island would become a bastion for
corporate greed like the world has never seen before.
Microsoft would issue a press release stating, "The sudden
appearance of this island out of the blue is a clear sign
that God Himself approves of Microsoft's Freedom To
Innovate. Take that, Judge Jackson!"

Foreign policy for this new nation would be simple: If a
country ticked off Bill Gates, he'd just punch a red button
near his desk, and every Windows machine in that country
would instantly crash and burn without any hope for repair.
That's the beauty of proprietary, closed-source software.

An End-User License Agreement would form the constitution
by which the DirectGovernment(tm) of Innovationia would
operate. Citizenship would be automatically granted to all
Microsoft employees at no charge, and to everybody else for
only a nominal fee of US$10,000 to cover the required
"re-education" treatment.

The License Agreement would guarantee certain rights, such
as free speech -- well, sort of.  Here "free" refers to
free beer, not... um, free speech.  You would never have to
pay any money to speak, but if you said something bad about
Microsoft, you might wind up receiving "Re-Education 2.0".

In addition, the EULA would prohibit certain acts that
might threaten national security, such as running a
non-Microsoft operating system, or deliberately crashing
Windows machines by typing in "C:\CON\CON".  Meanwhile, all
Internet (er, Microsoft Network) traffic would be funneled
through a single 386 DOS-based firewall that would filter
out subversive material (i.e. Humorix).

But let me get back to the story.  It was agreed during an
emergency meeting at Humorix World Headquarters that we
needed to do something about this hideous James Bond-ish
plot.  Going public wasn't an option, we thought, since
nobody would believe stories told by an organization whose
name contains the word "humor".  

We finally sent our crack investigative reporter, Dances
With Herring,  to complete this mission. I'll leave out the
details, since you probably don't care. Besides, I don't
want the networks to use this story to produce any lame
made-for-TV movies.

The upshot is that Dances was able to easily crack into
Microsoft's computer network and make a few "innovative"
changes to the blueprints for the new island. The
Microserfs didn't realize their plan had been
booby-trapped. When they started their
ActiveTerraforming(tm) machine, they stood in horror as the
new island took the shape of... Tux Penguin!

The Microsoft employees all fled in horror back to Redmond,
not wanting to be near such obviously unholy and sinister
ground.  They also happened to leave their terraforming
machine behind.

Humorixia was ours.  

But the battle wasn't over.  Microsoft would come back
fighting. Then Raymond S. Eric would spread rumors that
Humorixia was committing "atrocities against lawyers",
which would provide an excuse for the American Attorneys
Association to attack us.  After all, they weren't about to
let us get away with our crusade to prevent the
Lawyerclysm.

I was trapped on Humorixia for six months while the island
was under siege by lawyers.  But this was a small price to
pay to advance the cause of Geek Independence.  In Part 2
of this series, I'll chronicle the epic struggle of Geeks
vs. Lawyers, a conflict that will affect geeks everywhere
for decades to come.

Write me at jonsplatz@i-want-a-website.com

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

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Date:   Tue, 25 Jul 2000 22:19:29 -0500
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Two Years Of Humorix
July 25th, 2000

Live from our World Headquarters in the Missouri Ozarks,
this is Humorix's Second Anniversary Special. Hi, I'm
Dances With Herring, Humorix's special investigator and
host for this event.  For the next 12,187 bytes this ASCII
broadcast will feature such lame filler material as fake
interviews, never before seen articles, and a behind the
scenes look at Humorix.

Today, July 25th, marks the second anniversary of that
fateful day when the first lame fake news article was
thrust upon the unsuspecting world.  280 articles and 1,024
Microsoft jokes later and we're still going strong, unlike
the many dotcoms which launched, IPO'd, and declared
bankruptcy all within the span of about 3 weeks.

After two years Humorix is still going strong.  The number
of regular readers has increased by a whopping 150% (i.e.
from two people in 1998 all the way to five in 2000).  Here
with me is Eric, one of our regular readers and Vast Spy
Network(tm) member.

DANCES: So how long have you been reading Humorix?

ERIC: Since New Year's Eve 1998.  I was totally drunk at
the time... with still two hours to go before midnight I
killed the time by surfing random webpages I found at
Yahoo.  I stumbled on to Humorix, and in my drunken stupor
I found the site to be uproariously funny... Of course,
after sobering up in the morning it didn't seem quite so
humorous, but I was too lazy to unsubscribe from the
mailing list, so I've been a reader ever since.

DANCES: Umm, yeah... I hear you're one of the largest
Humorix stock holders.

ERIC: Oh, yes, I own 5,000 shares of FAUX.  Unfortunately,
they've lost 99.9% of their value, but at least they're
holding steady now even while the Nasdaq is faltering.
Holding steady at $0.0000001, that is.  In fact, the stock
certificates literally aren't worth the paper they are
printed on... I could redeem them at a recycling center for
about 50 cents.  I'm pretty lazy, though, so I'm still
holding on to them for the long haul... maybe they'll reach
$0.0000005 sometime this decade.

DANCES: Well, this isn't going so well... let me move on.

It was two years ago that our Editor posted the first of
many amateurish pro-Linux, anti-Microsoft fake news
articles. Within milliseconds the first flame mails and
cease-and-desist bark letters arrived, but he persevered to
create the most popular Linux humor website in the world...
er, Missouri.

But not all has been rosy for Humorix.  That terrible
denial-of-serive attack known as the Slashdot Effect has
struck this site more than once, leaving behind a trail of
death and destruction.  Joining me is Eric Geekman, the
system administrator for Humorix's website hosting company.

DANCES: What was it like when the Slashdot Effect first
struck?

GEEKMAN: Oh, it was horrible... I still have nightmares
from that first attack in 1998.  The kernel panics, the
sparks flying from the machine, the power surges... it's
just too horrible to think about.  I almost quit my job the
next day and went into farming... I was so shaken up by the
whole dreadful experience.  

DANCES: Were there any more attacks?

GEEKMAN: Oh yes... I wish I had quit, as the second
Slashdot Effect was even worse. Several cockroaches that
were hiding beneath the server were roasted to death by the
flames coming from the overheating Pentium at the height of
the maelstrom.  And the amount of electricity my servers
drew that day exceeded the total amount consumed by Rhode
Island in a week.

The next day I sent a memo to James Baughn requesting that
he make his articles less funny and more bland to prevent
any more such calamities.  He replied "I can do that", but
his valiant efforts to make his articles even more lame
simply wasn't enough to keep away the likes of Taco Boy and
his legions of followers and groupies.

Whoa!  My beeper just went off; it must be time for my
appointment with my shrink.  We're going to be discussing
the recurring nightmares I keep having about the Slashdot
Effect in which I get repeatedly struck by lightning... I
gotta go.

DANCES: After these messages we'll be back with never
before published Humorix articles!  Don't touch that Back
button.

---

ANNOUNCER: Internet access... $19.95.

Humorix T-shirt: $14.

Inkjet printer... $100.

Printing out a particularly bad Humorix article and using
it for toilet paper or fertilizer... Priceless.

Humorix... It's nowhere you want to be.

---

DANCES: Hi, we're back at the Humorix Second Anniversary
Special.  Our Editorial staff can be quite cranky,
rejecting every article they read over picayune stuff. 
Some articles, no matter how well-written and downright
funny, never make it past the Editors.  Meanwhile, for some
reason I still haven't figured out, lots of really crappy
articles do get approved without hesitation.

So, then, a number of articles are left to die from bitrot
as they sit in the Rejection box.  For your amusement, and
to fill up this show with old material, here are two
never-before-published articles from the past.

---

Linus Torvalds: King Of Silicon Valley

[This was published last January the day before every geek
sat in front of ZDTV for the first (and only) time so they
could be the first to learn what Transmeta was doing...]

SANTA CLARA, CA -- A mob of high-tech recruiters surrounded
Linus Torvalds' house this morning, forcing the Finnish
babe-magnet to hire a group of bodyguards.  Many now
consider Torvalds to be King Midas -- any Silicon Valley
start-up he touches turns into gold.  Many dotcoms, hoping
to turn a profit for the first time, are working to attract
Torvalds to their company.

Said one recruiter, "The only reason Transmeta hired Linus
was for the buzz and PR that he brought.  Tommorrow
millions of geeks will be on the edge of their seats
waiting for the official Transmeta announcement for a
product that probably won't be that great.  If it wasn't
for Linus, Transmeta would be yet another bankruptcy-bound,
product-less company that nobody has ever heard of.
Unfortauntely, our company is bankrupcty-bound and
product-less, but we hope that if we can hire Linus the
ensuing buzz and interest will lift us off the ground..."

---

Ask Humorix: Defending Gates

[And here's another rejected article that I salvaged from
electron death...]

Anonymous Noncoward writes, "For my Economics 101 class, I
have to pretend to be Bill Gates and write an editorial
defending Microsoft against anti-trust charges, citing
economic principles.  To complete such an assignment
violates every moral fiber of my body.  What should I do?"

The Oracle responds: Well, it seems that you have to make a
decision among two choices. You can blow off the
assignment, thus forcing you to fail EC101, lowering your
GPA below the required minimum to keep your scholarship,
causing you to drop out of college and work at McDonalds
all your life.  Or you can write a paper that's positive
towards Microsoft and make an 'A'.  This seems like a
no-brainer to me; I'd choose the first option without
hesitation -- a burger flipper has far more dignity and
self-respect than somebody who utters a positive statement
about the Evil Empire.

---

DANCES: Coming up next... a look behind the scenes here at
Humorix.  Stay browsed!

---

ANNOUNCER: Are you sick of wasting valuable seconds while
ingesting caffeine or eating a cold pizza?  Is your
programming project running behind because you keep falling
asleep? EyeOpener(tm) brand caffeinated beverages has the
solution. Our new ActiveIV product will provide a 24 hour
supply of caffeine via intravenous tube while you work --
so you can hack without any interruptions at all (except
going to the bathroom -- but our Port-a-Urinal(tm) can help
solve that problem as well).

EyeOpener(tm) beverages contain at least 5,000% of the
daily recommended dose of caffeine, a quantity that will
surely keep you wide awake, alert, and in Deep Hack Mode
for weeks at a time.  With EyeOpener and ActiveIV, you
won't waste your valuable time at a vendine machine.

EyeOpener(tm): You'll Never Waste Another Millisecond Ever
Again.

---

DANCES: Welcome back.  To finish off this Humorix Second
Anniversary Special, I've inserted a secret microphone
downstairs in the Humorix Boardroom.  A meeting between
staff members is about to begin.  This is an exclusive
behind-the-scenes look at the corporate culture here at
Humorix, so don't even think about clicking on a hyperlink
until you've finished reading this article!

---

BAUGHN: Okay, folks, this is an emergency meeting of the
Humorix executive staff.  You know why we're here.

JON SPLATZ: What emergency?  Has Jesse Berst retired or
something?

BAUGHN: Well, that would be bad, since Ziff-Davis pundit
jokes account for 10% of our content.  But that's not the
problem.  We're broke. I'll turn this over to our new
Executive Book Cooker, Mr. G. E. Trich.

G. E. TRICH: [Reaches into his pockets] Here's the entire
contents of Humorix's bank account: two dollars and
fifty-one cents, three million Russian rubles (worth 23
cents), plus an annual membership in the Linux Distro Of
The Month Club (worth $9.95). 

We can't keep up our burn rate... the daily massages, the
luxury jet, the unlimited supply of imported German beer,
our constant legal expenses... we've gotta cut back.

NOAH MORALS (Humorix Lawyer): Now wait a minute!  Humorix's
legal expenses aren't that expensive.  So maybe I've filed
and lost a few frivolous, costly lawsuits.  I'm charging a
bargain-basement price of $500 per minute of work, which is
much cheaper than any other lawyer that has the same
caliber skill as me.   Humorix simply can't cut back it's
legal department. Why?  Well, I've got this huge monthly
payment on a 100,000 acre Montana ranch (and fifty room
mansion) that I can barely afford as it is.

BAUGHN: What about Humorix merchandise?  Isn't anybody
buying any?

TRICH: Not really.  I suppose we could plug the really
sweet-looking 100% cotton high-quality Humorix T-shirts in
a future  article, but we're just not selling as many as we
expected.

SPLATZ: How come we aren't receiving any more  Venture
Capital?  

BAUGHN: Last year before our IPO, hordes of VCs pounded on
our door demanding to invest in us.  Remember that? We had
to shoo 'em off because they were preventing the pizza
delivery guys from getting to our door.  Maybe we should
have taken their money before we kicked them out.

TRICH: Unfortunately most of the Venture Capital has run
out.  Still, we might be able to send someone on a
pilgramage to Silicon Valley and maybe find a few leftover
VCs which haven't invested all their money in failed
dotcoms.

BAUGHN: Any other ideas?

SPLATZ: What about the recent brouhaha surrounding
companies that send free stuff to Linux websites in order
to "buy" positive reviews? Why aren't _we_ getting any of
that free stuff?

MORALS: That's right!  Why does nobody send us
complementary copies of software or books to review?   If
we can convince other companies to bribe us with free
stuff, we could turn around and sell the merchandise on
eBay for a tidy profit.

BAUGHN: I'll have to think about that later when I'm taking
a dip in the new Olympic-size swimming pool that was just
built on the fifth floor.

SPLATZ: What? The new pool is finished already?  Why
doesn't anybody tell me these things?

BAUGHN: Well, before we go swimming, I just thought of
another money source.  I'm a college student, which
naturally means that I receive about four credit card
offers per day. If I were to apply for every one of those
cards, I'd probably have a large enough credit limit to
keep Humorix afloat for several years.

TRICH: But what about the exorbitant 350 percent interest
rates those credit card companies offer?  

BAUGHN: Not a problem.  One of these days we'll be acquired
by some big media conglomerate and we'll let them worry
about it... but they won't find out about our staggering
debt until after the ink has dried on the contract.  Mr.
Trich, you are a world-renowned expert in cooking books,
right?

TRICH: Yep. Not a problem.

BAUGHN: So then it's settled.  You all go ahead and take a
swim in the new pool while I go make some calls about the
new movie theater I have planned for the tenth floor...

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Sat Jul 29 05:16:45 2000
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Date:   Fri, 28 Jul 2000 22:02:02 -0500
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Organization: Humorix World Domination
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Achieve Fame And Fortune -- Hire A Script Kiddie!
July 28, 2000

Everybody has a gimmick.  A gang of Script Kiddies have
launched a new service called Dial-A-DOS (also known as
H1r3-4-Hax0r).  In exchange for cash, these Kiddies will
execute a Distributed Denial Of Service attack against your
own site.  

The founder of the company said over the phone (and yes he
really did talk like this, even on the phone), "ju5t l00k
4t kuro5hin.org.  s0m3 d15grun7l3d  h0t-gr1t-l0v1ng punkz
t4k3 +h3 s!t3 d0wn 4nd th3n +h3 s1t3 g3t5 a|| k1nd5 of
4tt3nt10n. Y0u c4n'7 6uy publ1c17y l1k3 th47 d00d.  W3||,
n0t unl355 y0u h1r3 us 37337 hax0rs 4t Dial-A-DOS. W3 c4n
d0 +h3 s4m3 7h1ng f0r y0ur und3r-4ppr3c1a7ed w3bs1t3 th4t
s0m3 Scr1p7 K1dd13 d!d f0r kuro5hin.  F0r +h3 r1gh7 pr1c3,
0f c0ur53."

Dial-A-DOS isn't alone in this industry, however.  Another
company called MafiaDotCom has emerged as a competitor, but
with a slightly different business plan. We found out about
this outfit last week when a shady figure representing the
"Godhacker" arrived at our door and announced, "The
Godhacker has taken an interest in your site.  Pay up or
else we'll hit it with a DOS attack.  Capiche?"

Our Vast Spy Network(tm) has been unable to ascertain
whether the Godhacker is truly the head of an international
crime syndicate or whether he's just some insecure Haxor
who couldn't tell the difference between a boot partition
or a swap partition.  Either way, we "paid up" by literally
burying the Godhacker under ten tons of Russian ruble
notes  (value: $2.53) that we hauled in via dump truck.  We
suspect he and his hired goons won't bother us again; if he
does we'll just send him another dump truck, this time
loaded with Mexican pesos -- and we'll shower him with
heavy, sharp-edged coins this time.

Not everybody is impressed with Dial-A-DOS's
get-publicity-quick scheme. "Why would you pay some
clueless idiot to crack into your system with a rootkit
when you can do that yourself in three seconds with a
recursive rm command as root?"  Our own Jon Splatz
muttered, "If the only way you can attract visitors to your
site is to stage a DOS attack, then you need to find a new
line of work in which you can put your obvious lack of
morals to good use -- such as a lawyer.  Well, strike that,
we certainly don't need any more attorneys..."

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Mon Jul 31 18:50:54 2000
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Date:   Mon, 31 Jul 2000 10:41:41 -0500
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Organization: Humorix World Domination
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World Domination, One CPU Cycle At A Time
July 31, 2000

Forget about searching for alien signals or large prime
numbers. The real distributed computing application of the
year is "Domination@World", a program to advocate Linux and
Apache to every single website in the world that uses
Windows and IIS.

The goal of the project is to probe every IP number to
determine what kind of platform each Net-connected machine
is running.  "That's a tall order... we need lots of
computers running our Domination@World clients to help
probe every nook and cranny of the Net," explained Mr. Zell
Litt, the project leader.  

After the probing is complete, the second phase calls for
the data to be cross-referenced with the InterNIC whois
database.  "This way we'll have the names, addresses, and
phone numbers for every Windows-using system administrator
on the planet," Zell gloated.  "That's when the fun
begins."

The "fun" part involves LART (Linux Advocacy & Re-education
Training), a comprehensive program for extreme advocacy. 
As part of LART, each Linux User Group will receive a list
of the Windows-using weenies in their region.  The LUG will
then be able to employ various advocacy techniques, ranging
from a soft-sell approach (sending the target a free Linux
CD in the mail) all the way to "LARTcon 5" (cracking into
their system and forcibly installing Linux).

We asked another Domination@Home leader about the moral and
privacy implications of their project.  "There's certainly
some ethical dilemmas with this," he admitted. "But that
hasn't stopped the FBI from using Carnivore to build
dossiers on people they suspect could be national security
risks. Meanwhile, we'll be using Domination@Home to build
dossiers on people who represent network security risks
since their servers run Windows. So what's the difference?"


-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

