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==The Serdar Argic posts== ==The Serdar Argic posts==


For a period of several months in the first half of ], the Internet user under the pseudonym of "Serdar Argic" (with the address '''sera@zuma.uucp''') posted messages in any Usenet ] thread involving the countries of ] and ], arguing that the ] had not occurred or that ] had committed ] upon Turks. For a period of several months in the first half of ], the Internet user under the pseudonym of "Serdar Argic" (with the address '''sera@zuma.uucp''') posted messages in any Usenet ] thread involving the country of ], arguing that the ] had not occurred or that ] had committed ] upon Turks.


Argic's postings soon numbered in the tens of thousands, and averaged over 100 posts per day, the highest post count of any single Usenet entity. He posted to several newsgroups, especially soc.history, soc.culture.turkish, and misc.headlines. Because of the posting volume, repetitiveness and minimal direct response to posts they were in reply to, most observers concluded that it is the output of a program, or "]", which scanned for any new appearances of the keywords "Turkey" or "Armenia" in certain newsgroups and replied with saved pages of political text. The bot would automatically post a reply even if the original message had simply mentioned a ] but was crossposted to a soc.* group. The posts sometimes contained direct responses to specific statements indicating some human intervention. Argic's postings soon numbered in the tens of thousands, and averaged over 100 posts per day, the highest post count of any single Usenet entity. He posted to several newsgroups, especially soc.history, soc.culture.turkish, and misc.headlines. Because of the posting volume, repetitiveness and minimal direct response to posts they were in reply to, most observers concluded that it is the output of a program, or "]", which scanned for any new appearances of the keywords "Turkey" or "Armenia" in certain newsgroups and replied with saved pages of political text. The bot would automatically post a reply even if the original message had simply mentioned a ] but was crossposted to a soc.* group. The posts sometimes contained direct responses to specific statements indicating some human intervention.

Revision as of 22:12, 25 October 2006

Serdar Argic was the alias used in one of the first automated newsgroup spam incidents on Usenet, with the objective of denying the Armenian genocide.

The Serdar Argic posts

For a period of several months in the first half of 1994, the Internet user under the pseudonym of "Serdar Argic" (with the address sera@zuma.uucp) posted messages in any Usenet newsgroup thread involving the country of Turkey, arguing that the Armenian Genocide had not occurred or that Armenians had committed genocide upon Turks.

Argic's postings soon numbered in the tens of thousands, and averaged over 100 posts per day, the highest post count of any single Usenet entity. He posted to several newsgroups, especially soc.history, soc.culture.turkish, and misc.headlines. Because of the posting volume, repetitiveness and minimal direct response to posts they were in reply to, most observers concluded that it is the output of a program, or "bot", which scanned for any new appearances of the keywords "Turkey" or "Armenia" in certain newsgroups and replied with saved pages of political text. The bot would automatically post a reply even if the original message had simply mentioned a Thanksgiving turkey but was crossposted to a soc.* group. The posts sometimes contained direct responses to specific statements indicating some human intervention.

Response

Internet users sent a barrage of complaints to UUNET, the Internet service provider hosting the account of Serdar Argic. UUNET never took any action based on the complaints, a first sign that spam would become an increasingly common problem on the Internet in the years to follow. UUNET's justification was that Serdar Argic was posting from a host downstream from the host they fed (anatolia!zuma) over which they had no control. Serdar Argic became known as the Zumabot due to the name of his host.

At the time, there was a fear of the free use of third party cancellations, as it was felt they could set a precedent for the cancellation of posts by anyone simply disagreeing with the messages. Cancellations were rarely performed at the time, because spam had not become the problem it became in subsequent years.

The Serdar Argic posts suddenly disappeared in April, 1994, after Stefan Chakerian created a specific newsgroup (alt.cancel.bots) to carry only cancel messages specifically for any post from any machine downstream from the "anatolia" UUNET feed which carried Serdar Argic's messages. This dealt with the censorship complaints of direct cancellations, because carrying a newsgroup was always the option of the news feed, and no cancellations would propagate unless the news administrator intentionally carried the alt.cancel.bots group. If sites chose to carry the group (most sites did), all of Serdar Argic's messages were removed from all newsgroups.

Parody

Ken MacLeod referred to Argic in his novel The Star Fraction as a slang term for "the lowest layer of paranoid drivel that infested the Cable, spun out by degenerate, bug-ridden, knee-jerk auto-post programs. Kill-file clutter."

Identity of Serdar Argic

During the Serdar Argic phenomenon it was widely believed that the person responsible for the posting was Ahmet Cosar, a graduate student in the Department of Computer Sciences at the University of Minnesota; Argic claimed to have a doctorate. The belief stemmed initially from the fact that Serdar Argic's newsgroup posts went through a news feed administered by Ahmet Cosar. Many believed that Cosar was also responsible for the posts of Hasan Mutlu, another extremely active poster of Turkish nationalist beliefs whose last Usenet post had come one day after Serdar Argic's first (September 1/August 31 1992). In a post of March 22, 1994, Serdar Argic asked a user to mail him a journal, and gave Ahmet Cosar's name and U of M address as the mailing address. James Bottomley, then a student at the University of Warwick in England led a Usenet campaign to try and have Cosar censured or removed as a user from U of M, something they declined to do. In April 1994 Cosar posted angry messages under his own name against the actions of Chakerian and others attempting to contain the Argic bot. A person using Cosar's feed created the group alt.cancel.armenian.garbage in an attempt at canceling pro-Armenian posts, but never posted cancellations to this group.

A post on Slashdot of early April, 2001 (post ID 1617212, comment ID 141, now disappeared) claimed that Cosar had connections to the Turkish secret police and had to cancel his spamming activities after his visa for the USA was revoked.

Trivia

Riled by Usenet kibology - fans of James "Kibo" Parry, such as James Bottomley, Argic invented petnames for them, dubbing Bottomley for example "Bottomless of Armenian Church Garbage", an epithet he continued to use for many months. Bottomley responded by collecting names from other Usenet "kooks" such as Parry ("Bottomlibo"), Ludwig Plutonium ("Bottomtotty Bottomseeker") and so on, seeking to make the ultimate set.

See also

External links

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