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Revision as of 02:50, 4 January 2015 by Boomur (talk | contribs) (→Other usage: rephrasing)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The term banhammer began as a satirical term for the power wielded by an administrator to ban or block users of internet forums, wikis, online games, or other internet media.
The term is often used as a nickname for the actual anti-cheating software in video games that performs the banning action.
Banning
Banning is usually a form of punishment from the service, either by deleting the guilty party's account or suspending it for a period of time. In extreme cases, the person's IP address may be blocked from the server to prevent them from simply creating another account, sometimes indefinitely; however, this particular action is rarely taken, as most Internet Service Providers allocate dynamic IPs to their customers which can change from time to time. These actions are usually invoked for such offenses as violating the website's Terms of Service, trolling, promoting prejudice, disrespect of moderators, or promoting illegal acts.
Gaming usage
The term originated in 1996 from MSN Chat where administrator's ban icon was a hammer. The term has become commonplace now in the game sales community and among game forums. The name has been used in more mainstream venues, such as Halo 2 and Halo 3 video game for the Xbox console. Developers Bungie used the term "banhammer" when describing a July 2005 patch that scanned the user's hard drive and summarily restricted him or her from joining Xbox Live without possibility of appeal or leniency if it was determined that his or her copy had been modded. News site Slashdot began using the term at that point and has subsequently applied it to multiple instances of similar housecleaning occurring on World of Warcraft.
In other games such as Blizzard's StarCraft, the host has a hammer icon next to his or her name and is able to boot people from the chat along with the ability to ban people from the channel for a specified time period. The banhammer has even made an appearance in the RPG The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, where it can be found on the corpse of an NPC. Valve CEO Gabe Newell's inventory in Team Fortress 2, when examined using a third-party inspection tool, displays only one item, a "Vintage Ban Hammer".
Other usage
In reviews of the Facebook group Cool Freaks' Misplaced Pages Club, The Tab and Vice have both referred to the threat of the banhammer to assert the strict enforcement of the group's rules. The Tab described the moderators of the group as "bands of extremist ideologues patrol comment threads wielding 'the banhammer'."
See also
Specific websites
References
- Thompson, Chris, "3D printed ban-hammer", Boing Boing, URL retrieved 2009-10-02.
- Lasky, Michael (2005-05-23). "AT&T's CallVantage: Excellent Phone Service on the Cheap". PC World. IDG. Archived from the original on 2 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
{{cite news}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - "HALO 2 & CHEATING: How does the Bungie "Banhammer" actually work?", Bungie.net, 2005-06-10, URL retrieved 2006-12-29.
- "Halo 2 and Halo 3 Online Cheaters Get Smashed by Bungie's Banhammer" GamePro, 2006-01-13, URL retrieved 2006-12-29.
- "Searching For: banhammer", Slashdot.
- Velvin, Sinder, "Morrowind Easter Eggs", The Imperial Library fansite, URL retrieved 2006-12-29.
- "TF2 Backpack". TF2 Backpack Examiner. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- Rory Cox (17 November 2014). "Cool Freaks' Misplaced Pages Club and Oxford University, a comparison". The Tab. Retrieved 2014-12-29.
- ^ River Donaghey (7 November 2014). "Cool Freaks' Misplaced Pages Club Is a Shitshow of Esoterica, Political Correctness, and Trigger Warnings". Vice. Retrieved 2014-12-29.