11-28-2006, 09:08 AM
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CP Pontiff
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: A pasture out by Millarville
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Feeding the Ego Monster
Pretty funny - and interesting - opinion piece in the Washington Post . . .
There is something about the Web that brings out the ego monster in everybody. It's not just the well-established tendency to be nasty. When you write for the Web, you open yourself up to breathtakingly vicious vitriol. People wish things on your mother, simply for bearing you, that you wouldn't wish on Hitler.
But even in their quieter modes, denizens of the Web seem to lug around huge egos and deeply questionable assumptions about how interesting they and their lives might be to others.
This is strange. Anonymity, for better or for worse, is supposed to be one of the signature qualities of the Web. As that dog in the New Yorker cartoon says, "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog." The Internet is a place where you can interact with other people and have complete control over how much they know about you. Or supposedly that is the case, and virtually everybody on the Internet is committed to achieving that goal.
But anonymity does not actually seem to interest many of the Web's most devoted users.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...112701024.html
Cowperson
__________________
Dear Lord, help me to be the kind of person my dog thinks I am. - Anonymous
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