Internet humor
The Internet, being what many have described as an "organic" entity, has
long been a resource for the circulation of humorous ideas and jokes.
Countless web-sites are devoted to the collection of Internet humour, and
every day thousands of emails cross the world containing the text of
humorous articles, or jokes about current events.
"Internet humor" is distinguishable from "Humor on the Internet" through the
concept of ownership. There are definite examples of commercially protected
humor on the internet, examples include the cartoons of Dilbert or the
newspaper columns of Dave Barry. "Internet Humor" is regarded as that which
belongs to the public domain.
Internet humor may also be regarded as humor that specifically relies on
characteristics belonging to the Internet, and the "geek" or "hacker" humor.
That is, humor that would not exist if not for the Internet.
Generally, this type of semi-institutionalized humor starts as a specific
group's in-joke, and grows until it reaches a significant portion of
Internet users, gaining popularity, "rules" and mythos.
Longstanding and widely recognized examples of such humor are:
* The Internet Oracle (formerly The Usenet Oracle) at
http://cgi.cs.indiana.edu/~oracle/index.cgi
* The Jargon file (also known as The (New) Hacker's Dictionary)
* The cult of Kibology
* The Darwin Awards
The concept of authorship with regard to Internet humor is very difficult to
define. Frequently a "list" type joke may get started but within a few
generations of distribution it evolves beyond recognition. A classic example
is the well-known "You have two cows" joke - after circulating in more
primitive media throughout the 1980s, it seems to have first appeared on the
Internet in 1993 with simple descriptions of communism, capitalism and
socialism. However, the version presented within the Wikipedia has expanded
to include all forms of government, regional variations, philosophical
systems, and even art movements. Attempting to define an "author" of the
joke hence becomes impossible, and it becomes a publicly owned resource,
simply because no-one could validly claim legitimate ownership.
Though the Internet has allowed the global explosion of
collectively-authored comedy, its precursors existed on bulletin boards,
corporate messaging systems, and even through such low-tech mechanisms as
the facsimile since at least the 1970s.
This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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