Troll: Difference between revisions

741 bytes added ,  21 December 2003
use of this term in the singular is confined to non-trolls who psychiatrically insist on defining "behaviour" from their own God's Eye View - to trolls there is just a "we", "trolls..."
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(use of this term in the singular is confined to non-trolls who psychiatrically insist on defining "behaviour" from their own God's Eye View - to trolls there is just a "we", "trolls...")
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See [[w:Internet troll|Internet troll (Wikipedia)]] for anti-troll [[propaganda]] and [[m:troll|troll (Meta-Wikipedia)]] for troll view.
"The author does not precede the works;  he is a certain functional principle by which, in our culture, one [[limits, excludes, chooses and impedes]] the [[free circulation of fiction]]." - [[Michel Foucault]]
A [[wiki]] is [[troll-friendly]] when a [[friendly troll]] gets [[due process]].
 
That is usually all they want.
[[Trolls]] are those who agree with Foucault and so reject both authorship and the association of authorship with fiction.  To trolls, there is no such thing as an individual "troll", so the use of the term in the singular is confined to sysops.  See [[w:Internet troll|Internet troll (Wikipedia)]] for examples of their anti-troll [[propaganda]] and [[m:troll|troll (Meta-Wikipedia)]] for a troll view, in which sysops are defined as simply "less mature individual troll personalities who have not yet found a group they can comfortably be trolls in".
 
A [[wiki]] is [[troll-friendly]] when a [[friendly troll]] gets [[due process]], and consideration of his "fiction" as a peer to other fiction, without regard to [[reputation]]. That is usually all they want.
 
See also:
* http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=360db514.18861087%40news.pipeline.com
* http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=360db514.18861087%40news.pipeline.com
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