Lyle Seaman writes:
Reads like another L.D. "tentacle", doesn't it?
an12070@anon.penet.fi (Zen Master) writes:
Don't look at the readable id, look at the an12070 part. Whether S.Boxx == L.Detweiler or not, S.Boxx and Zen Master (and one or two other nyms) are posting from one and the same account. Boxx, if you want to play the Medusa, changing the nick on your penet account doesn't hack it. -- ____ Richard Kennaway __\_ / School of Information Systems Internet: jrk@sys.uea.ac.uk \ X/ University of East Anglia uucp: ...mcsun!ukc!uea-sys!jrk \/ Norwich NR4 7TJ, U.K.
Richard Kennaway said:
Lyle Seaman writes:
Reads like another L.D. "tentacle", doesn't it?
an12070@anon.penet.fi (Zen Master) writes:
Don't look at the readable id, look at the an12070 part. Whether S.Boxx == L.Detweiler or not, S.Boxx and Zen Master (and one or two other nyms) are posting from one and the same account.
Boxx, if you want to play the Medusa, changing the nick on your penet account doesn't hack it.
Is there a way to get elm filters to look at the "body" of a message, as well? (I'll look into it, yes, I do know how to RTFM.. just posting the suggestion, in a roundabout way.) body = detweiler ? save /dev/null body = s.boxx ? save /dev/null
jrk@sys.uea.ac.uk (Richard Kennaway) writes:
Lyle Seaman writes:
Reads like another L.D. "tentacle", doesn't it?
an12070@anon.penet.fi (Zen Master) writes:
Don't look at the readable id, look at the an12070 part. Whether S.Boxx == L.Detweiler or not, S.Boxx and Zen Master (and one or two other nyms) are
Well, golly gee, you're absolutely right. It looks like this "pseudo-spoofing" game is harder than it looks, isn't it? After all, ignorant ol' me recognized the author from the text, without even THINKING to check the anon id. I'll bet that only people who have MPD master multiple styles of discourse which are much more distinct than those of L.D, S.B. and Z.M (oh, maybe a professional writer can manage, occasionally). I'll also bet that it's a rare MPD sufferer whose various personalities share any significant accord. Lyle
Lyle_Seaman@transarc.com wrote:
I'll bet that only people who have MPD master multiple styles of discourse which are much more distinct than those of L.D, S.B. and Z.M (oh, maybe a professional writer can manage, occasionally). I'll also bet that it's a rare MPD sufferer whose various personalities share any significant accord.
Um, not necessarily. It varies depending on the case. Some people with MPD can have very similiar personalities, and others vary widely. In other cases, a person can have many seperate personalities which are fairly similar, and a few radically different ones.
participants (4)
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jrk@sys.uea.ac.uk -
Lyle_Seaman@transarc.com -
Matthew J Ghio -
sameer@uclink.berkeley.edu