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Microconspiracies Galore

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted July 19, 2006.


Welcome to a world of conspiracy, spies, and political intrigue -- it's Harry Potter fandom on the internet.
Annalee Newitz

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In the Internet age, conspiracies are niche phenomena. All the classic conspiracies of yesteryear -- the Kennedy assassination, ZOG, and Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" -- had mass appeal. But frankly they're not nearly as juicy as obscure, narrow-band obsessions plucked from the glowing pages of LiveJournal. Hence my inability to stop reading about the Ms. Scribe Harry Potter fanfic sock puppet conspiracy of 2003. The whole thing has been chronicled assiduously in an anonymously written e-book about Ms. Scribe's rise and fall, deliciously titled "The Ms. Scribe Story: An Unauthorized Fandom Biography."

There are fake identities! Homophobia and racism! Brushes with death! Flame wars! Sex! Stalking! Long explanations of how IP addresses work! Plus, many obscure acronyms and internecine battles between said acronyms! It's like reading a history of the CIA, only with less cross-dressing.

The Ms. Scribe conspiracy unfolded in the vast and lively world of Harry Potter fandom online, where many people write stories (called fanfic) based on the J.K. Rowling books they love. Some of these writers are known as "shippers," people who write about certain characters falling in love and having sex. (The word "shipper" is from "relationship.") Three years ago, Ms. Scribe masterminded a covert campaign to dominate and destroy the shipper community by playing two rival camps of shippers off each other: the Harry-Hermione shippers of FictionAlley.org and the Harry-Ginny shippers of the Gryffindor Tower community. These groups weren't just separated by their ships -- they also had moral differences. Denizens of FictionAlley were comfortable with overtly erotic stories that involved homosexuality, while the Gryffindor Tower fans tended to be strictly het and PG-rated.

According to "The Ms. Scribe Story," its eponymous antiheroine began her campaign by inventing a set of fake identities online who were Ms. Scribe fans. These so-called sock puppets spent all their time praising Ms. Scribe's fanfic and linking to it in shipper forums. When that didn't get Ms. Scribe the attention she seemed to crave, she started posting anonymous comments in her LiveJournal attacking herself for being a depraved homo-lover and for being mixed race.

The more she was attacked, the more she could bravely defend herself -- and the more attention she got from the FictionAlley community, whose members rushed to her aid against the bigoted "attackers." Eventually she created several "Christian" sock puppets who made antigay, racist comments on Ms. Scribe's LiveJournal. They also claimed to be from the rival Gryffindor Tower group. The longer this went on, the more allies Ms. Scribe had; she eventually gained about 200 LiveJournal friends, including elite members of the FictionAlley inner circle.

Although relations between FictionAlley and Gryffindor Tower had always been strained, the Ms. Scribe controversies turned the two groups into outright enemies. Friends of the Gryffindor Tower crowd made a series of posts revealing that the IP addresses on Ms. Scribe's posts matched those of her alleged Christian attackers and fans, but the FictionAlley fans were so incensed by the "persecution" of Ms. Scribe that they ignored the evidence. Whenever things started to unravel, Ms. Scribe would whip her supporters into a frenzy by pretending to be in the hospital or claiming she was being stalked by one of the Christians.

The author of "The Ms. Scribe Story" believes that Ms. Scribe made her last appearance in 2005, when she stirred up trouble yet again by accusing the fans of being racist for jokingly comparing the fight between shippers to the Civil War. Not surprisingly, the comment thread was filled with mysterious posts from racists who had never shown up before (and never came back) and whose entire histories on LiveJournal consisted of that particular thread.

Nobody knows what Ms. Scribe is doing now.

What's intriguing about Ms. Scribe and her sock puppets' microconspiracy is its everyday scale. It's not hard to understand why secret societies might scheme to kill a president. But why would one woman spend so much time trying to bring down a group of Harry Potter fans?

There are many theories: that she wanted attention; that she adored a fight; that she was nuts and unemployed. All we know for sure is that, wherever she is now, we are one step away from being her, one lonely morning, when all we want are a few online friends.

Digg!

Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd who is still trying to listen to the backward masking on "Dark Side of the Moon."

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Hmmm ....
Posted by: just john on Jul 19, 2006 12:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't recall ever seeing you and her in the same room ....

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» RE: Bwahahahaa! Posted by: Ghoulman
» RE: Bwahahahaa! Posted by: Orwells_nightmare
How stupid!
Posted by: lamar on Jul 19, 2006 2:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ha ha ha, I'm laughing at this stupid Ms. Scribe and wondering how much of her stupid life she wasted typing stupid crap...er...on...uh...aw damn...the computer. I'm going outside now.

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The Glories of the Net
Posted by: jamester on Jul 20, 2006 7:56 AM   
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Something I'm trying to appreciate about the Net is the persistence of the pathetic, as well as the unexpected brilliance from previously undiscovered sources...

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ljdrama
Posted by: spacemummy on Jul 20, 2006 1:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was excited to see the term microconspiracy, a neologism, at least for me. I thought, what new twist in the world of cretinous realpolitik? What a disappointment to see this loser-bash report.

This forum seems like the wrong place for this kind of tripe. Livejournal is aptly suited. I should know, having spent too much time there myself.

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» RE: ljdrama Posted by: just john
Sounds like Ms Scribe took trolling to a new and
Posted by: wildmon on Jul 20, 2006 8:38 PM   
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facinating dimension. In the process she taught others something about trusting online entities. To wit-you can't! Good for her/him/it.

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may be
Posted by: pollar on Oct 19, 2006 3:50 AM   
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I don't knnnow
12345678910111212345612345678

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ya... I see...
Posted by: pollar on Nov 7, 2006 3:01 AM   
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today
Posted by: pollar on Nov 13, 2006 3:10 PM   
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now I read biblogg and yersaterday read bolywood ringtones article in gopneg blog.

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may be
Posted by: pollar on Jan 29, 2007 12:24 PM   
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wii
Posted by: parser on Feb 14, 2007 4:30 AM   
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