I just ran across a meme that leaves me breathless. I can’t decide whether the guy who came up with it is an absolute idiot, or a criminal genius.
In case you’ve somehow missed out on this craze (in which case, I’m deeply jealous), a reasonable colloquial definition of a “meme” is that it’s a series of questions that you’re supposed to answer and either reply back to everyone on the email you received it in (plus perhaps everyone you know) or, more recently, post the answers on your blog and encourage others to copy and answer on their own blogs.
Now I’ll admit, I’ve participated in a few of these things, most recently a list of “Have you ever done these things?” but I’m generally reluctant to share much in the way of personal information. (A co-worker recently commented that she knows I take time off from time to time, but never had any idea where I was going.)
This new meme terrifies me. I don’t know whether it originated as email, or in blogs, but what you do is start off with your real name (or perhaps even your full name), and then make up your “Witness Protection Name”, “Nascar Name”, “Stripper Name” and so on. The way you create these names is through various concatenations of the name of your first pet, the name of the first street you lived on, your mother’s maiden name, and various other bits of information that are normally reserved for establishing your identity when you open a bank or credit account.
Armed with that information, a scammer should have no trouble impersonating someone who participated in the meme.
What scares me is that a member of my immediate family fell for this one, which means my identity has been compromised too.
Some days, I truly hate the Internet.
4 thoughts on “World's Most Dangerous Meme”
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How do you spell your last name? 🙂
Well, it’s spelled “Raymond Luxury Yacht”, but it’s pronounced “Throatwarbler Mangrove.”
That usually throws ’em off.
Oddments like this are pretty old; I remember coming across a variant of it more than 10 years ago as a newspaper reporter. Yes, it existed in the days before universal web access, and it included the maiden name as part of the gimmick then too. (Exotic dancer: dog’s name, mother’s maiden name.)
It’s a frivolous exercise in nomenclature that has carried over onto the Internet from its pre-Internet days, as have many other things of even less value.
All that said, I don’t dispute that it can be used in the manner you’re describing.
Small nitpick: the popular misuse of the term aside, these things are not memes. Properly speaking, a meme is an idea gene, the simplest, most basic level of an idea that can be transmitted from person to person, and from culture to culture; as it is transmitted, it manifests itself in personally and culturally appropriate ways, but the essence is unchanged. It’s similar in nature to a literary motif.
I have no idea how these things came to be called memes.
A key difference to this being propogated before the interwebz is that it would have been much more difficult for people you didn’t know to come across the information en mass.
As far as your nitpick goes: That’s why I labeled my definition as colloquial instead of presenting it as a formal one.