Seppukoo = Digital Suicide?

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The Mike

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'Anti-social network' aims to be Facebook killer app
AFP/File – Facebook makes you despair? Social networking makes you want to end it all? You may be ready for online …

PARIS (AFP) – Facebook makes you despair? Social networking makes you want to end it all? You may be ready for online ritual suicide with the aid of a new website that helps you kill your virtual identity. "Impress your friends, disconnect yourself," is the slogan on www.seppukoo.com, a site that aims to subvert Facebook by offering its millions of users a glorious end and a memorial page to match. "Rather than fall into the hands of their enemies, ancient Japanese samurai preferred to die with honour, voluntarily plunging a sword into the abdomen and moving it left to right in a slicing motion," the site notes.

This form of ritual suicide was known as "seppuku."

"As the seppuku restores the samurai's honour as a warrior, seppukoo.com deals with the liberation of the digital body," the site says.

Today the enemy is not other bands of noble warriors but corporate media who use viral marketing to make huge profits by connecting people across the globe. "Seppukoo playfully attempts to subvert this mechanism by disconnecting people from each other and transforming the individual suicide experience into an exciting 'social' experience." The site, which uses its own viral marketing strategy to lure in disgruntled social networkers, is part of a protest wave that sees Facebook as a potentially dangerous entity beholden to corporate interests. It offers ritual suicide for Facebook users in five easy steps.

Willing victims must first log in to seppukoo.com by typing in the same information they use to go on to their Facebook profile. They then choose one of several memorial RIP page templates before writing their last words, which the site promises to send to all their Facebook friends when they have taken the final step. Once the user has made that fatal final click, his or her Facebook profile is deactivated. But in what might be seen as a bit of a cheat, virtual life goes on after the ritual suicide. It comes in the form of testimonials friends can write on the memorial page or by rising in the seppukoo ranks by scoring points with every former Facebook friend who follows your lead and commits hara-kari.

The top scorer in that game is currently a blonde woman who uses the name Simona Lodi and who passed into the post-Facebook world on November 5. But seppukoo.com has some way to go before it attracts anything near the more than 300 million users Facebook currently boasts. On Wednesday it pulled in only half a dozen Facebookers ready to end it all. Its owners -- whose website says are an "imaginary art-group from Italy" -- told AFP by email that over 15,000 people had done the deed and over 350,000 Facebook users had received an invite to follow suit. Facebook did not immediately reply when contacted by AFP to ask if it saw seppukoo.com as a threat and if it planned any action to block it. To reinforce the tongue-in-cheek approach of seppukoo.com, the group's art director -- who uses the name Guy McMusker -- replied when asked if he was a Facebook user: "Of course. We're not Luddites. We're incoherent."

The group is called "Linking The Invisible" and its website says it is made up of media artists Clemente Pestelli and Gionatan Quintini whose work explores "the invisible links between the infosphere, neural synapsis, and real life." Seppukoo admits that it is in reality a social networking group but seeks to distinguish itself from Facebook by noting that it will store no data and its server will not sell data to any third party. "If you've trusted a merciless company (Facebook) until now, we hope you can also trust an imaginary artist group," it says. McMusker said the site was not set up with a view to making money. The RIP memorial page it offers Facebook dissidents could easily be mistaken for a real memorial for a real deceased person. But McMusker rejected suggestions it was in bad taste and said that no-one was likely to be upset. "Just take it easy," he wrote. In the real world, suicide is obviously a one-way trip. But in the virtual world even a would-be subversive site like seppukoo.com cannot prevent your resurrection. If you realise that leaving Facebook was a mistake, all you have to do is log back on again and your profile is instantly restored.

This seems like just another way of attention whoring but its an interesting gimmick.
 
The paranoid cynic in me wonders what nefarious uses this website may have in store for the information people enter...

I don't understand all this digital social networking crap, it all seems superficial to me.
 
The paranoid cynic in me wonders what nefarious uses this website may have in store for the information people enter...

I don't understand all this digital social networking crap, it all seems superficial to me.

It is superficial, and nobody even meets up with 2/3rds of their online members. :s

I laugh when people have 300-800 people on their Facebook. Like they are friends with that many people. People just add people for the sake of adding them. I only want my closest friends on there. Even then, I don't have a bunch of them on there. Rather see people in person. Meh. Whatever.
 
It is superficial, and nobody even meets up with 2/3rds of their online members. :s

I laugh when people have 300-800 people on their Facebook. Like they are friends with that many people. People just add people for the sake of adding them. I only want my closest friends on there. Even then, I don't have a bunch of them on there. Rather see people in person. Meh. Whatever.

I currently have 483 friends on Facebook, and I personally know all but maybe 25. Those 25 are people I often communicate with on other friend's pages, via statuses or notes, so they're not just random people. I don't add random people. I also keep a lot of my friends from seeing everything on my profile, so I have control over what they see.
 
WOuldn't it be easier to just not use any of that ?????

I don't have myspace or facebook, never did, I still talk to my friends the old fashioned way. With my mouth.

I never understood facebook, "I have 500 friends."

No you don't. You have maybe 2-3 real friends who would take you in if you lost your job, or really truely look out for you. The rest are simply acquaintances and I never felt the need to let those people know I had a big day of shopping to twitter about.

Its all just sad attention whoredom to me.
 
It is not easier to not use any of that. It's impossible to keep up with so many people (even with Facebook) but it makes it easier to communicate and check up on friends that yeah, you don't talk to every day, but it's still nice to know they're alive and well.

Do I talk to all of my Facebook friends regularly? No, maybe 20-30 of the same people post on my page in a given month. But still I like knowing I can get in touch with someone should I need to, and vice versa.

Different strokes for different folks.
 
I don't do any of those social sites either. I spend too much time on the computer as it is.
 
You don't do the social sites because then you'd have to post your face. No more secret identity of The Ween :lol
 
i have a facebook page, and it is annoying. It was one of the worst things i did in a while. I now have to explain to my fiance who all of the girls are and that i am not trying to sleep with them. I might ritually kill my page with this just for ????s and giggles
 
It would be cool if you could have virtual samurai duels where the loser's Facebook identity was slain. Then people could put up little death tablets for them and pray in virtual shrines.
 
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