
The front page of bash.org
Bash.org is a
web site that hosts a popular
database of
quotes. While the site's official name is
QDB, or
Quote Database, it is usually referred to
by its
URL, or simply as "bash". The site
collects, stores and presents humourous quotes garnered almost
exclusively from
Internet Relay Chat, although some
entries from
instant messaging and spoken quotations
also appear in the database. After being submitted, these entries
can be
voted on and displayed
according to different sorting methods. A subsequent
neologism, "bashing", has come to
refer to the process of submitting a quote to this site.
The
topic of the database's quotes are largely '
nerd humour', and the comedy value of the database is
enhanced if the reader is computer literate. The intended audience
of the QDB is people aged 16 and over; quotes often contain
combinations of
explicit
language, adult themes, sexual references and allusions to
drug use.
Site
details
Quotes are submitted to bash.org through a web form,
where they are then put into a
moderation queue. After being reviewed by a moderator, quotes are
either accepted or removed from the queue. The latter is often
referred to as killing the quote. Criteria for acceptance are
stated to be funniness, reasonable length and proper
formatting, such as the removal of
timestamps unless
required for context. Each quote is assigned a unique identifier
and, once approved, can be displayed in a number of ways. The
latest fifty approved quotes are shown on a page, but users can
also view quotes randomly or sorted by score. There is also a
"browse" option which enables users to go through every quote in
the database, and a
search
page.
An approved quote is also subject to user approval.
Bash.org uses a simple
voting
system in which users select a plus for a positive vote, minus for
negative vote, or X for a quote which they feel should be removed
from the database entirely. If the latter option is selected, the
quote is subject to re-moderation. Quotes that are
racist, in bad taste, recycled, or
simply not funny often find themselves with very low
ratings.
Bash.org has also hosted other
community-based activities, such as two
Counter-Strike game servers, a
Tradewars server,
streaming radio and a
messy desk contest. These activities are targeted towards the
site's large computer-literate gaming demographic.
On
January 9
2005, Bash.org revealed its
moderator application. An applicant is given 500 actually submitted
quotes to moderate, and ranked based on their moderation of these
quotes. In other words, the test is a kind of
meta-moderation system. On the site,
applicants are advised to "mod from the gut", rather than
attempting to analyse a given quote. It is also advised not to
moderate too lightly, with an approval rate of 5% being average.
[450]Other viewpoints and
criticisms
The site's ease of quote submission means that
large amounts of quotes are submitted every day.
As of January 8th, 2005, there
are 17575 approved quotes, and 24188 in the queue. Detractors have
noted the size of the queue and use this as an indication that
there are not enough moderators, or the existing ones are not
examining enough quotes to stop the site from stagnating. This has
often been the target of jokes that, themselves, have ended up on
the site
[451] [452]. In response to this, a moderator
test was created to allow normal users to apply to be moderators.
However, applicants have not yet been added to the moderator pool,
as the test results are still being
tweaked.
Another target of criticism is the
moderation process itself. Some disenchanted submitters complain
that the submission process is too strict, and some quotes seem
arbitrarily rejected. One pundit notes this in a satirical quote
[453] by comparing the
submission and donation standards. Others, however, claim that the
submission standards are too relaxed, and that many quotes are
childish or only accepted for shock value or because they're
so-called 'in jokes'
[454].
The site itself has
satirised the criticisms leveled at it with an
April fools'
joke on
April 1
2004, which claimed the site
was to now automatically accept every quote, give 100 free positive
votes to anyone who mentioned a wish to be on the site, and change
its name to the
politically correct
"funny-in-a-friendly-way.org".
[455].
History==
The code for
this site was originally created by a user known as DigDug, where
it ran at http://digdig.cx/quotes on a FreeBSD server running PHP4 and MySQL
[456]. He also developed a moderation
system to prevent abuse, and the site also came to exist
simultaneously at http://geekissues.org/quotes [457]. The site was handed over to three
other users named Guilty, Madog and Amanda on August 1 2002. Under their management, the database moved to
bash.org [458]. Madog later left to be replaced
by another user called Blaxthos.
On September 15 2003, the bash.org managers posted a request for
donation of
hardware, including
RAM and a new processor for a second server. They mentioned this was part of another
project "so super-secret that we still can't discuss it". [459]. They also noted that there was to
be a complete rewrite of the bash.org code, though this has not yet
happened as of
2005.
In 2003, DigDug
requested to be involved with the site again, but was denied. In
response, he forked the code
to create another IRC quote database site called bash.cx, which
eventually became QDB.us
[460] [461].
Meanwhile, tension grew between bash.org's moderators and
management, mostly due to the code being outdated and requests for
changes and added features being denied. Finally, many of the
moderators went on strike
during July 2004 [462].
A statement
of complaint was put up on an Earthlink webpage [463]
(which no longer exists). The news spread through weblogs and IRC
news pages while the queue quickly grew out of control. In
response, bash.org's management fired the moderators, and many of them moved to QDB.us
[464]
[465] [466]. Following the strike,
Bash.org management added a set of newer moderators.
Other
projects have also developed around the general premise of
bash.org, such as an open source clone called Rash Quote Management System.
These clones, however, are based on different code, and none have
gained the popularity Bash.org has among internet users. This is
most likely due to the network effect found in most online
communities.
==External links
Bash.org Snapshot of the old QDB at
GeekIssues.org QDB.us: A fork of the
site Rash QMS - Open Source
Clone of Bash.org ( project page)