186 points

People would click God damn anything two decades ago

permalink
report
reply
94 points

Now they’ll install any random fucking app a company tells them to install. Oh, you want to see a menu at the restaurant? Just install this app. How about fuck you?

permalink
report
parent
reply
37 points

Modern mobile OS’ and apps are quite strictly sandboxed so, with reasonable vetting like Google Play Store and Apple Store, you can reasonably safely install random crap and uninstall it later. It’s a different realm from running random binary executables.

permalink
report
parent
reply
37 points

with reasonable vetting like Google Play Store

Seemingly innocuous Play store apps get found to be viruses all the time, most recent in my memory being a few barcode scanner apps, farthest back in my memory being flashlight apps back before android did it natively, but there’s been more over the years. Trusting apps “because play store” is horrible practice.

permalink
report
parent
reply
16 points

That depends on your definition of safe. Everyone wants to be a data broker these days, and the amount of data that can be gleaned from basic app permissions is startling. Not to mention that it’s just annoying. We already solved this “an app for everything” problem 40 years ago with the HTML/CSS/W3C standards and a regular old web browser. 90% of the apps out there could be websites, and the world would be better if they were. But having an app gives the publisher a lot more control over what they can do, how they can spam you, and what they can scrape, and that’s why everyone has their own stupid apps now.

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points

Blot is blot. My phone barely handles what I want on it. I don’t need a menu app.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

Here’s an unsigned APK that’s just our website in a container plus all of the tracking and data mining we could shove in there. Why dont you go ahead and oauth us to all of your social media accounts too? Don’t worry, we only need post permissions so that we can bring you these sweet customized bargains.

permalink
report
parent
reply
32 points

“It said nude pictures of Anna Kournikova…”

permalink
report
parent
reply
13 points

I’m listening

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

It is actually a sasser worm virus. Don’t do it!

permalink
report
parent
reply
16 points

Yep, back in the very early 2000s, this was something we did at school to jokke around.

The cupholder joke was neat, it had a nice official looking UI with the Coca Cola logo, and a corporate style promotion text, there was a button to click to accept the “gift”, and only then did the CD drive open.

Then I remember running a joke program that would make the startbutton jump around on the screen.

permalink
report
parent
reply

I still couldn’t resist to be honest. It can be done safely. Well, mostly. Some things may decide to overwrite the BIOS with Nyan cat, for example.

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

So nothing’s changed?

permalink
report
parent
reply
88 points

That gag is a bit older than just 2006. I remember it circulating the warez scene back in 1998. Might even be older. Truly antique!

permalink
report
reply
23 points

I remember getting it from Coca-Cola about that time. Even packed it with a logo.

permalink
report
parent
reply
17 points

I was working in my college’s computer lab in '97/'98 and this was old then. The freshmen kept falling for it every year!

permalink
report
parent
reply
17 points

I can’t speak to the executable, but I know back in '95 the joke about someone calling support and asking why they have a cup holder but no CD drive was already crusty. There were a bunch of variations, but here’s the first one I found for those too young to remember:

Customer: "Can you help me, the cup holder on my new computer broke, and I don’t know what to do?

Friend: “Cup holder? What are you talking about? None of our computers come with a cup holder attached to them, and I’ve never heard of one that did.”

Customer: Yes, well the one you sold me did, and the other day I went to set a mug of coffee on it and it just snapped off!"

Friend: “Sir, can you describe what the cup holder looks like, because I still can’t picture what a cup holder on a computer would look like?”

At this point the customer is getting a little irritated!

Customer: “Look, I don’t know how you could not know that you sell computers with cup holders on them, because it’s right in the middle of the thing, and when you push a button on the side, it pops out so you can set your drink on it, and it says 4X on the front cover!”

A long pause . . .

Friend: Sir, are you telling me, you’re using your CD-Rom drive as a beverage holder?"

Customer: “What’s a CD-Rom Drive?”

And now, a terrible bonus joke that is completely unrelated but was around at about the same time:

How do you know if you’re addicted to the Internet? You get a tattoo that says “This body best viewed with Netscape 2.01 or higher.”

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

From my time as tech support, I can tell you that story is probably true

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points
*
Deleted by creator
permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point
Deleted by creator
permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Holland Warez was the shit!

permalink
report
parent
reply
84 points

This reminds me of a similar joke from AIM days.

You could tell your friends that you were going to “hack” their computer.

They would of course not believe you.

You would then send them a few images that looked hackery and a few that were broken.

The broken images were actually a link to “A:/fakeimage.jpg” and “D:/fakeimage.jpg”.

This would cause A drive, the common “floppy” drive, to turn on and look for a fake image for a few seconds. As I recall this worked even with no disk inserted and made a bunch of noise.

Similarly the D drive, the common CD drive, would spin up, also making noise. I believe this did require a disk in the drive, but at the time everyone always had some form of disk in the drive.

What you had really done was nothing, but making your friends computer make noise unexpectedly was still funny.

permalink
report
reply
42 points

There was an AOL instant messenger exploit back in the day where you would send a link or attachment or something and it would cause the other person’s desktop wallpaper to change to a big dick or something, and all of the desktop icons were turned into other porn thumbnails. Lastly, it would turn the windows 95 or 98 or whatever volume up to 100% and blast porn tracks. It was brutal. My friends would do it to each other all the time.

permalink
report
parent
reply
21 points

You could send .exe and .bat executable files. Many of them were actual viruses disquised as pranks.

permalink
report
parent
reply

There was a whole collection of “hacker” programs seemingly exclusively made and used by 12.5-13.5-year-olds that did these things. AOHell was the most well-known.

permalink
report
parent
reply
8 points

That was me! I was those kids! We had crews and handles (tags?) And the whole thing!

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

And then you look at 12 year olds now and they don’t even know how to save files, or type properly on a keyboard.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Jesus. Somebody got kicked out of their house over that, guaranteed.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

Jesus. Somebody got kicked out of their house over that, guaranteed.

permalink
report
parent
reply

I love stuff like this. I can’t think of a good equivalent now.

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points
*

Not a remote trick but put a small sticky note on the bottom of the mouse to cover the light. Or CTRL + ALT + DOWN ARROW to rotate the screen upside down, should work on win10.

permalink
report
parent
reply
78 points

The thought of clicking on some random.exe hurt me a little inside…

So much trust, or ignorance, or both lol

permalink
report
reply
22 points

How do you think we got to this level of distrust?

permalink
report
parent
reply
8 points

Even then was a bad move. Speaking from experience.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

When we were kids we’d download Trojans with fancy UIs for pranks from random websites and install them on each others computers.

How that didn’t massively backfire I have no idea, I mean it was before internet banking or even really buying stuff online but still. Yikes.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

Abuse of trust by hackers, scammers, thieves and other scum on the internet that try to min-max criminality.

permalink
report
parent
reply
9 points

You don’t have a burner machine?

permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

Morbid curiosity

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

What about putting a drink in the dvd drive?

permalink
report
parent
reply
46 points

I liked the random.exe that unmuted your computer, turned the volume to max, and said “hey everybody, I’m downloading pornography!”. My friend got a big kick out of that when he ran it at work. …ah, those were the days…

permalink
report
reply

Antique Memes Roadshow

!antiquememesroadshow@lemmy.world

Create post

Giving you the backstory and appraisals of vintage memes!

Submissions should be vintage memes or commentary about vintage memes. Commenters are advised to appraise the internet value and provenance meme antiquities.

Rules:

  • Posts should be old memes or about old memes.
  • Don’t be a jerk. Be excellent to each other.
  • Keep it safe for work.
  • Follow global .world instance rules outlined here

Community stats

  • 208

    Monthly active users

  • 583

    Posts

  • 3.2K

    Comments

Community moderators