Talk:Leet/Archive 2

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Archive 1 Archive 2 Archive 3 Archive 4 Archive 5

Language box

I removed the right box from the article. It is a hoax. SYSS Mouse 02:42, 26 July 2005 (UTC)

Leet
L33t
Native toInternet
RegionInternet Chatrooms, forums, etc.
Native speakers
Several million. 
Indo-European

 Germanic
  West
   Anglic
    Binary
    Ebonics

    Leet
Official status
Official language in
Internet
Regulated byPeople who use it in chatrooms
Language codes
ISO 639-1lt
ISO 639-2leet
ISO 639-3
Should ISO 639-2 designation in the language box on the version of the article page really be "art" as it is now? An artificial language is one "whose phonology, grammar and vocabulary are specifically devised by an individual or small group, rather than having naturally evolved as part of a culture as with natural languages." l33t started off as a way to avoid text filters, and evolved into its current form over time as a part of Internet Culture, and is still evolving. As such, it should be a natural language. Specifically a primarily written dialect of English, similiar in relationship to Ebonics (although not genetically related.) Or perhaps an encoding of the English language, but alone it is certainly not any form of standard English. Perhaps someone with a greater knowledge of linguistics can better classify it?
It should also be noted that I do pronounce some of the new forms introduced through l33t speak along with some AOL speak when speaking with someone who'll know what I'm talking about. So, l33t is not completely written despite what the article may say. Particularly, I can use -x0rz [zowrz] and -4g3 [æʤ] or [əʤ] as a productive affixes in certain contexts. Examples of things I can sometimes be heard saying: h4x0rz [hækzowrz], pwn3d [pʰːownd], lol [lowl], brb [biːɑrːbiː], keke as a series of velar affricates I don't know how to transcribe, etc. With the exception of new forms unique to l33t, in my experience l33t is usually pronounced the same as the original English it encodes. --j0no 18:47, 18 December 2005 (UTC)

Maybe this, along with this article in Leetspeek, should go into the Encyclopedia Dramatica? Zaphod Beeblebrox 18:41, 25 March 2006 (UTC)DontPanic6x9


The letter translations jumped the shark

I'm not sure if the above comment is referring to what I'm referring to, but the I find the "Kusachu" table not very visually comprehensible (some columns are randomly squished). Perhaps a <dl>-style list would be better? Decklin 13:35, 8 August 2005 (UTC)

Make sure you are using the default text size on your browser. It looks fine to me on both IE and Firefox. Changing the text size (which can easily be done accidentally) can screw with the appearance and layout of highly formatted pages such as W--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 02:45, 19 December 2005 (UTC)ikipedia.

b6 or b7???

ähm?, is the & really above the 7 in american keyboards? i didn'T knw that, till yet. THX LOL

Yup it is. the ^ is above the 6

Yeah, i was confused at first when i saw that since i use a german keyboard

Removal of the "vocabulary" category

Yeah, I think it should be removed from the Leet article, as it already has its own category at Internet slang. The reason for this is that stuff like "kekeke", "Zerg rush", ROFL and such really have little to do with 1337 as a phenomenon. The way I see it, leetspeak is strictly the art of obscuring text using numbers or other letters on the keyboard. The "Over-exclamation and other emphasis" could easily go as well.

A lot of things in this article is about common internet language for 13-year old Counterstrike gamers. While I'm aware that this kind of style has been shoved under the expanding '1337'-category, I still think it's a wrong turn to take as it has nothing to do with what it originally started out as, at all. This article has been marked heavily by the large amount of frustrated, grammatically correct internet users, aggravated at other, minor-aged internet users speaking what I would rather call n00bspeak than l33tspeak :) Apocryphite 04:27, 4 April 2006 (UTC)

Leet translation

Someone took the time to convert the entire article into Leet. Here 's a link http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Leet&oldid=21226208 to that revision. Lisiate 02:33, 18 August 2005 (UTC)

I'm sure they just used an automatic translator. God damn vandals. --cheese-cube 09:32, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
Maybe this should go into the encyclopedia dramatica? It deserves to be there.

Zaphod Beeblebrox 18:41, 25 March 2006 (UTC)User:DontPanic6x9 ... a complete n00b

Republic Commando

I've played through the game and asked on the forums and no one recalls that happening. Can anyone confirm the validity of this? --Phoenix Hacker 06:55, September 11, 2005 (UTC)

  • It's in there, I'm sure that Scorch will say something like "No mainframe is a match for my l33t hacker skills" when he is performing computer hack command.

Brian Bell?

I notice there is a sentence "Brian Bell is gay" contained within the article. Is this some sort of an in-joke or graffiti?

About Greeklish

The section greeklish doesnt belong in that article. It came about as a means to be able to comunicate in Greek since most electronic devices have a poor support for the Greek language. Almost all Greek speakers who use technology (most people) have had this problem and therefore especially in the early days of the net needed to invent a way to communicate. Presumably the only similarity except from the fact that it is a transliteration is it´s use of numbers for characters that doesn exist in the "correct" Greeklish, for example the use of 8 in place of "theta" (θήτα) or the use of 3 in place of "xi" (x pronounced like the x in exodus, Ξί in Greek). It is not a way to create an elite, and it came about presumably by some form of trade war on protocols and standards of the kind that occured at the time that DVDs and CDROMs were to be standardised, hence the Greek codepage can be either ISO-8859-7 or "wingreek"(win-1253) or MacGreek (don´t ask). There was an effort to standardise with Unicode but this seems to be ignored by most software makers even nowdays.

--Vousmanos 08:10, 5 October 2005 (UTC) "Common sense is what makes you think that the world is flat"

First Usage of Leetspeak

An anon IP (User:65.33.207.254) contributed this (now first) chapter of Leet. I fail to see any relevance (read: 1337|\|355) of this Doomish fact for the article. Anyone else agrees that "First Usage of Leetspeak" should be made an e><ample of and promptly o|3137eo|? --Misza13 (Talk) 19:04, 8 October 2005 (UTC)

  • Deleted

Noobishness

I've reverted quite a bit, (be bold) First was for the most recent edit abotu the math. That was unimportant, irrelevant, and unhelpful. Leet can also be used to make fun of his mom, but we don't add that in here.

Also, I've reverted a bunch of additions to the noob section. (which actually reverts over a vandalism revert). First I think that these kinds of remarks belong in the article for noob. Only but the most basic comments regarding noobishness belong here. Second, it didn't seem very accurate (original research only?). As far as I can tell:

  • noober is used either to rhyme with uber, or with an -er modifier for noob.
  • nubian is possibly real, but given the edit history of this user on this article, I've decided to blanket revert for safety. It could very well, just be used to describe the things noobs do, not referencing the noobs themselves.
  • nubnuts 0 google hits (I was expecting at least something)
  • noobnuts appears to be a username on several forums. The first google hit might be something, but seems very much a neologism.

So if you've any questions about any of this, feel free to contact me, but I (for the moment) stand my ground). McKay 03:02, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

Frequent misspellings

This list is long, redundant, and hard to verify. Can we just list the extremely common ones (e.g. teh, pwn), and say that adjacent letters are commonly transposed for effect (like->liek, lame->laem)? With a constantly evolving language like leet where the emphasis is on generalization, it seems silly to list frequent misspellings, since any word can be turned into leet by deliberate misspelling. e.g. any person familiar with leet would know waht I maent if I wroet thsi, but it doesnt maen we haev to list "waht", "maent", "wroet", "thsi", "maen", and "haev". Kjl 18:44, 11 October 2005 (UTC)

  • I've done this and more McKay 07:30, 12 October 2005 (UTC)

Stuff changed today

Paragraph on misspellings in Overview removed words without value:

  • fuxored (self explanatory)
  • l@@k (self explanatory)
  • l4m3 (self explanatory), l3m (not notable, doesn't even appear in UrbanDict, most related hits are WikiPedia),
  • rape (self explanatory, not L33t)
  • üb3rly 1337 (duplicate)
  • r0x0r, suxx0r (already a -x0r section)

removed comment on w00t. Discussion on the word should go there. edited the "jaja" stuff. Batman Begins -> Batman Begins (video game)

Origins of -8- ("l8r", "gr8", etc.)

As soon as the early 90's, word formations involving substitutions of "8" for "ate" (such as l8r, gr8, and so forth) were already part of BBS message boards; thus, such words should not be considered a part of "AOL/IM speak", as they are not an invention of the AOL community. It has been thus edited.

  • I'll vouch for having seen "l8r" as early as the mid 1980s on Commodore BBSes Murple 20:28, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

Comedic value?

I have not read the article very thoroughly, but I haven't seen mentioned that these days almost everyone uses 1337 for its comedic value (well, except those annoying 12-year-olds in multiplayer games). I think that the majority (myself included) uses it to annoy and joke about than for any of the reasons in the article. Poromenos 00:23, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

'/34/-/, !7 |2311'/ (4/\/ |33 /-/!14|2!0|_|5. Feel free to add stuff. Matt Yeager 05:07, 16 October 2005 (UTC)

Use of x0r

I added "The term "r0x0r j00r b0x0r" itself probably relates to hacking itself, with a person being able to gain access to and, from there, "rock their box". It is also possible that it is a derivation from ".

I'm pretty sure that "r0x0rz j00r s0x0rs" didn't come in until way after *"b0x0rz". But I left the other explanation because I don't think this can be proven.

-Fishdinner 10.21.05

Is there a way to fit in the fact that it's a scandanavian j? i.e. it's pronounced like y, as in j00r -> your.

Ja, but it's not only Scandanavian. I reckons it's got to do with the germanics in general (dutch, danes, swedes, germs etc). 1337 iz universal, so there's loadz ov international influences. The demo scene was big in central and northern europe all thru the 80s and 90s. I think this could be emphasised more in the article, a whole section on internationalness. How else to exsplain the non-rhotic forms?

User:Tony Danza 16:16, 23 March 2006 (UTC)

Jeopardy

Should this article mention the time on Jeopardy that a CMU student wagered $1337? --NeuronExMachina 02:17, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

Heh, awesome. I would think so, probably in the "Social considerations" section :) Apocryphite 20:32, 3 April 2006 (UTC)

Move/redirect

Either redirect from 1337 or move to 1337 with a redirect in place. What do you think? Poorsod 11:39, 12 November 2005 (UTC)

You know 1337 was a year, right? I think it takes precedence.--Alhutch 08:02, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
Plus, there's already a disambig in place at the top of the year 1337 page that leads people to this article if they want.--Alhutch 21:06, 30 November 2005 (UTC)

typing non-latin languages leet-like language

some languages use number combined with special characters in addition to charachters to provide readable non-latin languages, for example, in arabic 9aba7 instead of the similar prounciation " sabah " or " ba6i7' " instead of the similar prounciation "batikh" which are the words صباح and بطيخ respectivily. it is usually used to represent sounds that dont map correctly to the sounds of english: 2(a') 3{A'a) 6(Tta) 6'(Th'a) 5(Kh'a) 9(Ssa) 9'(Dha) 3'(Gha') 7 (H-ha) $ (Sh'a) are examples, what article matches that? (Unattributed comment)

I suggest that you go ahead and add a section on Arabic under the heading "leet in other languages", next to the subsections on Japanese, Cyrillic and Greek practices. --Slashme 07:32, 13 December 2005 (UTC)

Cryptography

Recently the label of cryptography as a setting for 1337 was removed. I replaced it along with a comment instructing anyone wishing to change it to see this page first. The reason for that is that it does appear to qualify under the current definition, as layed out in Cryptography. Cryptography does not require any form of Encryption. It is simply a method of either authentication information, or limiting the number of people able to interpret the message. 1337 does just that.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 16:59, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

You're missing something here. Leet is used for fun (mostly). Now imagine that someone starts writing lojbanic (for example) - also just for amusement. Under your interpretation this would also qualify as cryptography (not many people speak lojbanic), but is it really? I guess the actual question is whether Leet is a constructed language. I wouldn't say it is - in which case the cryptography-argument would be valid - some people think different though. --Misza13 (Talk) 18:51, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
Leet is used by spammers as a constructed language to fool spam filters (as per article) AzaToth 18:58, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
Yeah, thats what I'm going at with this. In this article, it states that leet was essentially direived from the English language for the purpose of bypassing filters and for being able to talk essentially in front of someone without them knowing what it means.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 19:21, 16 December 2005 (UTC)

Wikipedia in Leet?

I've been thinking... if Leet is a constructed language, then why shouldn't we have a Leet Wikipedia? (1337 \/\/ | |< | P 3 |> | 4) After all, major websites like Google already have a leet translation. Uncyclopedia, a website inspired on Wikipedia, has articles on leet as well. What do you think? Who joins me? |-|4|1 j00! Ruela 01:26, 27 Dec 2005 (UTC)

It's not a spoken language. It's like latin--though many people can speak it, it's not used, for practical purposes. Second of all, there is no regulated spelling of leet words, so there wouldn't be an easy way to regulate it. In my opinion, a leet wikipedia would just be difficult to regulate and messy. authraw 04:29, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
Well, we *do* have a Latin wikipedia. However, Wikimedia is less accepting of constructed languages in general. It might link to a l33t-language Wikipedia if you hosted it independently. -Tim Rhymeless (Er...let's shimmy) 04:41, 27 December 2005 (UTC)
Ok, maybe it's not a good idea... but if anyone has any interest in a Leet Wikipedia, contact me. Like Tim said, it could be hosted independently (Wikicities already hosts a Tokipona Wikipedia, which was locked as a regular Wikipedia). There has been a request for a Pig Latin Wikicity, but it was denied because it should be at Conlang Wikipedia, so probably a Leet Wikipedia should apply there. Happy new year everyone! Ruela 14:44, 28 Dec 2005 (UTC)
The main point, I think, is that leet isn't a language at all. Not even a constructed one (like Esperanto, for which we do have a Wikiepedia) or a mainly written one (like Latin, for which we also have a Wikipedia). It's simply written English, with some fairly rule-based orthographic changes applied. Same goes for Pig Latin, and I suspect this, too, is why it was denied: It's not a language at all. We already have Wikipedias for the conlangs Esperanto and Klingon, so there's no precedent for denial on that basis alone. It's even less of an argument in this case (as well as Pig Latin, which seems to be good for comparison), since neither Leet nor Pig Latin are really constructed per se. EldKatt (Talk) 14:02, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
Another bad reason for a leet Wikipedia is that there are many different forms, with the same characters being used for many letters (e.g 1 = I and L), and many characters being used for each letter, so leet can sometimes be difficult to read. - Ghelaetalkcontribs 14:26, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
And that's all the fun in it! Writing longish text in leet is a sort of an art. But the real question is: would the leet.wikipedia articles be created by pure "translation" (i.e. transliteration) or would we go all the leet way for sth like "Y0! 4|b3|2+ 31|\|57£!/V \/\/@5 d4 g33|<i3S+ 5c|3N+!5+ 0f d3M 4ll!!!!11!one!!!" (which is slightly POV)? Misza13 T C 13:36, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
I would join a leet wikipedia! 1'm 73h |337 m4573r. ILovEPlankton 20:13, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

It aint constructed, it's evolved (over 25 years old), thus natural. A contructed language is when a bunch of people get together and plan it out. 1337 just kind ov happened. I would personally lean towards calling it a dialect (mutual intellegibility, genetic closeness, non-native speakers etc). Also, the fact it aint spoken (or mostly written) is neither here nor there. There's quite a long list of purely literary languages, most of which have higher prestige than their spoken varieties. I wouldn't be bothered by inconsistencies in spelling, this is typical in most young languages. You should try reading pre 17th century English. It also exibhits some unique grammatical constructions not found in standard englishes. So it has a distinct grammar, and spelling. It is at least as good as most pidjins, and there are pidjin newspapers and bibles. It is perfectly plausible to write a wikipedia in 1337. I've read quite long articles written in 1337. Sh17 sum1 shood put thiz al in tha w1k1!! (Talk) 14:02, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Another origin of the term 'elite'.

I suspect that another contributing source for the term 'elite' in this context will have come from the Elite series of computer games.

There is a wikipedia article covering the series here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Elite_%28computer_game%29

Elite is perhaps not as well known now but was one of the best selling and most highly respected games of the 8 bit home computer era.

The scoring system of Elite assigned the player a rank. The starting rank was 'harmless'. After the first couple of succesful kills, the player received a rating of 'mostly harmless' (HHGTTG refs). The final player rank was Elite.

It is quite common that a phrase can have more than one source. For example, the phrase 'saved by the bell' is a boxing expression but also has an earlier origin connected with the practice of burrying people with a bell. The bell was included so that a person who had been inadvertantly burried alive could signal for help.

Be careful of such folk-etymologies. Check this out

--Slashme 10:15, 29 December 2005 (UTC)

I recall seeing the term "elite" before seeing the game Elite. It was generally used to describe BBSes where you could download warez or talk about hacking and phreaking... or on general purpose BBSes, there would be hidden elite message boards. I seriously doubt the Elite games are the origin of the term. Murple 20:33, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

Pardon me very much but this is a) Original Research, and b) crap. "Popularly considered to stem from"? I am very sure that the term 'elite' was not invented by a computer game studio, as am I pretty certain that the "true" form of 1337, 5(_)(|-| 45 7|-|15, was employed by hackers in order to prevent detection by spiders, Echelon andsoforth by obscuring the text. Apocryphite 20:17, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
Addition; I actually think the "Sociological Considerations" section has a better grasp on it. This means inconsistency in the article.

The ZIP Code 31337

What town has the zip code of 31337? Based on the numbering, it's somewhere on the East Coast. Have tech companies settled there to slowly grow it into "The Silicon Valley of the East" due to its ZIP Code's meaning? --Shultz 05:16, 5 January 2006 (UTC)

According to US Postal Service: The ZIP Code you entered could not be found in our database. --Misza13 (Talk) 18:47, 15 January 2006 (UTC)

'Spelt' vs 'Spelled'?

Isn't 'spelt' a British term? Seeing as the rest of this article is written using the American spellings of various words, shouldn't we be using 'spelled'? authraw 01:43, 7 January 2006 (UTC)

Infobox

Leetspeak
13375p34k
Created byOrigins from hackers on Bulletin board systems
Date1980
Setting and usageInternet, Cryptography
Purpose
SourcesEnglish
Language codes
ISO 639-3

I removed the infobox becuase it's plainly silly to think of this as a language unto itself. I see it was removed once (see above) but was reinserted at some point without discussion. -- Netoholic @ 22:41, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

(italics are message copied from talk pages)
Whoa, there. That's unilateral. Could you maybe try to gain consensus before acting like that? It's a significant change to the article. And you said "see talk", but left no comment. You can probably tell from the talk page therein that there are several people actively watching that page. Avriette 22:43, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

First of all, don't use the word "unilateral" -- This is a wiki, get over it. Besides, I did post on the talk page, and the language box has been removed before. At some point, it was reinsered "unilaterally". -- Netoholic @ 22:44, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
By that logic I could blank the page, "unilaterally", and tell you to just "get over it." What harm was it doing to the page? For that matter, what information was it contributing which was not worthwhile to the article? Avriette 22:47, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
Blanking a page is vandalism, making a good faith change to an article is not. What harm was it doing? When I saw it, I was immediately struck by a sense that Wikipedia was it was a joke. Discrediting Wikipedia is a bad thing to do for teh funny. Please follow-up on the talk page. -- Netoholic @ 22:50, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
I disagree strongly with your removal. I don't think it harms anything by being there. I might change the 'nativename' parameter. However, I don't feel that it is a "joke," as you contest. Certainly the entire purpose of the dialect may be taken as a joke. As it has been in use for twenty years or more, evolving, I think it rather deserves to be recognized as such. I am initially inclined to point out Singlish and Hawaiian Pidgin -- neither of which use an infobox -- as examples of languages which do have recognition ("official" or otherwise) in the wikipedia. It seems to me that there is some bias against it on your part here. While you may feel that it appears to be a joke, I contend that it is precisely because of your lack of experience or immersion in the communities which use the dialect. Note also, within the article that several other languages have included elements of it, making this a polyglot as well. I take umbrage at your categorization of the article as a joke, and your actions to deprecate it here.
As for unilateral, consider the argument "I am right, and if you disagree with me, you are wrong." Your actions were indeed unilateral. As an example of constructive, healthy interaction on the wikipedia, I would point out nuclear bunker buster where the main people actually working on the article discussed merging it with another. The resultant modification was substantial, and thus it is courteous to attain a quorum.
These are presently trying times, where many people have unilaterally taken actions -- that is to say, have acted rashly without the input of other users -- and caused great tumult and rifts in the community. I encourage you to revert your change until some of the other authors of the article can discuss it. Now is not the time to be taking actions such as you have, and claim to support on your user page. Avriette 23:01, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
Netoholic's Law: As a wiki discussion grows longer, the probability of an accusation by one user of another acting unilaterally approaches one. Look, I've made thousands of "unilateral" edits, so probably have you. It's a wiki. Get over it.
Stop talking about my action, and please describe any justification for having this the box. Leet is not a language, it is slang based on English, like Jive. I'm sure someone added it thinking it was teh funny, but Wikipedia's credibility is more important. -- Netoholic @ 23:16, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

I am aware of what your user page says. As I said above, I disagree with it. And, you acted to change the article in a way that could best be categorized as a style change, with reasoning that was shoddy. A justification for the infobox was provided. This is a dialect, and a polyglot, with well established acceptance in the internet community as a whole, as well as within at least three other languages. If you don't feel that is sufficient "justification," why don't you propose something that would be more appropriate for the article? Or do you disagree with the notion of it being a dialect or polyglot? Avriette 23:27, 14 January 2006 (UTC)

The description of this as a polyglot or dialect gives it far too much credit. It is slang. Even if it were dialect or polyglot, that infobox is not designed for, or used, on those articles. -- Netoholic @ 04:39, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
And you determine where templates are used? I disagree that "too much credit" is given. I think that polyglots and dialects should be given templates. However, I'm not going to unilaterally go through the encyclopedia finding all of them and adding an infobox. Please define what "sufficient justification" is. Also, please suggest something more appropriate so we can come to some agreement here. Note that I have not reverted the article, as I assume you edited in good faith. I am trying to reach an agreement here. Avriette 04:42, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
In short, Template:Language is for languages, not dialects. -- Netoholic @ 04:52, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
Because there is such a difficulty to separate dialects and languages there was consensus to use the same infobox for both. AzaToth 19:18, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
That is just not true, particularly for any dialects of the English language. -- Netoholic @ 20:28, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
I was pointing on those that are difficult to define (for example Jamtska), leet is not a dialect of the english language. AzaToth 20:54, 16 January 2006 (UTC)
Neither SIL nor Ethnologue have any documentation on leet. That's because it is not considered anything but a slang, like Cockney is. -- Netoholic @ 05:29, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition defines a language as "Communication of thoughts and feelings through a system of arbitrary signals, such as voice sounds, gestures, or written symbols." and "Such a system as used by a nation, people, or other distinct community; often contrasted with dialect."
Leet fits both the definition and its subset very well. Most other generically accepted dictionaries support this, as does the Wikipedia Language page. Leet fits these definitions very well. It may be a cryptographic language, and be used much as slang, but in and of itself it is a language.
Just because the powers and authorities that be do not choose to officially recognize it as such does not mean it isn't. They certainly haven't denied that it is one either I might add. I dont need someone of authority to officially recognize me as a human being to know that I am. I certainly fit the definition, and do not contradict it in any way, so I am definitely human.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 08:42, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
On a side note, if constructed languages like Esperanto, Lojban, and even Klingon get their own status as a language, complete with box, why is the standard not the same here?--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 08:48, 17 January 2006 (UTC)

Wikipedia is not about what you or I think. It is about what can be verified. If two of the most recognized language bodies (SIL, Ethnologue) do not recognize leet as either a language, dialog, or a slang, that is what we must accept. Until someone, ANYONE, can cite prominent language authorities which give leet a language status, that infobox is inappropriate, inaccurate, and against policy. -- Netoholic @ 18:29, 17 January 2006 (UTC)

Which policy would that be? Further, where would you propose finding an original source on the subject? Given it is a relatively new phenomenon, I'm not sure that there would be that many original sources on the subject. Additionally, as we are talking about a dialect/polyglot/pidgin/creole which is not actually spoken, the chance of finding somebody who happens to be a linguist, frequents "gamer" communities (or frequented BBS's, etc) and who gets a book published is slim. I could do a little looking to see if an original source is available. However, what you will find is confirmation from all over the place (the Microsoft link, above, should be valid for that purpose) that it is in use. Wide use.
I think also, the point above about it being used "only for comedic value" is somewhat correct, in conjunction with the later comment that it is "like latin" in that many people can speak it, but it is of rather esoteric value. So that having been said, I have the following answers to your request for sources:
  • Finding a source to verify its status as a language/etc would be difficult due to the dynamic and young nature thereof.
  • Finding a source would also be difficult because the dialect is not spoken, and as such, finding sources in systems which are spoken-language-derived would be difficult. (example: searching for Chinese text in the Library of Congress card catalogue)
  • The verifiability of the dialect meeting the constraints required for a polyglot, pidgin, creole, dialect, or even perhaps language is easy to attain. The definitions are well understood.
  • No attempt has been made to find somebody local to the wikipedia who can evaluate the status from an "expert" standpoint. I would suggest that there are people from UH Manoa and other UH branches who are editing the Hawaiian Pidgin article, and do claim to possess expert knowledge of the distinction between all the following terms:
  • Dialect
  • Creole
  • Pidgin
  • Slang
  • Language
  • Polyglot
  • The same requirement, that other dialects "prove their worth" to you has not been extended to other articles which may have difficulty finding original sources (Greeklish, Singlish).
  • No attempt has been made whatsoever to seek outside input on this article outside of the people who may be watching the article casually.
  • The article has been through the FA process and as such was extensively reviewed by internal users, and did not receive a "factuality dispute" at the time.
  • Having the infobox does not hurt the article, nor the encyclopedia.
  • Having the infobox does hot hurt the infobox itself.
  • Having the infobox does not hurt any users of the encyclopedia, including its readers.
  • These sorts of dialects/etc tend to create a polarization between those who "speak" it and those who do not. The fact that people do not like it does not diminish its validity. A language is defined by its having speakers, not by the acceptance of the language.
  • In addition to Greeklish, this dialect/etc may be one of the first dynamically changing, solely electronic media-transferred of its type. As such special consideration may need to be taken due to the ethereal nature thereof.
  • WP:OWN
  • WP:5P:4,5
Food for thought. Avriette 21:13, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
There are a lot of misconceptions above, so I'll be short. "I'm not sure that there would be that many original sources on the subject", "Finding a source would also be difficult" - thanks for agreeing with my point - per WP:V, we cannot state what can't be verified. "article has been through the FA process" - when the article became featured back in 2004, it made no assertion that Leet was a language and certainly did not include any infobox. The infobox hurts our credibility because any real language experts would look at it and immediately be struck by its inappropriateness. "WP:OWN", let's see, I don't think I've ever edited this article before. On the other hand, User:Azatoth was the one that added it just recently... and the one that's been edit warring over it's removal. I'm still waiting for anyone to WP:CITE a legitimate source that says this anything close to it's own "language". I think we need to grow up. -- Netoholic @ 21:46, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
  • Since the contents of the infobox match the content of the article itself, the alleged lack of verifiability is hardly an issue with the box. Its exact age of origin may be unknown, but l33t is obviously a conlang based on English, so at least parts of the infobox are correct. Radiant_>|< 22:02, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
    • Be careful with the word "obviously". A constructed language (conlang) is "is a language whose phonology, grammar and vocabulary are specifically devised by an individual or small group, rather than having naturally evolved as part of a culture as with natural languages". Nobody sat down and specifically devised Leet, so whatever it is, it isn't a conlang. It is just a slang that evolved over time. -- Netoholic @ 22:43, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
      • "Constructed languages are often divided into (...) a posteriori languages, where the grammar and vocabulary are derived from one or more natural languages." So whether or not it is a conlang is in fact debatable. I would have no objection to the article stating that some people consider it a conlang but others disagree. Radiant_>|< 23:04, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
        • Find good, verifiable external sources which describe it as a constructed language. Put up, or shut up. -- Netoholic @ 23:41, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
It seems to me that leet is a cipher (though not a well-defined one) more than anything else. Definitely not a language. --Pagrashtak 23:10, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
  • Interesting point. However, according to our article, "A cipher is an algorithm for performing encryption — a series of well-defined steps that can be followed as a procedure". And note that l33t has some linguistic (or pseudo-linguistic) grammatical constructs different from English. I think the main point is that it's hard to narrow down what exactly l33tspeak is (even if a language is "a system of symbols ... and the rules by which they are manipulated" which does seem to apply). Hence my earlier suggestion to state that some people consider it a language/conlang/cipher and others disagree. Radiant_>|< 23:21, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
Well, the "grammatical constructs" themselves are little more than a cipher applied at the word level. --Pagrashtak 01:14, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

I am entirely tired of the bickering going on here. Netoholic, you addressed very few points, and you have been ... less than accomodating to opposing viewpoints. I am going to try to rewrite the article to make it a little more general, and to reflect the culture a bit. For what it is worth, I feel that you are almost being ethnocentric here. You would be ethnocentric if there were some ethnicity herein. Lastly, telling anyone to "shut up" is childish and doesn't belong in this conversation. You could simply have linked off to WP:V and explained why. Instead, you're throwing a tantrum because you aren't getting your way. Please stop. I am on business travel this week, so I might not have time to get it done soon, but I'd like to ask others to refrain from drastically changing the article (that includes fiddling with the infobox or definitions in the article) until I have a stab at "fixing" it. I agree that it has gotten off track somewhat. I would hope that, with this olive branch extended, you come to your senses and attempt to cooperate. There's no place for polarization or derision here. Avriette 01:29, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

As someone who has bothered to earn a degree in linguistics, I'll put in my two cents: "constructed language" falls far wide of the mark. I would be very surprised if any reliable source refers to this as a constructed language. Constructed languages are planned and created deliberately and expressly. I tend to agree with Cecil Adams that it is on a par with Pig Latin—in other words, a language game (also referred to as speech disguise or secret language). --Tabor 02:42, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

So just to get right, the ones I listed are "constructed languages" do to the fact that their creation was created to achieve a specific goal? ((i.e. Esperanto created to be a universal second language, "Klingon" created to have an (arguably) more identifiable fictional race))--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 20:19, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
The distinction, I think, is that constructed languages are devised and planned by a specific, identifiable individual or group with the express intent of creating a language. (The intended purpose of the language itself is irrelevant.) Constructed languages are not something that arise organically from a community or subculture in a diffuse way, as seems to be the case for something like "Leet".
I think the infobox itself tends to point out what a poor fit "Leet" is. The only field in the infobox that has an suitable entry is "Setting and usage". The rest seem to be about fitting a square peg into a round hole. --Tabor 20:25, 19 January 2006 (UTC)

Considering that leet is not immediately comprehendable or recognizable by native English-speakers, is unspeakable despite being fully formed in ink, has a level of complexity high enough to confound pretty much any and all translators both to and from the language, and requires immersion and practice before mastery of it can be observed, it can be safely said that leet is a fully seperate language from English. Seriously, if you think leet is not a language, which pages loses the box next? Klingon? - CorbinSimpson 07:41, 26 January 2006 (UTC)

Oh, and I spaced on this, too. Keep in mind who first used leet. The first steps made in creating leet were by hackers on BBS systems who wanted sysadmins to not be able to filter their emails. Through a community process we know today as consensus, hackers slowly formulated standardized rules for leet, and certain standards were dropped. They didn't construct leet intentionally, but it just so happened that the easiest way to facilitate communication was to really branch off into a new language. Just because there's no official standards for leet does not make it less of a language. Leet today has dialects. You might not notice it unless you visit a lot of different places, but for me, I have to understand leet on StarCraft when I'm playing with crazy Koreans (they don't speak English, I don't speak Korean, we talk to each other in leet); I have to understand a different, toned-down kind of leet when I'm on Counter-Strike playing with 12-year-old maphacking kiddies. I can say with experience that leet is a language. If it's not constructed, then use your linguistics degree and tell me what kind of language it is. - CorbinSimpson 07:51, 26 January 2006 (UTC)

And yet one more point I get to make, because for some reason discussion on this thread seems to have stopped. Leet cannot possibly be a cipher because there are no deterministic patterns; that is, a translation from English (or any other language) into leet is not one-to-one. For example, "I won this round, hahaha." could be "ha! C7z pwn 7322021575! w00t!" on Counter-Strike, or "omg, i pwned joo w/rush keke" on Starcraft (that example would probably be US East; US West tends to have heavy character obfuscation). Also, translations back are not one-to-one. - CorbinSimpson 17:36, 29 January 2006 (UTC)

LEET certainly deserves to be considered a langauage as it posseses an alphabet, rules of pronunciation and words unique to it while still being used by a relatively large culture. Symmetric Chaos 15:24, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

origins

thats the trouble with the internet generation, you think the world started in 1984............

The first use of forms of 1337 were in car registration number plates, (two decades before the Internet), or as they are correctly called in the UK, VIN plates, whereby people would spell names and words using the limited character format, e.g, 'Fionas' being rendered as F10NAS , or 'Jason' as J4SON. Whereas the number plate format in the US was more flexible and made it easier to do this sort of personalising, the UK strict number plate format meant the english had to be more inventive. This practice was not exactly widespread, but certainly common anough by the 1970's such that the registration COM1C was auctioned for a considerable sum to a famous TV stand up comic. When the internet and texting arose one and two decades later respectively, the same method of transliteration was used to save keystrokes and provide some measure of one upmanship to the uninitated.

  • I suppose this is comparable to elementary school kids typing 58008 on calculators, turning them upside down, and giggling about it saying "boobs"... However, Leet is more than just replacing letters with numbers. Murple 20:38, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

By the way, i disagree with the poster above. 1337 is an evovling language. All new languages start as an offsring to something else, look at Afrikaans. The fascinating thing here is that languages usually take more than 100 years to evolve, whereas 1337 is evolving globally at an accellerated rate due to global input from every english speaking nation.

if you went back 400 years int he UK, its unlikely you woudl be able to understand 50% of what people said. Within 20 year 1337 will be the same - and within 50 years it will be an entirely separate Net language that you will need to learn to penetrate the darker recesses of the Internet.. You watch and see ..........

It isn't just English speakers. There are forms in other languages, with cross polination. The english 1337 has had significant input from non native speakers since at least the 80s. The computing community has been global since forever. Go watch some 80s euro demos. You'll see what I mean.

References

If I recall, this article used to have a reference section. First of all, where did it go? But perhaps more importantly, it needs one now. I propose a mini-wiki-project of sorts to collect several references in the next day or two so that this article may keep its featured article status (as that is the only worthwhile concern). Keep in mind that in order to be truly effective, references need not only to be placed but to assert statements (preferably via footnote) above. I get off of work approx 9 hours after this post, (UTC math confuses me) so I will get to work on it personally as of them. In any case, any help is appreciated and critical.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 20:14, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

I sympathize with the difficulty of finding references for a topic such as this. However, I think the verbumvanum and goshen references belong (at best) in the External Links section; they do not meet WP:RS criteria for several reasons, including:
  • They appear to be unpublished, unreviewed student papers
  • They themselves cite Wikipedia as a source
--Tabor 23:16, 19 January 2006 (UTC)

Comments on Academia

I find the comments on academia particularly offensive, specifically: Another view is that obsessive attention to grammar, vocabulary, and spelling is increasingly outmoded on the current medium (the Internet) or the current period (of increasing internationalism). Underemployed academics - a group that is well known for fastidious attention to spelling - may constitute a large portion of the group that assesses themselves as highly Internet-savvy, and (conversely) leet users somehow less-savvy. While the academy, (the prime locus of the aforementioned group) may serve as a conservatory for Standard English, live languages are known to evolve (sometimes rapidly).

Additionally, stating that use of leet is indicative of level of Internet mastery may represent a thinly-veiled nationalist or ethnocentric urge (cf. the English-Only movement; the Ebonics Controversy). -- CCJ

Er, which comments about academia? Avriette 02:27, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
(after quick glance at history, etc) Oh. Hi. Welcome to Wikipedia. I've removed the npov tag, as I don't think it's appropriate. Please also note that above, I have mentioned that I plan to reword this article substantially. I don't expect that it will seem overly pov after I am done with it. However, as it is large (56k!), it will take me a while. Do you have specific suggestions for how you would reword the above? Avriette 02:35, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

is this really a constructed language? or a language at all?

I'm curious about the inclusion of a language box. How is leet a language? If anything, it's a creative orthography for the english language. And I don't agree it's constructed - it seems to have arrisen perfectly naturally among online communities, not in a planned fashion by one individual as most constructed languages are. So what's with the language box? --Krsont 20:04, 24 January 2006 (UTC)

Um, if you'd read the rest of the talk page, you'd see that there has been an ongoing discussion about this, for some time. Avriette 03:40, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
I did read it, but I still wanted to voice my annoyance seperately. --Krsont 12:41, 25 January 2006 (UTC)
For what reason? It would be far more productive to do so in the other line of discussion. It is most definitely recent enough. Posting it seperately serves no purpose.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 16:13, 26 January 2006 (UTC)

Archive box

Is it just me, or do other users find that the archive template at the top of this page clashes with the featured article template? Setokaiba 20:19, 24 January 2006 (UTC)

Not just you. I moved things around and it should hopefully look better now. --GraemeL (talk) 20:41, 24 January 2006 (UTC)
Thanks; it looks much better now. Setokaiba 20:45, 24 January 2006 (UTC)

Updated content

I am aware that people may object to the {{English dialects by continent}} template inclusion. I myself find it to be an imperfect solution. However, I do believe it is better than the language infobox. I would like to add Leet to the english dialects template. The reasoning for this is that other dialects, such as Spanglish, are there already. Leet fits there about as well as it's going to fit anywhere else.

I would also like people to proofread this. I have done my best to neutralize the tone. I have removed 19k of content either outright, or to separate articles (I realize this is a popular article to edit, and it will probably take several people "watching" it to make sure it doesn't sprawl again). I have also added sources (which were hard to find), as well as include terms which are new to the article, and pertinent to the subject.

I have a couple concerns. First, the "transliteration" table for English is large, and difficult to read. The data therein is necessary. I'm not sure how to clean it up. Perhaps a vertical display would be better than horizontal. Also, in the actual text of the article, it's nigh impossible to read because of its horizontal orientation. The other thing that concerns me is the cyrillic transliteration table. That table exists in the article linked from that section. I think we might be able to get away without having it at all. That would also cut down on the size of the article (I'd love to see us make the < 32k size).

Lastly, I've removed all the images. None of them were especially relevant. None of them provided additional depth to the article. I'm not sure what would add depth, although I'd like to see an image added to this article.

Anyways, I worked pretty hard on this to try to get it to a point where we could all agree that it was neutral, that it was verifiable, and that it was a lot cleaner than where it started. I welcome comments here or on my talk page.

Avriette 00:52, 30 January 2006 (UTC)

This is not bad. I would vehemently argue that it is indeed a full language, but I'm sure that someone with a degree could easily reclassify it. Oh well, eh? But, seriously, nice job. It looks nice. {{English dialects by continent}} should have leet listed in it if that's the template we're keeping, right? - CorbinSimpson 02:03, 30 January 2006 (UTC)

Thanks a lot. I spent something like five hours on it, and my wife kept asking me why. :) Anyways, the reason I am not necessarily in favor of adding it to {{English dialects by continent}} is that I don't think it's 100% english. See related parts regarding chinese, greek, cyrillic, etc. I think it's a dialect, but it may be the first... language parasite defined as such. Also, it may be the first recursive dialect. See where this is going? I think it could be an english dialect, but it would do an injustice to the ... dialect (or whatever it is) as a whole. That having been said, I don't think anyone who has yet commented on this discussion has the expertise to decide either way. As such, it remains original research (if it weren't, I would have changed the english dialect template myself). Thanks again for your recognition. :) Avriette 03:15, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
Leet to me (not a language scholar here or anything) seems to be a universal interpretational dialect, or at least one native to the entire latin alphabet. However, the coining of that phrase would be entirely against WP:NOR, so what I say means nothing! fwah!--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 06:31, 30 January 2006 (UTC)

Leet has no classification, by any established bodies, as a language or dialect. As such, neither template should be used. We should not obsess over that point any longer - just be rid of them.
The section "Problems classifying Leet as a language" reads terribly like the article is apologizing for not being able to define it as a language. I think the qhole section needs to go, but if you want to keep it, re-title that section "Classification" (neutral) and start by specifically stating that "Leet has no classification, by any established bodies, as a language or dialect" and start from scratch citing sources as you go. It's obvious that the section violates WP:NOR by presenting possible reasons that it's not classified a language. Instead, use clear referential phrases like "According to so-and-so..." -- Netoholic @ 07:19, 30 January 2006 (UTC)

I may start working on cleaning that up. I'm sure you understand that it is important to provide counter-views to an article. I figured that was the clearest way of doing so. I'll have less time this week to work on it, but I may get to it. Avriette 15:42, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
Maybe the best way to think about defining leet is in terms of what it isn't, rather than what it is. Leet definitely isn't synonymous with the English language - the average speaker of English would have difficulty reading it, and even if they learned all of the characters used, there are idioms and grammatical constructions which aren't identical or even similar to English. However, so much of Leet is based on English that it wouldn't be fair to call it a distinct language unto itself. Most linguists base their definitions of what a "dialect" is on the region in which it is spoken, and Leet is definitely not regional. Whether this means that Leet can't be classified as a dialect, or whether it means that the definitions of "dialect" need to be expanded, is a matter for debate by linguists, and while the difficulty with classification really ought to be mentioned, I think the very fact that nobody can seem to agree on what exactly Leet is means that we shouldn't try to come down on one side or another. I'm generally opposed to placing it on the English Dialects page, or any other linguistic-type page, until it is classified officially one way or another, simply because it's entirely possible that new classifications will need to be created for languages like Leet. The Disco King 15:38, 20 February 2006 (UTC)

Infobox: english dialects (again)

I have replaced the english dialects box, and gone as far as to be bold and add leet to it. I feel that this is an awkward placement. However, I do feel that this article needs the box, as it shares much in common with those similarly listed. I would also ask that before people change it back, that they discuss this with others. This article has had something of a contentious recent history, and I'd prefer to smooth things out rather than exacerbate them further. I also do not feel that it harms either this article, or the infobox (or those linked off the infobox) to have this article included. If you wish to remove it, as I asked, please discuss here, and indicate why it is necessary to remove it (to a greater extent than it is necessary to include it). Additionally, I know that some of us feel that "it's a wiki, get over it," but there are quite a few people involved in this article. Acting unilaterally after requests not to do so is not acting in good faith. It is argumentative and divisive.

Please also note that I have tried repeatedly to get the other linguists on the project to comment on the article, and they have not. If people get upset about this, rather than attacking the article (which I think anyone would agree is going on), they might consider bringing the article up to a quality that they like, instead of complaining. Avriette 04:39, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

"Sharing in common"? No reliable sources have classified this a dialect. As such, Leet would never be appropriate to add to Template:English dialects by continent. As such, Template:English dialects by continent is not appropriate for this article either. -- Netoholic @ 06:16, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
I have been more than accomodating to your point of view in this circumstance. I have cited references, I have cleaned up and neutralized the article, and yet you continue to revert it. It is very hard to believe this is good faith. I will revert the removal of the dialects box for now. I request that you make some effort to have the article peer reviewed, and also find third party opinion on a proper classification. I have made every effort to do so, and I feel that your efforts at this point are only hurting the article. You have also not even attempted to discuss this with me, after I very clearly asked for quorum. Consensus is imperative, as you have been reminded elsewhere. I also find it discouraging that while I do not have time presently to make the changes we discussed making (and I did agree to make them), it is necessary to deal with this petty squabbling. I want nothing more than to make the article, you seem content with nothing less than eradicating it.
Lastly, sources are cited. If you feel that these sources are not enough, I suggest you find sources which are counter to specific points in the article. I feel I have come up with a substantial amount of supporting sources, despite the fact that we all agreed it would be very difficult to do so. Avriette 06:30, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
Your sources are ass. Blogs, personal webpages, and term papers which themselves cite Wikipedia as a source. Give me even one reputable language body that classifies this as anything more than slang. Just one. -- Netoholic @ 06:52, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
Ass?! I think you've lost the ability to edit this article in good faith, sir. I suggest you seek mediation on this. Avriette 07:02, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
While Neto's comment was somewhat uncivil, I think the point is valid. See WP:RS. I think we should keep in mind that a lack of readily available reliable sources is not really license to venture into original research. This is a great article. But I don't think Wikipedia should get hung up on ontological classification of leet—since the question is not addressed in reliable sources, the question should probably not be addressed here. Representing it as a controversy or unsettled question and presenting different interpretations per NPOV might be appropriate if there were some active scholarly debate on the topic, but I don't really see that as the case here. That Wikipedians are tossing ideas around does not seem reason to include it in the article. My opinion is: don't assign a classification and omit discussion of Leet's classification in the article. Don't write things we can't support. --Tabor 03:19, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
Agree completely. This article can be informative and interesting without bothering about the classification. -- Netoholic @ 20:49, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

markup at end of article

Neto, what is going on here? I removed the trailing "-->", and mentioned it in the edit log. However, you reverted its removal, saying that "sources need to be cited." I'm not sure that falls under the topic of "sources." It looks to me rather like an error in markup. Am I missing something? Avriette 06:37, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

Restructured transliteration table

I had an idea for restructuring the transliteration table like this, because I was confused by all those commas:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
4
/\
@
/-\
^
ä
ª
aye
8
6
13
|3
ß
P>
|:
!3
(3
/3
)3
[
¢
<
(
©
)
o|
[)
I>
|>
 ?
T)
.|
3
&
£
ë
[-

ê
|=-
=
ƒ
|#
i=
ph
/=
G
g
6
&
(_+
9
C-
gee
(γ,
#
/-/
[-]
]-[
)-(
(-)
 :-:
|~|
{=}
<~>
|-|
]~[
}{
]-[
 ?
}-{
1
 !
|
&
eye
3y3
ï
][
[]
j
_|
 ;
_/
</
(/
X
|<
|{
]{
}<
|(
1
£
7
1_
|
|_
#
l
M
m
//.
|v|
[V]
{V}
|\/|
/\/\
(u)
[]V[]
(V)
(\/)
/|\
Μ
М
м
//
^/
|\|
/\/
[\]
<\>
{\}
[]\[]
n
/V
0
()
?p
[]
*
ö
^
|*
|o

|^(o)
|>
|"
9
[]D

|7
q
(_,)
()_
0_
<|
2
P\
|?
/2
|^
lz
®
[z
12
Я
2
S
s
5
2
$
z
§
ehs
es
7
+
-|-
1
']['
(_)
|_|
v
ü
Ü
\/
\_/
\/\/
vv
'//
\^/
(n)
\V/
\//
\X/
\|/
\_|_/
\_:_/
Ш
><
Ж
}{
ecks
×
)(
Y
y
j
`/
Ý
ÿ
ý
Ŷ
ŷ
Ÿ
Ϋ
Υ
Ψ
φ
λ
Ұ
ұ
ў
ץ
צ
-)
Ч
2
z
~\_
~/_
 %

† Note the use of 7 for either L or T.

I wanted the benefit of more eyeballs before I committed the change to check I didn't obliaterate anything important. There's a couple of little outstanding issues:

  • I tried but failed to ensure that all the columns were of equal width.
  • What is that thing second from the bottom of the P column? It displays as a box in my browser; it seems to be some sort of unicode combiner but makes no sense if I add {{unicode}}.

HTH HAND —Phil | Talk 10:15, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

Phil, I think that's a great start. Do you suppose there's a way to make it even easier to read than that? Perhaps breaking it up into two tables? (stacked vertically) I like it more than the extant one, but it's still kind of tough to read. As well, it may be wider than some people's browser pane. I don't know what that would cause. Many of us have large resolution (in excess of 1024x768), but there are quite a few of us out there with 800x600 or even 640x480. Thoughts? Also, thanks so much for your hard work on this. Avriette 17:40, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

I don't understand why the upper- and lower-case versions of the letters being transliterated are repeated in the listing. "M" has multiple duplicates. -- Netoholic @ 18:53, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

I agree, that is odd. Avriette 19:13, 1 February 2006 (UTC)
They arent duplicates... they're unicode characters that look similar.  ALKIVAR 01:10, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
On my browser they look identical, but that's probably because I'm using Courier New. What would be the least obfuscatory method of indicating this? I'm wondering whether we could split the huge row into several chunks by "style of transliteration", dividing the "pictograms" (or whatever you call /\/\) and the "unicode doppelgangers" from each other, but that could make the table much "taller". Thoughts? —Phil | Talk 08:02, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

Much more legible, but do we really need ALL those letter variants listed? Murple 20:40, 9 February 2006 (UTC)

Removed box

I'm going to remove the box with 'leet english' in it. Reasons :-

From the article - It is also important to note that Leet itself is not solely based upon one language or character set. In fact, Greek, Russian, Chinese, and other languages have been subjected to the Leet "cipher" - if leet english is valid, then so is leet russian, leet chinese, leet navaho etc - every language in the world that is used online would presumably have a 'leet' dialect. Leet is simply a different way of writing the parent language. A dialect by definition has to be spoken. Even leets new words have been 'unleeted' back to standard phonetic words (e.g. haxxored). Leet is not a dialect, it's just a different way of writing the parent language, so I'm going to be bold and remove the box. 81.76.20.44 11:23, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

  • Ok having just seen the 'don't remove box without discussion' message, I won't remove it just yet. I'll wait for a while. - Minor point - having the box there causes a big white space in middle of the article, so there's an argument for removing it on aesthetic grounds anyway, regardless of it's merits as it makes the article look ugly and unprofessional. 81.76.20.44 11:26, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

smrt/samrt

FWIW, smrt and samrt mean "death" and "deathbed" in Serbo-Croatian language & family, and possibly in few other Slavic languages (Chech?). Althought the Simpson's episode is the more likely origin, I just thought I could mention it; strange enough, the previous paragraph describes the use of "death" in conjunction with "ist". In any case, the connection is c00|.

Googling a bit – Seoul Metropolitan Rapid Transit Corporation (metro operator) as the 2nd link for "smrt"?! ROTFML. Duja 12:56, 10 February 2006 (UTC)

pwn

I can't verify it, but I do believe that "pwned" first appeared in a release of warcraft 2. It came up with the message "Player1 was pwned by Player2" or something like that when someone died in a multiplayer match, and was indeed a misspelling during the creation of the game.

Someone seems to have added that "pwned" may have first appeared in a WoW typo. This is so laughable I'm removing it immediately, but I assume that it refers to the War/StarCraft theory, with a particular custom map having such a typo. That's mentioned in the pwn article, so I won't add it here as the article is long enough already. --Switch 15:46, 18 February 2006 (UTC)

Repeated Information

Section 3.1.1 and Section 3.1.5 seem to contain very similar information. Perhaps a merge is required. cBuckley 00:16, 18 February 2006 (UTC)

Too Long

The article is too long. I propose moving Leet#Leet_influence_on_other_languages_and_character_sets to Influence of leet on other languages. --ʀ6ʍɑʏ89 02:06, 25 February 2006 (UTC)

I agree with the size issue. However, I think it would be better to migrate the different vocabulary subsections into a seperate article.--Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 01:25, 4 March 2006 (UTC)

too long, too bloated, etc.

I will be chopping up and attempting (another) rewrite on the article. I agree it needs to be separated into a few articles. I am also adding several references (at least two have been added today). I will be reworking the references sections, and hopefully making this article less attractive to the various.. nubs who insist on editing it and adding all the garbage spoken at their particular high school. I'd welcome suggestions at this point. ... aa:talk 01:05, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

I've moved a lot of content out. It's still hefty at 45kb. However, it's more readable presently. Also, I've substantiated claims of it being a language. As it isn't standardized by any body, I have added it (as a dialect of english) to the english dialects template, and re-added that template. The "moved out" articles aren't in great shape. Somebody more familiar than I should expand them or merge them somewhere useful. ... aa:talk 04:44, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Your revision made this article into a POV dissertation on why you think it's a language. Phrases like "What is clear is that Leet is an evolving language" show that POV clearly. You also cannot say "Leet is a language" and "has not gained official status as a language recognized by any international body"... any n00b can call it a language, but that does not make it so. -- Netoholic @ 18:14, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

let's talk about sources and original research

Has anyone but me actually stopped to read the sources? Netoholic's "unreliable sources" in fact include one by a doctorate in language. Published in a journal of emerging technology. What could possibly be less impeachable than that?

Netoholic, I request that you list requirements for your satisfaction on this article. We can then discuss whether the requirements are reasonable, and go about meeting them. Although I might remind you that you do not own this article, the project, template namespace, nor the policies governing CITE and OR. ... aa:talk 21:14, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

In order for us to responsibly call Leet a language, we would need at least two notable language bodies which specifically describe Leet as a language, and make comparison between it and other such languages. What is not acceptable is for some random writer to, in passing, use the word "language". As far as I can see, no reputable body even defines Leet, let along even calling it slang, dialect, and certainly not language. -- Netoholic @ 23:48, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
It is specified in the article that "has not gained official status as a language recognized by any international body" AzaToth 23:51, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
And yet it calls itself a lanuage in Avriette's version. -- Netoholic @ 23:57, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
I referred to it as a language because there are at least two sources referring directly to it as a language, and it means the standards of an emerging language (hence my wording) in yet another source. I wish you'd take the time to read the sources. We're not talking about "blogs" here, we are talking about people with doctorates. ... aa:talk 00:03, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
I did read them... I removed one because it used Wikipedia (this article) as a primary source... talk about a conflict of interest. -- Netoholic @ 00:05, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
And the doctorate? What qualifies as a reliable source? Two doctorates on one article? Do you set criteria for what is reliable? ... aa:talk 00:14, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
The nature of supporting NPOV is that one sometimes needs to leave in references that they personally disagree with. Verifiability is the rule. There are some people, like you, that think leet is a language, and that should be mentioned in the article... but the overall quality of your sources is poor and the language argument is not a strong one, and it's more often called a slang, cipher, or rarely a dialect. Leet has no official status as anything, and so the article should primarily reflect that - AND NOT TAKE A STAND. Concentrate on the other content and this can be featured again. -- Netoholic @ 00:21, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

"It is imperative at this point that I at least mention LEET SPEAK. Adopted widely by the technological elite, this language was initially thought to have evolved when the Internet was adopted by technologically inferior beings who did not understand programming languages. But it has evolved over time and leet speak generators now exist on the WWW as a means of assisting the uninitiated in understanding the concepts being discussed by these digital nomads."

Any one of those would have added hundreds of new words to the language, together, they have created thousands. Some have already come and gone, others may stick around for the rest of our lives — reappearing on our grandchildren's tongues in some transformed, or even reversed, definition.

The world was being connected, and "Net shorthand" was quickly becoming the Internet's lingua franca.

I don't know why I am going to the trouble of justifying my efforts here. I have spent over sixteen hours rewriting this article to make it more neutral and to find sources. In fact, I have collaborated with others in finding sources. You are not my interrogator, deeming what is and is not worthy of the encyclopedia, of templates, nor of what distinction. I have more than met the burden of citations, and I am not conducting original research. I am compiling together many respected sources in one place. This article is little more than a description of the syntax, and a brief mention of the vocabulary of a language. I would personally have chosen "dialect" for it, but the sources say language. That wasn't my decision. It was the decision of many who are more educated in linguistics than both of us. Why do you fight so hard to demote this article? Neither of us owns it, and it has become so much better since I started fleshing it out. ... aa:talk 00:31, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

You aren't supposed to justify your efforts to me... you're supposed to justify them to the reader. I am positive that if you Google for "leet AND language", you'll find sources which use those words together in a sentence. That is not how to do proper research. Also, you need to consider this... that the absence of a thing is significant. No major language body recognizes Leet as anything. It's like if I wrote an article decribing Coca-Cola as a cure for cancer... you'd surely find that as a reference, but the established medical sources would have nothing to say. It would not suddenly be right to add that conjecture to the Coca-Cola article. Almost every source (even yours) agrees Leet is a slang and a cipher. A few conjecture that it may be a dialect, and none directly asserts it's a formal language in it's own right. Let's keep to the most accepted form (that it's a slang using ciphers) and ever so briefly mention that it's acceptance as a language has not been establish, though there are supporters. Get past that, and then let's get on to the actual informative part. -- Netoholic @ 21:56, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
I've done a very good job providing sources. And since we're not going to poll users, and you're the only one complaining here (aside from the move, of course, thanks), I have removed the dispute tags, and I will not continue to "justify" things to you. See the quote on WP:Vandalism:
and the reason for placing the dispute tag is because a suggested edit has failed to meet consensus
you, fortunately or not, do not comprise a consensus (or failure to meet such). I've done as much as I can with the article, and you've suggested no requirements for "fixing it" (as I have requested multiple times). So, you can rewrite the article, and we can discuss those changes (note that simply reverting my changes isn't exactly "writing" anything). ... aa:talk 22:06, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
On Wikipedia:Featured article removal candidates/Leet, several outside people supported my assertion that this contains the POV assertion that this is a "language". Several other editors in the move vote below agree. This is not a personal grudge.... just a badly written article. You say I've not suggested fixes, yet I did so in my comment just above. You're asking me to cite sources that Leet isn't a language (that Coke cures cancer), which I cannot do. You're delaying this pages development by making assertions not supported by reliable sources. -- Netoholic @ 04:20, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
There are four sources listed as supporting the claim that Leet is either a language unto itself or a dialect of English. The burden is on you to show why those sources should be ignored and your original research (specifically, your OR claiming Leet is not a language/dialect) should be given more weight. —Locke Coletc 04:34, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

What about this as another possible source? It's a linguistics undergraduate senior thesis. 15:32, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

the "sources"

Fine, let's look at those four sources. The first thing I'll note is that none of these sources is in print form - all were found on the web. Googling "leet AND language", three show up at the top, but all within the first 100 results. Googling "leet" alone, only the ABCnews (Malone) comes in the top 100 results. Googling est phun. -- Netoholic @ 05:05, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Kristof Van de Velde

  • Van de Velde, Kristof (2006). "Lexical tensions in 'internet english': 1337 as language?". Retrieved 29 January 2006. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

My main concern is that his first listed source is Wikipedia itself. That alone may disqualify him, especially where he makes statements that arent using footnote reference numbers. In particular, his first sentence refers to leet as an "internet language1... referencing Wikipedia. In his entire piece, he does not use the term "slang" or "dialect" at all, signifying that he's not addressing the classification issue in proper light. Several of his other sources are not in English originally, so I think his translation is what results in the over-use of the term "language". The conclusion section uses the term "Internet English", not leet, but even says "we can assert that 'internet English' does not exist as an independent variety of English". In short, even if we could use this as a reliable source, it would not favorably help the "leet is a language" crowd. -- Netoholic @ 05:05, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Sasha Dyck

Sasha's here written a term paper for her "Engl 310" class, and she's not a notable primary source. It should not be used in our articles Reference section. The only value of her paper is for what she uses as references (something we might consider checking out). She does not make the language assertion - her conclusion is summed up "I believe it can be considered the first non-verbal and wholly Internet-based dialect". If it came from a linguist, it might impress me, but it's just a student's paper. -- Netoholic @ 05:05, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Joanne Jacobs

Joanne is in the "Brisbane Graduate School of Business", and she's not a linguist and not a primary source worth using. She mentions leet once in this sentence - "It is imperative at this point that I at least mention LEET SPEAK. Adopted widely by the technological elite, this language was initially thought to have evolved when the Internet was adopted by technologically inferior beings who did not understand programming languages." This unfortunately does not give a footnote or other reference. My casual read on this is that she uses the term "language" only in passing, not as an assertion of significance. -- Netoholic @ 05:05, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Michael S Malone

A reliable news organization, and a notable columnist, but it's a commentary piece. He makes use of the term "language", in the first sentence - "Great technological innovations change the culture, and that in turn changes the language." This comment asserts nothing about the status of leet, and only mentions "changes" to the language... referring to English general. I think he means "changes" as in the way language naturally evolves... but he's clearly not asserting leet is a language unto itself, though later hs does say "What you'll discover is that a whole new language is being created before your eyes." This is a great reference for many reasons, but he's also not a linguist, and uses the term language in passing. I think this can be useful, but only to prove my assertion that some people think of it as a foreign language, because it looks so strange. It does not help in classifying this formally. -- Netoholic @ 05:12, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the debate was move. —Nightstallion (?) 10:33, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

Requested move

Leet (language) → Leet -- The page was moved by myself, believing there was a need for a disambiguation page at Leet rather than the article there with a notice pointing at leet (disambiguation). ... aa:talk 22:10, 10 March 2006 (UTC)


Add *Support or *Oppose followed by ~~~~
  • Support - move it back to the name it's been for a long time. It deserves the main title. Disambiguation is silly. -- Netoholic @ 23:39, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Opposeleet can refer equal both to the language (or what you today want to call it) and the culture. Thou leet (language) I think is optimal for this. AzaToth 00:12, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
    • Strictly speaking, leet is not a language in any way. It's slang, a cipher, or at best (with a very liberal definition) a dialect. Calling it a language is patently incorrect, and as far as I can see a discussion shouldn't even be necessary. I can see the need for the disambiguation you mention, though. How about "leetspeak"? Tacking on the false label "language" is about as wrong as a solution can get, though. EldKatt (Talk) 16:36, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • oppose. i find it insulting that this is being used in lieu of discussion rather than after discussion. ... aa:talk 00:13, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
    • This is not in lieu of discussion. WP:FAC and WP:AFD are two prime examples of well-accepted processes that use this format for discussion. Pagrashtak 01:18, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
      • I beg to differ. discussion does not have a "one sentence limit". This RM was brought about primarily because the user was unhappy with the content, not with the article's placement. I mean, have a look at the rest of this page. If you look at the history, I moved the page after a user added (another) dab link. I'm not opposed to the move, I'm opposed to it happening under the auspices of diverting conversation. Netoholic has used this technique elsewhere (although for purposes of not spreading the discussion, I won't include the links here). This is entirely disruptive. Note that we are now discussing something tangential to the article itself. Previously, Netoholic copped a {{farc}} to derail the discussion of the article. ... aa:talk 01:54, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
        • Where did you get "one sentence limit"? There's no such limit, look at what we're doing right now. If you're not opposed to the move, then why did you vote oppose? Pagrashtak 23:15, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
          • Up at the top of this section it says that we should post our vote followed by a one-sentence explanation. Nobody's really been sticking to the one-sentence thing, though. authraw 01:47, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
            • My apologies to aa, I see the "one sentence" reference in the history now. I'm glad someone removed it, that's a horrible suggestion. Pagrashtak 01:17, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support I believe that leet (1337) is by far the primary meaning of leet. As such, this article should reside at leet and leet (disambiguation) should be created. The discussion of leet's alleged status as a language is completely irrelevant to this page move. Pagrashtak 01:18, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Oppose per AzaToth. —Locke Coletc 01:23, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support I think that the "language" leet is the most common usage of leet by far. A leet (disambiguation) page should be made for any other meanings, and the "language" itself should be listed at leet. authraw 01:28, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support Strictly speaking, leet is not a language in any way. It's slang, a cipher, or at best (with a very liberal definition) a dialect. Calling it a language is patently incorrect, and as far as I can see a discussion shouldn't even be necessary. EldKatt (Talk) 16:36, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support. Looking at Leet (disambiguation), the "(language)" disambiguation not needed. David Kernow 17:09, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Strongly oppose. The entire idea behind disambiguation is to separate articles, and this article needed to be disambiguated (unless you prefer the giant morass of disambig that used to be this article's header); on top of that, this article is designed to explain the linguistics of leet, and not it's cultural status; we need to also remember that the layperson will look for leet at leet and then leet (language), not leet (creole), leet (pidgin), leet (slang), leet (cipher), or any other page...(You know what? I want to know why they set a one-sentence limit for comments. I also wonder if they count parenthetical asides as sentences when they are embedded. It really makes one wonder...)...so I suppose we should keep it here, unless someone has a better place to put it (and leet is not a better place!!!) - CorbinSimpson 19:16, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
    • Ordinarily, it would make sense. All discussion would be directed to the talk page. This is the talk page. This is therefore a discussion, and arbitrary limits on what you can say are silly. ... aa:talk 22:10, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
    • The layperson's predicted actions is not enough of a reason to warrant an incorrect title. The layperson might also look first at tidal wave when he means a tsunami, but since the former term is technically incorrect we have the article at the latter title. As should we here. This is also a non-issue since we could make Leet (language) a redirect. As for a better place to put it, how about leetspeak? It doesn't make any false claims, and it's a rather widely used term. EldKatt (Talk) 10:03, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support. It's standard to have the primary use of a term as the main page with a dab notice at the top. It's strange that this prior move was done without consensus, but now we have to have a whole discussion to move it back. --C S (Talk) 19:22, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
    • I didn't think that consensus was required to move it. People had placed disambiguation links at the top of the page, and it made sense to move the page. Since the history was preserved, I didn't see any harm in it at all. The title might have been contentious (see above discussion, again this is entirely to disrupt that discussion), but I felt that I had supported that (at Netoholic's request) with at least three sources, in the article. People here are not necessarily aware the huge controversy surrounding this article, which Netoholic is quite adeptly disrupting. ... aa:talk 22:15, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support. It's certainly the primary article right now - But if and when someone starts an article on the leet subculture it'll probably need to be disambiguated again. Ehheh 21:34, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Conditional support. It does seem that my move was in error. I don't see it being harmful where it is, but I can see how it would be logical to move it back (this does have to be undertaken by an admin to preserve the history). However, I do think it is inappropriate to move it until the discussions above have had a chance to run their course. The move, while relevant, is tangential and disruptive for the time being. There is no hurry to move it. The discussion is helpful. ... aa:talk 22:12, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support, don't reflexively disambiguate. the wub "?!" 00:39, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
  • Support per Pagrashtak. —Locke Coletc 00:51, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Discussion

The move of this article from Leet to Leet (language) is improper. Topics like Leet are clearly deserving of primary disambiguation because that word is vastly more commonly used to talk about the cipher. I'm guessing it was moved to (language) to promote the POV that it is a language, rather than simply a (slang) or (cipher). It should be moved back immediately. -- Netoholic @ 23:34, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

(from my talk page -- aa)

Your move was not in good faith.... stop trying to push on your POV by making that change... disambiguation is not needed, and at best, the article would go at (slang) or (cipher). -- Netoholic @ 23:33, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
Actually, it was. I moved it because I felt that two dab links at the top was pushing it. Both were valid dabs, and making a dab page is standard practice. I have cited two sources (one from a doctorate of language) classifying Leet as a language. Per your request, I might add. Let's take up this discussion on the talk page. ... aa:talk 23:35, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

(again from my talk page -- aa)

Neither of those links would appear as "Leet", since neither use that as the most common English name for that subject. See Wikipedia:Disambiguation.
I can understand that this may have been an emotional reaction to my criticism of your edit. You have a chance now to just say sorry, and let the page go back where it was... no harm, no foul. -- Netoholic @ 23:42, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
What is that, threats? The move was appropriate. You're reverting this page without discussing it in the least. I have cited sources which indicate it's a language. I disagree very strenuously with your behavior here. This doesn't call for a vote. It was moved, properly, with sources cited, and with due cause. You're also playing both sides of this argument. On the one hand, insisting that Leet is so notable as to have "primary disambiguation" and on the other that it is an "internet joke," and not notable. You have yet to reply, above, as to what requirements you have for this article. I have been more than forthcoming and accomodating here. It's time for you to compromise a little. ... aa:talk 23:48, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

(again, from my talk page -- aa)

I think the alleged sources which "indicate it's a language" would be in the interest of everyone in this discussion. I could dig them up myself, I guess, but I would appreciate if you cited them here as well. EldKatt (Talk) 16:40, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
It wasn't a threat, but a request. You're obsessing on this subject, and making some bad, emotional, judgements. You have a chance to rise above that and correct those bad decisions... before more people look at this and start thinking you're not playing nice. -- Netoholic @ 23:51, 8 March 2006 (UTC)
I am not going to discuss this with you until you calm down, realize that I am editing in good faith, and discuss this in a manner suited to editing. Please refrain from saying that I am "making bad decisions" or "obsessing". I am not. I am trying to improve the article. This has become quite difficult with your objections. ... aa:talk 23:54, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

I believe that leet (1337) is by far the primary meaning of leet. As such, this article should reside at leet and leet (disambiguation) should be created. The discussion of leet's alleged status as a language is completely irrelevant to this page move. Pagrashtak 00:03, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

You're right; will change to support (with a seperate dab page for the other meanings). —Locke Coletc 00:49, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

Rewrite section...

Alright, I think it is largely due to the lengthy, less than verifiable, generally un-encyclopedic set of word endings and terms, that this article has lost featured status. I don't think I can get it back, but I'm going to try. Later tonight (round 9:00 - 10:00 PST) I'm going to take some of the stuff on articles like pwn and move it to the appropriate articles. Sometimes I act w/o thinking however, So, to anyone who is watching this page, feel free to revert my edits and tell me what I did wrong on my talk page. Thanks all -- Dragoonmac - If there was a problem yo I'll solve it 01:48, 10 March 2006 (UTC)

Pmurray bigpond.com 04:10, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

Ok, I am a bad person, and fiddled with this article without reading the talk page first.

I moved the "vocabulary section" up a notch to make it a sibling to the stuff that discusses the lexicography (say ... maybe it should be called that), and added some stuff on its use as a cypher opaque to machines.

Obfuscated City

1|># j00 (@^ |23@|) +#1$, j00 @|2 |>|23@|<1^9 1337. |}v|}3. #@#@#@#@#@! 1'^^ jv$+ \x/|21+1^9 +#1$ |>#0|2 ^0 |23@$0^, 1+'$ jv$+ |>#1|.|.3|2. 13v+ $+11.1., 1+'$ @^^0'/1^9 +0 |>@1^$+@|<1^9l'/ |23@|) @ |>@|2@9|2@|># 0|># 1337 @^|) |)1$(0\/3|2 1+'$ jv$+ |>#1ll3|2. $0 +#3|23, 1|># joo jv$+ |23@|) +#1$, j00 |20><><0|2! 1|># j00 (0vl|)^'+ |23@|) 1+, |)0^'+ \x/0|2|2'/. 1'^^ @ |>|20|>#3$$10^@l! |>|2@(+1(3 ^^@|<3$ |>3|2|>#3(+! V^+1l ^3><+ +'/^^3, Flameviper12 13:36, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

4 |>|20|>#355!0|\|41??????????////// !5|\|'7 7#47 50|\/|30|\|3 \/\/#0 9375 |>4!|)? #0\/\/ |\/||_|(# |)0 7#3'/ |>4'/ ;00? (0|_|1|) 7#3'/ 3|\/||>10'/ |\/|3?  !|\/| 73# |20><0|22!!!!!!!!!!1111111oneoneoneeleventyone. 50rry, ju57 63!ng p3d@nt!c. Anyway, that's probably in itself a good argument against a leet Wikipedia - there may be some people who have no difficulty decifering your comment, but Standard English is a lot clearer. Besides, how would you define Brilliant prose in leet? Is that where one uses |23@||'/ 0|8|>|-||_|$(4+£|) 4|)\/@^(£|) 1337 (really obfuscated advanced leet) or where one makes one's writing @s b@5ic & e@5y 2 r34d @s p055ibl3???????////slashslashslash? 6:20 19 March 2006 (UTC)

Bad Wiki-Formatting

This was not a separate section, nor was it signed.
Nor was it even comprehensible, it's a giant run-on sentence.
But cut the guy some slack, maybe he only had 30 seconds or something.
Laugh all you want, but it actually happens sometimes. Flameviper12 00:04, 15 March 2006 (UTC)

The articles got a couple things wrong zor is Zoor and only noobs use that people imitate noobs by saying something like hey im awsome zoors i pwnt all you. also Newbie is someone new no disrespect intended newb is someone new that you dont really like noob is someone new who is annoying and doing something like begging for cash n00b is an insult it just means that your like a noob begging for cash but have no excuse cuase your not new. then theres also a few more abreviations such as roflolommo or rolling on floor laughing out lots of my major organs.

Wow... I've never seen anyone say roflolommo, but since they'd doubtless be lying, that's probably for the best. I've never encountered 'zor' and 'zoor', but I'd imagine 'zor' came first as it resembles the suffix used in leet words such as 'R0x0rz' and '5ux0rz', which isn't to say that couldn't become 'zoor' by corruption or alteration, so surely it's plausible that both might be used. Saying that the article is wrong is, I'm afraid, most probably incorrect, as leet is used differently by different people. Your usage may be in existance, but so is the article's. As for your strict categorisation of variations of the word 'newb', that's certainly not how I'd use the words. Newbie isn't even leet, it gets used all over the place; I've never spoken leet seriously, but I've still used that word because it isn't restricted to computers. Newb is a contraction of newbie that gets used in leet (it's leet spelling would be n3wb, n3w6, |\|3|/\||8, ^3\/\/|. or any other variation of that) and should in theory be a synonym for noob, although noob has acquired a derogatory connotation. N00b is just a leet spelling of noob, as are |\|00b, nu6, n00|8 etc., and if it is more offensive than noob I've never seen it used like that (which isn't to say you're actually wrong). If you have some alternative definitions to the current ones on the page, you should probably add them, but please don't delete the current ones as they are also correct. Citing sources is also helpful. 6:54 19 March 2006 (UTC)

Help?

I know this isn't the place to ask for stuff like this, but going with the general helpfulness of the Wikipedia populace, I'll have a go anyway.

Can anyone direct me to any true leet in use; forums, webpages, even archived chats? I'm studying it in a linguistic investigation and any help would be gratefull received.

Thanks for your time. Seegoon 19:03, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

Cant

As ridiculously argued-out as the discussion on linguisitc classification of leet is, has anyone considered that it is a cant (argot)? I am not a professional linguist, but leet certainly seems to fit that category more than any else. Dialect seems wrong as it indicates geographic or social groups. Slang is closer, but it does not account for the pidgin-nature of leet. Argot is a type of cant used by criminals (Thieves' cant). According to the American Heritage Dictionary, a cant is "The special terminology understood among the members of a profession, discipline, or class but obscure to the general population." Cants are naturally evolving and are "often marked by the use of stock phrases." Other sources indicate that cants often include constructs similar to those is pidgin.

I'd like to hear what others have to say about this idea.

Both "cant" and "argot" seem to imply that secrecy is a desired goal. While it can be argued that leet is used (as Cant (language) boldly claims) "to bypass automatic text parsers", I'd like to see some reliable sources before assuming so.
Also, the mention of pidgin intrigues me. I've seen the term mentioned before in this article, but I can't see how leet is in any way similar to a pidgin. EldKatt (Talk) 14:04, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

It's not up to any of us to determine a classification. To do so is original research. What we need to do is to find good sources of information and write the page to reflect them. On the classification issue, we need good sources of language classification (linguists) and write the page to reflect their views. -- Netoholic @ 15:07, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Of course. Well said. EldKatt (Talk) 16:27, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
As far as I know, the only book written on the subject by a linguist is 'Language and the Internet' by David Crystal. Here's a quote from page 238: 'Is the Internet emerging as a homogenous linguistic medium or is it a collection of distinct dialects? The latter, surely, is the case.' Ehheh 17:12, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Have to read the context. Keep in mind that there is a distinction between number/symbol transliteration in Leet ("5p34k4g3") and common internet slang and shortcuts ("cya"). Some authors tend to talk about all forms interchangably or group them when making broad statements. -- Netoholic @ 17:37, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

Origin of "Kekeke"

In Brazil, they've explained to me that "kekeke" is indeed a way of laughter, but more a way of how gossiping girls or chickens would laugh. Meant more in a parodical way.

I'm pretty positive that "kekeke" didn't come from Brazil, even though they are active starcraft players, but it may have influenced the koreans or vice versa. Should this be added? No? Bloat?

FWIW, a Korean Brazilian acqaintance of mine also always laughs like ‘kekeke’ (in MSN chat). Grauw
I'm pretty sure that "ke-ke" is one of the Korean ways to describe a particular laughter (there are others, ranging from polite to expansive laughter). It's the kind of laugh that one might do behind someone's back while gossiping (as alluded to above). It's amusing that it has become so popular in Starcraft. --C S (Talk) 20:54, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
Kekeke i believe first entered the mainstream though Sulake games and there moderators. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 132.234.251.211 (talkcontribs)
My two cents. In StarCraft, "keke" is what most Koreans say where Americans would say "hehe" or "lol" and most South Americans (hispanohablantes) would say "jeje" or "jaja." - CorbinSimpson 02:09, 10 April 2006 (UTC)

Spam and 1337.

Given the apparent popularity of this article, special care must be taken to prevent the abuse of the editing function.

It was pretty FUBARed when I stumbled on this page for a friend, and I spent about 25 minutes cleaning it up, I think.

It would be great if someone could volunteer to maintain this page from all detritus.

--Logical2u 20:26, 28 March 2006 (UTC)

Edit: Added my account timestamp.

practical uses

For such a niche language, that is not understood by the overwhelming majority of the world, it seems that practical uses is a bit of a contradiction. Verily, little at all is practical about "leet."--Josh Rocchio 03:06, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

Its lack of understanding by most is its most practical use. The point is that it can be used to prevent others from understanding it, and is used like that frequently still, along with censor bypasses. --Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 05:17, 31 March 2006 (UTC)
In certain games, like Starcraft, leet is the main form of communication between countries with wildly differen langages. - CorbinSimpson 17:22, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

aye

Isn't "aye" pronounced as "eye" and not like the letter "A"? Front243 21:27, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

Origin of the k in k-rad

It is my understanding that the k in k-rad is short for killer not kilo as the artical seguests. Dose any one have any refreances for the kilo interpretation? I have a learned the killer interptreation from a person that was active in the LA H/P seen in the 80's. This is the era and local that this term seems to have come from. (LA BBS/phreak seen) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.81.65.90 (talkcontribs)

Spelling of "evar"

The misspelling of "ever" (from "best/worst. noun. evar.") seems to have been popularized by JeffK. 68.8.21.7 01:44, 1 April 2006 (UTC)

Source? The last thing we need is more unsourced assertions in the article. --Oni Ookami AlfadorTalk|@ 05:39, 1 April 2006 (UTC)

nostalgia, etc

i think i was probably included in the vanguard that made and/or destroyed d0ud sp33k, l33t speak, etc..

if there were a good (or better) archive of the conversations that occurred (usually on IRC) between 1991 and 1995, you would see dialects, slang, and so on forming within the sub-system of language that was leet speek between groups and regions, etc.

i think mostly the people that made it "cool" co-opted the language from ascii/ansi and warez boards and made the language so extreme that it began to stand out. as much as i hate to admit it (not from a lack of respect), BoW (the brotherhood of warez) was probably on the forefront of developing the dialect in the early 1990s and some of their terms and perversions of the English language are to this day pervasive.

obfuscation

The exact reasons for the obfuscation of text with Leet are disputed, but the most probable reason is that hackers needed to communicate without outsiders being able to intercept the message, for example through an intelligence gathering network such as ECHELON.

This is not the most probable reason. The substitution of numbers for letters began with signatures and ansi/ascii art during early BBS days. Using symbols to replace letters made available many more versions of cool/high tech aliases which had already been claimed in their native form, as well as made signatures more interesting both in emails and ansi/ascii art. This began with phonetically spelling with letters and evolved into number substitution and symbols eventually. For example,

  • Fiber Optic
  • Phiber Optik
  • Ph1ber 0pt1k

This was adopted into text chat exchanges and eventually altered words were accepted as common terms.

I disagree :P In this thread alone I have seen about 4 different theories as to the origination of 1337. I say we simply acknowledge that there will not be a consensus on the "most widely accepted" or "most probable" origination, and make a category listing all the theories? I sound pretty clever to me. In any case it's too long for the introduction. And the use of the word 'cool' in an article isn't too cool. Apocryphite 21:23, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
Oh, and please sign your talk comments using four tildes (~) in a row. (above poster)

Should we move Leet to 1337 or Leetspeak?

  • Leet seems to be an informal term, whereas 1337 seems to be the official name or Leetspeak the full name. Do you agree with me? Crad0010 17:36, 9 April 2006 (UTC)
  • In Spanish, se debe decir <español>, but in English, we call it "Spanish." Similarly, in 1337 \^/3 5h0u7d s4'/ "1337", but in English, we call it "leet." If there was a leet Wikipedia, then we would call it le:1337, or something like that. - CorbinSimpson 02:04, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
    • Ok, I guess, case closed. In other ideas, should we split this page? Crad0010 19:38, 10 April 2006 (UTC)