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First post

First Post! is an Internet phenomenon on Internet discussion groups (notably Slashdot and LiveJournal), where participants strive to be the first person to post a comment to a new article or discussion thread. This terminology dates back to the days of the BBS, when one would post a comment, much as one would post a reply on a physical bulletin board. The phenomenon is largely confined to sites that have reached a high degree of popularity, such that users are genuinely surprised to see an article without any associated comments. There is also the necessary condition that comments are displayed in chronological order (meaning the first message is the most prominently displayed). It is prevalent among user-commentary sites and does not often appear on conventional webboards, community journals, etc.

First Post originally appeared in the mid-nineties on BBSs (Bulletin Board Systems) before the world wide web had evolved into what it is now, most notably on NYC based MindVox where it was seen as fine sport.

In its original form, a first post was a light-hearted expression of the poster s excitement at being the first person to write a comment: Internet slang I got First Post! . However, it is now more widely intended as a means of annoying other site users (see Internet troll), with the aim of provoking a negative reaction (see Flamebait).

Since the chance of achieving a first post is increased by making the comment quickly, the message is usually short, adding no insight to the discussion. Often, it only contains the text First post! (or variations thereof). Some people would even argue that a comment is only a true first post if it contains no relevant information.

It should be noted that the traditional text of a first post may vary according to the site s content. For example, on Blog for America, 44! is used to represent a first post, in reference to the U.S. presidential election, 2004.

Some forums have devised creative ways of eliminating messages of this type: the filters on Fark.com message boards automatically turn the words First Post! into the word boobies and timestamp the comment 12 hours after it was actually posted. Meanwhile, Something Awful made posting First Post! a bannable offense. One way users have subverted this rule is to adopt a similar but different message (most notably Frost Pist ).

On political blogs (such as Atrios), first post is often typed as Frist, a reference to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (and depending on the forum, as a way to add an extra dash of irritation to an already irritating practice).

Some Slashdot readers parody the words first post with many alternate spellings: frist psot! , firts pots! , etc.

On Dutch language weblogs it s often shortened to Fipo , the first two letters of both first and post .

In Russia, there exists an analogue of this phenomenon. People post messages with the words Первый нах! [ pervij na:h] - which rough translation would be first and the hell with it . These words are believed to first appear on un-moderated subcultural websites, such as [http://www.udaff.com Udaff] and [http://www.padonki.org Padonki] (a misspelled Russian for Riff-raffs ). As of 2005, this phenomenon (as well as some others, like deliberate misspellings of the words) became very wide-spread among Russian-speaking users.

In has a section of e-mails sent to the page(in which the users can comment), updated daily- and every day, some people race to be the first posters (with even a final score each day).

The First Post is also an online magazine

= See also =

  • Flamebait
  • Internet troll
  • Slashdot trolling phenomena
  • =External Links=

  • [http://firstpost.wordpress.com First Post!: Digging, Archiving, and Publishing every First Post in the Blogosphere]