The Markovian Parallax Denigrate - what do you think they were?

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What is the Markovian Parallax Denigrate? It’s been called the “Internet’s oldest and weirdest mystery,” and it all started with a series of enigmatic early internet posts from the mid-1990s, the meaning of which remains unsolved over 20 years later.

The Markovian Parallax Denigrate messages date back to 1996, before the internet as we know it existed, at a time when the discussion system Usenet was still in wide use. Operating like a bulletin board or forum does today, Usenet allowed users to communicate by posting chronologically ordered messages, and not unlike the forums of today, it had problems with spam. The first major spamming incident in the history of the internet occurred in 1994, when a pair of lawyers blasted thousands of Usenet users with unbidden ads for their immigration law services. But when the mysterious Markovian Parallax Denigrate messages began, there were some good reasons to wonder if they were something more than spam.

Around August 5, 1996 (the date that belongs to one of the only surviving examples of the strange posts), hundreds of odd messages began sliding into discussions across Usenet. They consisted of blocks of seemingly nonsensical strings of words that read like terrible slam poetry. The only thing they shared was an equally meaningless subject line: Markovian parallax denigrate. Since many people at the time assumed that the messages were gibberish, most of the original posts have since been lost. But one original post that survives thanks to Google’s archives reads:



jitterbugging McKinley Abe break Newtonian inferring caw update Cohen air collaborate rue sportswriting rococo invocate tousle shadflower Debby Stirling pathogenesis escritoire adventitious novo ITT most chairperson Dwight Hertzog different pinpoint dunk McKinley pendant firelight Uranus episodic medicine ditty craggy flogging variac brotherhood Webb impromptu file countenance inheritance cohesion refrigerate morphine napkin inland Janeiro nameable yearbook hark






With no easy explanation for their origins or meaning, the messages quickly became fodder for a number of theories as to their existence. According to an in-depth article from 2012 on The Daily Dot, some Usenet denizens hypothesized that the words were a kind of secret code. The indecipherable messages were even likened to the broadcasts of enigmatic Cold War numbers stations. Yet despite multiple attempts to crack, or even find, some kind of cipher, to date, no one has been able to detect any kind of hidden meaning in the messages.


Another theory posited that the messages were the product of an early attempt at some kind of bot. The “Markovian” part of the message name has been thought to relate to a calculating process called a “Markov chain,” which has been used in programming chatbots. But if the messages were the result of tinkering with some kind of emergent conversation, the original programmer has never been identified.

Kevin Morris, the author of the Daily Dot article, proposes in his piece that the messages were the work of a controversial alleged spy, Susan Lindauer, whose name appears in the “From” line of the remaining archived message. While Morris’s article goes into great depth about Lindauer’s possible connections to the Markovian Parallax Denigrate, he also notes that when contacted for the piece, she denied any involvement in the creation of the messages.

Finally there is what may be the simplest answer, that the mystery messages were simply the work of a troll. Just as Usenet has evolved into the vastly more complicated and advanced internet we have today, sending out a bunch of gibberish to strangers could easily be seen as a silly, early version of the pointed and hateful “jokes” of today’s online trolls. Again, though, no one has ever stepped up to claim responsibility for the messages.

It’s been over two decades since the Markovian Parallax Denigrate posts hit Usenet, and despite all the theories and paranoid guesswork, the mystery is no closer to being solved now than it was in the mid-1990s. At this point it seems unlikely that anyone is going to crack the code (if there even is one), but ultimately, their enduring mystery is probably more intriguing than any concrete answer ever could be.





https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/markovian-parallax-denigrate-mystery-internet
 
I’m not going to say it was aliens






Because everyone knows it was.
 
If it was legit, some Good Will Hunting type would've solved it by now. Or else it has been solved, and they're just not going public with it.
 
jitterbugging McKinley Abe break Newtonian inferring caw update Cohen air collaborate rue sportswriting rococo invocate tousle shadflower Debby Stirling pathogenesis escritoire adventitious novo ITT most chairperson Dwight Hertzog different pinpoint dunk McKinley pendant firelight Uranus episodic medicine ditty craggy flogging variac brotherhood Webb impromptu file countenance inheritance cohesion refrigerate morphine napkin inland Janeiro nameable yearbook hark

:eek:




PGF7Dg7.png
 
@Scyther can you explain this?
I think the best explanation is that it was either done by this Susan Lindauer woman or it is a complete troll job. What would be her motivation, not really sure, she had some connection to intelligence agencies but what would her goal is only speculation. I think this may have just been her trolling or someone else.
 
I think the best explanation is that it was either done by this Susan Lindauer woman or it is a complete troll job. What would be her motivation, not really sure, she had some connection to intelligence agencies but what would her goal is only speculation. I think this may have just been her trolling or someone else.

I'm leaning more towards it being an early version of a bot. But who knows?
 
How did it get the fancy title and is not just referred to as nonsense?

Don't tell me I have to call you Puff Daddy, you're name is fucking Sean
 
How did it get the fancy title and is not just referred to as nonsense?

Don't tell me I have to call you Puff Daddy, you're name is fucking Sean

It wasn't in the link I put in the OP but I found on another site that they call it that because those 3 words were always somewhere in the message. Markovian, parallax and denigrate. Not necessarily just in the header of the messages and not necessarily back to back or in that order, but those 3 words were always somewhere in the messages. And those 3 words are the only thing the messages always had in common.
 
HELL YEAH SHERDOG GONNA CRACK THAT CODE

Edit: Figured it out. It means "I fucked you mom, :eek::eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:"

God damn trolls.
 
My group of friends all did mushrooms for the first time together. One guy said "I'm writing the best fucking philosophical treatise ever right now". We left him alone to do his thing. Next day we looked at it and it was pure fucking nonsense like the OP thing. Years later his brain broke and now he's full blown schizophrenic.

If I found his treatise and uploaded it, how much time would people spend trying to decipher it's secret wisdom?
 
My group of friends all did mushrooms for the first time together. One guy said "I'm writing the best fucking philosophical treatise ever right now". We left him alone to do his thing. Next day we looked at it and it was pure fucking nonsense like the OP thing. Years later his brain broke and now he's full blown schizophrenic.

If I found his treatise and uploaded it, how much time would people spend trying to decipher it's secret wisdom?

About an hour
 
My group of friends all did mushrooms for the first time together. One guy said "I'm writing the best fucking philosophical treatise ever right now". We left him alone to do his thing. Next day we looked at it and it was pure fucking nonsense like the OP thing. Years later his brain broke and now he's full blown schizophrenic.

If I found his treatise and uploaded it, how much time would people spend trying to decipher it's secret wisdom?

Let's see it. One man's nonsense is another man's spiritual enlightenment. As the saying goes.
 
No one saved it, but it was less intelligible than the OP thing
 
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