Internet forum

   

An Internet forum, also known as a message board or discussion board, is a web application that provides for online discussions, and is the modern descendant of the bulletin board systems and existing Usenet news systems that were widespread in the 1980s and 1990s. An Internet forum typically exists as part of a website and invites users to start topics and discuss issues with one another. Sometimes, a forum even comprises most, if not all, of the content of a site.

Internet forums differ from weblogs. The former generally allow most users to post topics (sometimes referred to as "threads"), while blogs only allow one or a few users to create entries. Forums also tend to be more diversified in interest, while blogs tend to be more specific to a certain topic or subset of beliefs.

Features

Typically, common Internet forum software will allow the webmaster or administrator to define several forums (or fora) which act as containers for topics or threads started by users. Other users can post replies to topics and start new ones as they wish.

Internet forums are divided between those requiring registration and those allowing users to post anonymously. In the former, users choose a username and password, and may be required to submit an e-mail address for confirmation. Members are often allowed to customize their board experience with special items such as avatars and profiles. Anonymous forums may enforce full anonymity or allow for pseudonymity without registration, using tripcodes derived by encrypting unique strings as identifiers.

Certain users may be given moderator privileges, which may include the ability to delete posts and topics, move topics to other forums, edit posts, or other mechanisms designed to keep the peace and uphold the rules set out by the webmaster. Who exactly will become a moderator is decided by the webmaster or by some kind of pseudorandom process possibly combined with meta-moderation. Many different moderation systems exist and webmasters are free to choose rules for their own forums.

A forum can be flat, meaning that each reply within a certain topic is listed in chronological order; or threaded, where each post descends from a parent post. Sites often provide several different views which combine aspects of both flat and threaded modes.

Many Internet forum software packages are available, usually written in PHP, Perl, or Java, and run by a CGI or Java Servlet. Data and configuration are usually stored in an SQL database (such as MySQL) or a series of text files. Each provides different features: the most basic restricting users to text-only posting, the most advanced allowing users to insert multimedia elements and formatting in to their posts using HTML or BBCode. Packages are often integrated within weblogs or news posting scripts (such as PHP-Nuke) to allow people to post comments on articles or entries.

Other notes

It is interesting that many Internet forums tend to develop into social communities, with their own social rules and even language forming a subculture. Some members organize social events, sometimes involving extensive international travel. It is not uncommon for members to marry people (sometimes from different countries) they have met on the forum.

Despite being an Internet tool, one thus popularly supposed to be part of the trends of anti-literacy, forums generate a huge amount of writing in posts. In sharp contrast to other Internet technologies such as instant messaging, many forum users often abide by correct spelling, grammar, and other rules of writing. The sheer amount of composition in such forums is sometimes thought to have exceeded the number of standard letters written.

Early in the 21st Century, some message boards were created by state-backed organisations, such as the Metropolitan Police in London, England as part of a strategy to improve their dialogue with those whom they perceive as their regular customers. In this they are seeking to utilise a medium that has flourished in the voluntary sector. It remains to be seen whether the vitality of message boards is compatible with the relative rigidity of a constituted formal body and whether trust and improved dialogue may be stimulated. In troubled communities that have not descended too deeply into lawlessness, it may be that a relatively low degree of improved interaction can tip-the-balance between a spiral of decline and positive regeneration. The police experiment cited is part of a "Reassurance" project that concentrates on what has recently been termed envirocrime and anti-social behaviour in the UK. The relative anonimity of the internet might have some advantages over the telephoning or visiting a police station which was the traditional way of notifying the police of concerns, especially where complainants are fearful of venturing onto local streets or of intimidation or attack from perpetrators' friends, associates or families.

See also

External Links

  • The Forum Insider (http://www.foruminsider.com) — Internet forum discussion and news site.


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