Virtual suicide — reclaim your real life
Everyone who has spent hours engaged in social networking services may recognise themselves in Irene Angelopoulos’s vitriolic attack on the “depressing daily grind” of virtual life (in Adbusters yesterday):
We toil late into the night, unleashing an endless stream of status updates and tweets in a desperate attempt to keep ourselves relevant, desirable and in [...] Social Networking Sites (SNSs) promise limitless, boundless friendship – a phenomenon that should make us happier than ever. But our optimism over connectivity has gradually morphed into cynicism and resentment. It turns out virtual life is less about connectivity than self-branding [...] Paranoid about how we’ll be perceived, we spend hour after hour trying to avoid the virtual consequences of being deemed uncool. We have more to worry about than our online acquaintances deleting us after we’re tagged in an unflattering photo [...] Bleak, shallow and repetitive, virtual life seems increasingly less worth living. Users are beginning to realize that it’s not leisure, it’s work that borders on servitude.
But there’s a resistance movement on its way “among those tired of their virtual subjugation”:
In response to the electronic world’s rising indignation, virtual suicide sites like seppukoo.com and suicidemachine.org have started a countermovement, provoking users to kill their online selves and reclaim their real lives. These programs assist our virtual deaths by hacking into our profiles, completely annihilating our online personas and leaving no trace of our former selves behind. It’s social revolt for the online age: a mass uprising that will shatter the virtual hierarchy and restore order to our actual lives.
A desire for off-line reality! Is this what’s behind Jessica’s (Bioephemera) current blogcation?
17 Feb 2010 Thomas

Hi Thomas
Last night I discovered that it’s impossible to write the name of the two sites in a status update on Facebook. The site simply blocks you from mentioning either of them. Free speech? Not on Facebook.
What? This sounds unbelievable. Give some more details, please — How did you try to write the names of the sites (as url’s)? How did Facebook respond? Did you have the same problem with other url’s?
Yep.
If you try to write either of the two addresses (url’s) in a status update you’ll receive the following message: “The content of this message contains blocked content. Some of the content in this message has been reported as misuse by Facebook-users”.
Of course they don’t tell you who these other Facebook-users are ;)
Try it yourself. It’s simply not possible.
If you want to mention the names seppukoo.com and suicidemachine.org on Facebook you have to make some space between the letters like this seppukoo. com and suicidemachine. org. The site can’t recognize the url’s if you change them a bit. Facebook has also taken measures to stop the two sites as seen here: http://suicidemachine.org/download/Web_2.0_Suicide_Machine.pdf
I have not had any problems with other url’s.
Hej,det er rigtigt godt men hvad gør jeg for at slippe ud fra et sted som Zoosk? Jeg er villig til at sætte penge til,men intet hjælper!