Smiley Lore :-)
Scott E. Fahlman
A lot of people have asked me about this, so I thought I’d
put the information here, linked under my home page:
Yes, I am the inventor of the sideways “smiley face” (sometimes
called an “emoticon”) that is commonly used in E-mail, chat,
and newsgroup posts. Or at least I’m one of the inventors.
By the early 1980’s, the Computer Science community at Carnegie
Mellon was making heavy use of online bulletin boards or “bboards”.
These were a precursor of today’s newsgroups, and they were
an important social mechanism in the department – a place
where faculty, staff, and students could discuss the weighty
matters of the day on an equal footing. Many of the posts
were serious: talk announcements, requests for information,
and things like “I’ve just found a ring in the fifth-floor
men’s room. Who does it belong to?” Other posts discussed
topics of general interest, ranging from politics to abortion
to campus parking to keyboard layout (in increasing order
of passion). Even in those days, extended “flame wars” were
common.
Given the nature of the community, a good many of the posts
were humorous (or attempted humor). The problem was that if
someone made a sarcastic remark, a few readers would fail
to get the joke, and each of them would post a lengthy diatribe
in response. That would stir up more people with more responses,
and soon the original thread of the discussion was buried.
In at least one case, a humorous remark was interpreted by
someone as a serious safety warning.
This problem caused some of us to suggest (only half seriously)
that maybe it would be a good idea to explicitly mark posts
that were not to be taken seriously. After all, when using
text-based online communication, we lack the body language
or tone-of-voice cues that convey this information when we
talk in person or on the phone. Various “joke markers” were
suggested, and in the midst of that discussion it occurred
to me that the character sequence :-) would be an elegant
solution – one that could be handled by the ASCII-based computer
terminals of the day. So I suggested that. In the same post,
I also suggested the use of :-( to indicate that a message
was meant to be taken seriously, though that symbol quickly
evolved into a marker for displeasure, frustration, or anger.
This convention caught on quickly around Carnegie Mellon,
and soon spread to other universities and research labs via
the primitive computer networks of the day. (Some CMU alumni
who had moved on to other places continued to read our bboards
as a way of keeping in touch with their old community.)
Within a few months, we started seeing the lists with dozens
of “smilies”: open-mouthed surprise, person wearing glasses,
Abraham Lincoln, Santa Claus, the pope, and so on. Producing
such clever compilations has become a serious hobby for some
people. But only my two original smilies, plus the “winky”
;-) and the “noseless” variants seem to be in common use for
actual communication. It’s interesting to note that Microsoft
and AOL now intercept these character strings and turn them
into little pictures. Personally, I think this destroys the
whimsical element of the original.
Unfortunately, I didn’t keep a copy of my original post.
It didn’t seem like a big deal at the time. By the time I
realized that this smiley-face phenomenon was going to be
long-lasting and that it would spread around the world as
the Internet grew, it was too late to easily retrieve the
post, and the original message was lost for many years.
Several attempts to find the post on old backup tapes were
unsuccessful. But recently Mike Jones of Microsoft sponsored
a more serious “archeological dig” through our ancient backup
tapes. Jeff Baird and the CMU CS facilities staff put in a
heroic effort with the support and encouragement of Howard
Wactlar, Bob Cosgrove, and David Livingston. They found the
proper tapes, located a working tape drive that could read
the ancient media, decoded the old formats, and did a lot
of searching to find the actual posts. I am most grateful
to all who participated in this successful quest, which I
call the “Digital Coelacanth Project.”
So the message itself, and the thread that gave rise to it,
are here. The exact date of the smiley’s birth can now be
determined: 19 September, 1982. It’s great to have this message
back just in time for the 20th anniversary of the original
post.
As you can see, the note in which I suggested this thing
was quite short and casual – just part of an ongoing discussion
that involved many people. I apparently didn’t even read it
over before posting, since a word or two were dropped in editing.
I do remember writing a longer message in which I explained
the need for a humor-marker in more detail, and suggested
the :-) symbol, along with :-( to indicate anger or real unhappiness.
But this longer message must have come later – perhaps a later
bboard post or an E-mail message that I sent to someone. In
any case, that more detailed post did not turn up in our search.
Many people have denounced the very idea of the smiley face,
pointing out that good writers should have no need to explicitly
label their humorous comments. Shakespeare and Jonathan Swift
and Mark Twain got along just fine without this. And by labeling
the remarks that are not meant to be taken seriously, we spoil
the joke. In satirical writing, half the fun is in never being
quite sure whether the author is serious or not.
To a large degree, I agree with these critics. Perhaps the
E-mail smiley face has done more to degrade our written communication
than to improve it. But in defense of the idea, let me say
two things:
First, not all people who post on boards have the literary
skill of Shakespeare or Twain, and even those luminaries had
bad days. If Shakespeare were tossing off a quick note complaining
about the lack of employee parking spaces near the Globe Theater,
he might have produced the same kind of sloppy prose that
the rest of us do. Besides, Shakespeare’s work is full of
cliches and his spelling was atrocious. :-)
Second, and more important, these authors were publishing
their words in a different medium, with different properties.
If 100,000 copies of a novel or an essay were distributed
in printed form, and if 1% of the readers didn’t get the joke
and were outraged at what they had read, there was nothing
these clueless readers could do to spoil the enjoyment of
the other 99%. But if it were possible for each of the 1000
clueless readers to write a lengthy counter-argument and to
flood these into the same distribution channels as the original
work, and if others could then jump into the fray in similar
fashion, you can see the problems that this would cause. If
the judicious use of a few smilies can reduce the frequency
of such firestorms, then maybe it’s not such a bad idea after
all. Again, we’re talking here about casual writing on the
Internet, not great works printed in one-way media that relatively
inaccessible to the general public.
One final point: I’ve seen various claims that the sideways
smiley face was invented by someone else. I believe that I
invented this particular glyph and the “turn your head to
one side” principle independently. I don’t recall seeing anything
like this before my post, though a few messages in the thread
we just located come close. Leonard Hamey’s post suggesting
(#) for humor might be taken as an example of “turn your head
to one side” – it’s not really clear if that was his intent
– and apparently \__/ was used by one of our research groups
to indicate a smile. I’ve never seen any hard evidence that
the :-) sequence was in use before my original post, and I’ve
never run into anyone who actually claims to have invented
it before I did. But it’s always possible that someone else
had the same idea – it’s a simple and obvious idea, after
all.
Some people have told me that the :-) or :) convention was
used by teletype operators in the old days. Maybe so. I haven’t
seen any examples of this, but it’s plausible, given the limitations
of the character set in that medium.
So, the smiley idea may have appeared and disappeared a few
times before my 1982 post, but it is pretty clear from the
timing that my suggestion was the one that finally took hold,
spread around the world, and spawned thousands of variations.
Let me close with a quote from an interview with Vladimir
Nabokov, author of Lolita and other modern classics (thanks
to Eli Brandt for calling this to my attention):
Q: How do you rank yourself among writers (living)
and of the immediate past?
Nabokov: I often think there should exist a special
typographical sign for a smile – some sort of concave mark,
a supine round bracket, which I would now like to trace in
reply to your question.
Here are links to some other online articles about smilies:
· Business
Week Online, April 23, 2001
· Text
of Wall Street Journal Article, September 15, 1992
· Neal Stephenson
Article in New Republic, September 1993
Article source: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~sef/sefSmiley.htm
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