A Basic History of l337 Sp3aK
Back in the days when the BBS(Bullitin Board System) was the primary interconnection medium for most computer users, a large portion of systems were for the soul purpose of downloading and uploading software. Some of these systems specilised in illegal software (Warez), others discouraged it, some provided a mixture. That was, when you were on the BBS for long enough, and proved yourself a real user your account was given a higher status giving you access to more chat-rooms, more file libraries, and more services. These users were called the Elite, and it is from them that the phrase "l33t speak" came.
Once you got onto the more open BBS systems, it became more dangerous to share warez. For those systems where trading was discouraged, you wanted to keep your conversations private. Some BBS software allowed a SYSOP(System Operator) to scan all conversation for keywords, allowing them to spy on any illegal sharing that went on. Even on the systems where warez was commonplace, users were paranoid of govermental robots sitting scanning all conversations for Warez talk.
The solution to this was to not talk in any way that would trip the sensors. Sensors were looking for words (Warez, Software, Zero Day, The titles of the latest games, etc.) and for talk of the mythical higher level (Elite) that would allow you access to the Cracker Cream, all the warez your phone bill could take.
Some ascii glyphs look like other ones, esspecially when combined. 3 could be misread as E in context, 7 has the same basic shape as T, @ contains a, 1 is nearly I anyway, O is almost exactly 0. So you go from "Elite" which might trip the sensors, to "31ite", which won't. And because this is a text-based chat medium, like IRC and SMS would do in the future, words got shorter to save time. Elite becomes leet becomes l33t. Once you get into typing and reading it, glyphs can become multiple characters. For the true cream of the leet, common programming and mathmatical operators can subsitute chunks of text ("2b||!2b" or "To Be or Not To Be" would be the question. Nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outragous ascii). The glyph "e", for example, could be rendered "e", "E", "3", "(-", "<-", "[-", "£" or many others.
Now it's used by people who've no idea why it was once relivant. It's useless now (save to demonstrate your knowledge of the culture, or shallow understanding of such) as the noise of thousands of IRC channels drowns out the signal of the Warez channels where this still goes on. You could argue that it's an outmoded dialect of a younger version of the Information Age, or that this basic steganography was genius in it's time.
But remember:
ALL CAPS TALK LEADS TO B1FF T4LK.
B1FF T4LK LE4D$ 2 W4r37_t4LK.
W4r3Zt/kL34d$ 2 31337 ///
37_ |>0o|) 7/|_|<,
4|||) 7|¬3|23 7!¬3 |)/|2|( 51|)3 |_|3$
-- (Charles Cooke)
Tim:
I h4×0r3d j00.
Good summary btw.
Burningbird:
This is spooky but I just came over to get your email to see where I can find out more about just this.
Odd, but I’ve been online for years, but have never been much for the BBS —I feel like I’ve missed a whole underground movement.
dearg:
l33tsp34k still has a use; Non-dictionary, memorable passwords.
Not that I recommend it.
Jason Williams:
It’s not really much of an improvement on a dictionary word, though, since any decent password cracker will try “l33t-style” variants of dictionary words.
Aquarion:
There are enough variations on most letters that it’s pretty unlikely it’ll find it, though.
Especially if you spell the words wrong too.
sarah:
hey-
1 agree completly, as an optomist myself i look forward to hearing more from you. sarah aka: L33764m3/2Ran:
One thing’s wrong.
real 1337 has NEVER been used to make words shorter!
SMS-language and 1337 got some things in common, but they’re still two totally different languages.
Aquarion:
Not deliberately, really, but by it’s method it has. People have been using “2” for to and ”b4” for before since /way/ before the txtspkfls got their grubby little mitts on our culture :-)
seraph:
the last lines are something about d00d talk and then it says “and there the dark side lies” ... i think
PaTrIcK:
t3h l33t sp3ak is easy , medium and hard ! So i thing 90% will learn easy l33t , in 2-3 days !
l33t – easy
l337 – medium
l33-|- – hard
So that depends on u` ... what l33t sp3ak u wanna` use :D
Some examples of l33t sp3ak !
\/\/|-|3r3 t3h P|-||_|c|{ a3r j00 ?
\/\/|-|3[\] | \/\/4s P|-|o|_|r y35rs 0l|) i h4×0r3d nasa.gov
S74cey:
//|_||2|) |-|0/v|3
A Nameless One:
Word Homie… dude… not kewl
Translation 4 teh ubre nubs, you know you love me even if I call ya a nub =p
x
Dark Im3k:
Where the f*ck are you?
When I was four I hacked the nasa website
^ The top one System lyrix? =P
P33c3 nu85
x
h4x:
0mg i h4xx0rd j00