翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Toothache (film)
・ Toothache Tree
・ Toothbrush
・ Toothbrush (album)
・ Toothbrush moustache
・ Toothcomb
・ Toothed belt
・ Toothed feather hydroid
・ Toothed leaf chameleon
・ Toothed river herring
・ Toothed seadevil
・ Toothed whale
・ Toother
・ Toothfriendly International
・ Toothill Fort
Toothing
・ Toothless
・ Toothless blindcat
・ Toothless catfish
・ Toothless George
・ Toothpaste
・ Toothpaste for Dinner
・ Toothpaste Kisses
・ Toothpaste tube theory
・ Toothpick
・ ToothPick (company)
・ Toothpick Bridge
・ Toothpick bulletin
・ Toothpick Lake
・ Toothpick sequence


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Toothing : ウィキペディア英語版
Toothing

Toothing was originally a hoax claim that Bluetooth-enabled mobile phones or PDAs were being used to arrange random sexual encounters, perpetrated as a prank on the media who reported it. The hoax was created by Ste Curran, then Editor at Large at the gaming magazine ''Edge'', and ex-journalist Simon Byron. They based it on the two concepts dogging and bluejacking that were popular at the time. The creators started a forum in March 2004 where they wrote fake news articles about toothing with other members and then sent them off to well-known Internet-based news services. The point of the hoax was to "highlight how journalists are happy to believe something is true without necessarily checking the facts". Dozens of news organizations, including BBC News, Wired News, and ''The Independent'' thought the toothing story was real and printed it. On April 4, 2005, Curran and Byron admitted that the whole thing was a hoax. There have, however, been real Bluetooth dating devices to hit the market since.
==Conception==
Devised by Swedish telecommunication company Ericsson, Bluetooth is an open wireless protocol for exchanging data over short distances from mobile devices such as mobile phones, laptops, and personal computers. Originally, Bluetooth was only intended for wireless exchanging of files between these devices, but it was later discovered that it could also be used for sexual intentions. The hoax concept of toothing started around March 2004 in the form of a forum designed by Ste Curran, then Editor at Large at games magazine ''Edge'', and ex-journalist Simon Byron.〔 Toothing was conceived as a merger of the two concepts dogging with bluejacking, both of which were frequently mentioned in the UK media around that time. Byron said he and Curran were "idly messaging about the Stan Collymore dogging scandal, and how this stupid sexual buzzword had (apparently) come from nowhere," when they came up with the concept. "We wondered if we could create our own. We wonder a lot of things, and rarely push them past concept, because we’re as collectively creative as we are frustratingly idle. This particularly concept was simple enough to outstrip the temptations of grinning, saying 'Yeah!', and wandering off to see what was on ()."〔 Several newspapers have also compared toothing to dogging.〔〔
In toothing, a Bluetooth device is used to find other Bluetooth enabled devices within a close distance (on trains or buses, for example), and then send the expression "toothing?" as an initial greeting, letting the person with the enabled Bluetooth device know you are looking for sex. If sending of text messages via Bluetooth is not possible, the Bluetooth name of the mobile phone can be set to "toothing?" or something else to indicate interest. The pair of hoaxers wrote fake news articles on the forum about toothing and sent them off well-known Internet-based news services. Byron said he had to write "''Penthouse''-letters-page style sexual adventure stories" for articles and interviews with the media. The point with hoax was, according to Byron, to "highlight how journalists are happy to believe something is true without necessarily checking the facts."〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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