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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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0719620.000
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<text id=93TT2012>
<title>
July 19, 1993: Heartbreak in Cyberspace
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ETHICS, Page 58
Heartbreak in Cyberspace
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Having too many on-line affairs gets a computer Casanova strung
up on an electronic bulletin board
</p>
<p>By SOPHFRONIA SCOTT GREGORY--With reporting by Wendy Cole/New York
</p>
<p> Have a seat. Switch on the computer. Dial into a network. Type
in a password. And welcome to the world of the WELL--the Whole
Earth 'Lectronic Link. Romance may be just a few keystrokes
or the click of a mouse away. The California-based electronic
bulletin board is one of the many new cybersocieties where men
and women can meet and message each other in a network less
smoky than a singles bar, less nerve-racking than a blind date.
There are no worries about appearances. No flesh. No sweat.
Utopia? No way. Romance gone awry has gummed up even this most
sophisticated of social circuits.
</p>
<p> Meet Lisa, Nancy and Beth (not their real names). In January,
Lisa, 42, made contact with a man by way of the electronic bulletin
board. Entranced with his terminal manner, Lisa allowed their
e-mail relationship to progress to "voice-level"--that is,
they called each other and soon were satisfying their mutual
lust in steamy phone sex that sometimes lasted up to four hours.
The bills were huge. He lived on the East Coast, she on the
West. Lisa thought she was in love, and she believed he felt
the same way.
</p>
<p> Nancy, 31, met her man electronically in May and began a near
daily phone relationship that she found so satisfying it drove
her to distraction. He made her believe she was the only one
he was so intimate with, and he soon had her complete trust.
</p>
<p> Beth, 38, also logged on to an intimate relationship with a
WELL man. They communicated regularly, and he made her feel
unique and special. Describing herself as "no naive young thing,"
Beth nevertheless says, "when someone tells you what you need
to hear, you begin to wonder if some kind of magic has happened."
</p>
<p> Lisa was so enthralled with her bulletin-board lover that she
decided to move on to what WELL users call an F2F--a face-to-face.
She agreed to split the cost of a plane ticket to fly her telephonic
paramour to the West Coast. "We had a great weekend," she says,
"including fabulous sex." But afterwards her lover turned cold,
and the e-mail correspondence dissolved. A heartbroken Lisa
grieved on a section of the network called WOW (Women on the
WELL)--where no men are allowed. And that is how she met Beth
and Nancy and discovered that they had all been involved with
the same man. Let's call him Mr. X.
</p>
<p> The incensed women decided to go public on the general WELL--if only to keep others from falling into Mr. X's trap. What
ensued became "Topic 1290: Do You Know This Cyber-Scam-Artist?,"
publicly exposing Mr. X to the WELL's 8,000 members (among them,
a high concentration of writers, journalists, musicians and
Grateful Deadheads) and sparking a network-wide debate on the
spoken and unspoken rules of electronic etiquette. Supporters
of Lisa, Beth and Nancy sent their messages flying. "E-mail
is the last refuge of a scoundrel," said one. But there were
plenty of opponents of the "outing" of Mr. X. "I haven't seen
anything posted here that suggests he did anything evil," said
a veteran WELL user. "The ugliness here smacks of a lynch mob
out for good old-fashioned vengeance."
</p>
<p> Mr. X has come to his own defense. Though he admits he conducted
cyber relationships with more than one woman at a time, he
insists he is the victim in this matter. "I feel my privacy
was radically violated," he says of the women's electronic onslaught.
"I didn't make any relationship promises I didn't keep." In
the bulletin-board free-for-all, he wrote, "I believe that I
was supportive, caring and tender with these women. I gave as
good as I got." He adds, "I was experimenting in a new area
for me. I didn't think that the same concerns about fidelity
I apply reflexively in physical relationships applied here in
cyberspace. I was wrong."
</p>
<p> "This is a communal regime but the rules haven't been made,"
says Howard Rheingold, a WELL member since 1985. "We have people
with different degrees of sophistication participating." Until
the affairs of Mr. X came to light, users could more easily
overlook the potential for the abuse of the network. The illusion
of safety promoted intense on-line intimacy--all behind the
safety of a computer screen. Says Preston Stern, an ally of
Mr. X, "The incident exposed in a very immediate way how the
medium facilitates deception--emotional manipulation because
of the absence of physical cues. It's easy to keep secrets when
you're on-line."
</p>
<p> And so cyberspace cannot exist in a vacuum. Now, many of its
denizens are mourning a paradise lost. Says one user: "The bottom
line is that we can't always trust each other and can't always
know who is worthy of our trust." Why venture into an F2F when
the party on the other side may think it's just a game or an
experiment? "I feel like an absolute fool," says Lisa. "People
look at a computer and fail to realize that behind those words
is a real person with feelings." Welcome back to the real world.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>