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You would have seen these behind the receptionist in dentists offices and public schools:

https://bavatuesdays.com/xeroxlore-folklore-in-the-age-of-me...

By the 2000s, the more-intense pranksters had discovered that high-volume printers on college campuses left IPP open.

Disappointed. There's supposed to be a frazzled cartoon cat with a cup of black coffee and the words "I've got one nerve left and you just stepped on it."

(Come to think of it maybe I'm mixing memes.)

“I can only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow doesn’t look good either.”
> more-intense pranksters

Never heard weev described that way before...

“Nothing will red pill white men faster than this,” was one white guy’s reaction to Obama. Back then, might have ended up as just a prank. But, that white guy was unfortunately ahead of his time.
Hmm.. I think I just realized that I had fallen for the "lights out" hoax for the longest time. I heard about it first in an email around 1998. I believed it to be true until I read this Faxlore wikipedia link today. Wow!

To clarify, just a month after I heard about this, I had a confirming event. I was in Detroit at that time and my wife and I were staying in a motel. It was just after sundown. We pulled out of the motel parking lot into the road. It was less than a minute later that I realized I did not have my car headlights turned on and I switched them on. Seconds later, a cop who was following us stopped us and questioned us if we just pulled out of a parking lot. He didn't give me a ticket, just an enquiry and let us off. That incident worked as a confirming event for me.

Bunch, Michael: "Technology Aided Spread of Terrifying Hoax", San Diego Union-Tribune, Oct. 4, 1993 – "Lights Out" gang initiation legend spreads by fax and copier.

My very first encounter with a Nigerian Prince scam was in the form of a fax received by my college roommate. He was from another country and didn't really understand it. I remember just telling him it looked suspicious and to ignore it.

Around the same time I also knew a religious family who had the a copy of the Proctor & Gamble "Satanism" warning taped to the front of their refrigerator (it listed all the P&G brands, so they'd know which ones to avoid).

To this day, the P&G corporate HQ in Cincinnati has blank white circles on the top, where the supposedly Satanic logo would have gone.
Can you point out for me in this picture where these white circles are that you just posted as fact?

https://www.google.com/maps/place/1+Procter+%26+Gamble+Plaza...

Obviously that picture was altered by Google, which works with the P&G Satanists. Search for any health or beauty product category on Google and see how long it takes for one of the P&G brands to pop up. It's no coincidence.
shhhh, the P&G mafia will soon be knocking on your door if you keep informing the public like this. You have been warned!
I'm surprised not to see the IBM mouse balls tech note on the list.
Reminds me of the time I got a box of mouse balls from AT&T, the guys got a chuckle out of that.
The blue star tattoo legend made it's way around my primary school twice while I was there.
If I wanted to set up a fax number to collect random fax spam, how would I attract spammers to the number?
Reminds me of tapelooping and blacklooping. Not only urban legends were spread by fax. All sorts of scams, baseless legal threats, harassment, and more were too.

Since in theory it tied up meaningful resources (time on the phone line and potentially paper and ink) some places made sending certain things by unsolicited fax illegal. In the US IIRC one could be fined and be made to pay restitution and punitive damages to to recipient if they could find and name the party to the government.

Someone tell me there's a section hidden on textfiles.org with examples of these.
Anyone know a good collection of faxlore? Id love to see more, but examples online seem a little sparse.