Hack Dthrip !!better!!: The
Our first example is a bot that, for 18 months in 2021-2022, replied to every tweet containing the word "efficiency" by deleting every third letter of that tweet and reposting the result. The output was almost always gibberish (e.g., "I love produtivty hacks" became "I lv rodutvtyh cs"). The bot’s creator, when interviewed via DMs, stated their goal was "not to correct, but to introduce a productive static." Followers of the bot reported a strange effect: after reading its outputs for several minutes, they began to see the original tweets as the corrupted ones. The hack dthrip here functions as a defamiliarization engine —it makes the language of optimization seem alien and broken, which is, in fact, its natural state.
The etymology is instructive. "Dthrip" is a ghost. It appears to be a keyboard smash (right hand: d, t, h, r, i, p) or a speech-to-text error for "the hack trip." It is a word that failed to be born. To perform a hack dthrip is therefore to engage in an activity that looks like a hack but produces the opposite of a hack’s intended outcome: it produces more work, more confusion, more joy, or a deliberate failure. the hack dthrip
The hack dthrip is not a solution to the exhaustion of digital life. It is not a solution at all. It is a symptom—a nervous tic of a culture that has been told to "move fast and break things" for too long and has decided, instead, to move slow and make things slightly worse on purpose. To hack is to seek mastery over a system. To perform a hack dthrip is to dance with the system’s failure modes, to find the strange poetry in a typo, to build the dresser that cannot stand. It is, in the end, a deeply human gesture: the choice to be gloriously, productively useless. Our first example is a bot that, for
The Hack dthrip: Towards a Theory of Glitch Aesthetics and the Anti-Productive Impulse in Post-Digital Labor The hack dthrip here functions as a defamiliarization
In 2024, a piece of generative art was uploaded to a popular NFT marketplace. Its code was simple:
