The only way to win is not to play.
May. 8th, 2006 03:02 amI never do quizzes, I didn't do this one either... But guess who did:
(As if the bunny didn't give it away.)
The only way to get a high score on this thing is to cheat of course...

-bash-3.00$ dig iq-challenge.com
; <<>> DiG 9.2.5 <<>> iq-challenge.com
;; global options: printcmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 37142
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONAL: 2
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;iq-challenge.com. IN A
;; ANSWER SECTION:
iq-challenge.com. 14030 IN A 205.234.161.62
;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
iq-challenge.com. 14030 IN NS ns1.
triggur.org.
iq-challenge.com. 14030 IN NS ns2.triggur.org.
;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
ns1..org. 86030 IN A 205.234.161.63
ns2..org. 86030 IN A 205.234.161.64
(As if the bunny didn't give it away.)
The only way to get a high score on this thing is to cheat of course...

no subject
Date: 2006-05-08 10:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-08 11:30 am (UTC)To put on my armchair psychologist hat [and to mix metaphors] here for a moment, people who do these online quizzes, and get results close to what they already believe, or want to believe about themselves, will post the results to their social peer group. It allows them to brag, and yet seem completely objective.
That is, if they just randomly asserted: "I have an IQ of 157!" or something. That will typically lower the speakers status among their peers. But if they said that: "Objective third party says I have an IQ of 157. That's not me saying that!" Then their status among their peers will go up. I bet that even more than that, if the 'objective third party' is a member of the peer group already, or is held in a socially high status [alpha, beta?] by the peer group, the person gets tons of bonus social points.
Dry academic looking IQ test ↔ high social strata.
[Which] Hee Haw character [are you quiz] ↔ low social strata.
Teachers, Professors, Researchers, Scientists ↔ high social strata.
Dukes of Hazard TV characters ↔ low social strata.
Authority figures ↔ high etc.
And I'm sure that Triggur knew this when he designed the test.
I didn't read any of the questions, and just clicked "A" on everything to get to the end quickly. (So I could grab the image above, and to see if the SHA1 hash used for the 'uid's was based on anything, or random (or an HMAC of an unknown nonce, which is basically random from my point of view).) Digging the results page out of my pcap log, look at how it strokes the reader's ego and encourages boasting to peers:
You scored 161 on your IQ test. The average person scores 100! Your intelligence quotient of 161 is very high compared with most people!
This is something to crow about!
And the test looked like someone really smart had put a lot of thought into designing it... so it is a really smart person saying that you're also really smart.
And so the joke is to make you look not-smart in front of your peers. Or maybe I'm over-explaining this.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-09 02:36 pm (UTC)People who brag about how smart they are in front of their friends deserve this kind of thing.