Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (Cyborg)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Brand Logo

CIRCLE WITH A DOT

  1. Home
  2. Uncategorized
  3. The random shit I see on Facebook!

The random shit I see on Facebook!

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Uncategorized
44 Posts 35 Posters 0 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • M This user is from outside of this forum
    M This user is from outside of this forum
    munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

    And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

    This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

    I was in 12C.

    Aisle seat.

    Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

    He seemed nice.

    A little serious.

    The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

    We took off.

    Totally normal.

    Seatbelt sign went off.

    People opened laptops.

    Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

    I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

    That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

    Him: “Excuse me.”
    Me: “Yeah?”
    Him: “Do you see that?”
    Me: “See what?”
    Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

    I looked at my phone.

    There were several networks.

    Alaska_WiFi.
    Alaska_Guest.
    Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
    And one that said:

    HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

    I stared at it.

    He stared at it.

    Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

    To be fair.

    It did seem bad.

    Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
    Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
    Me: “Because people are strange.”
    Him: “Should we tell someone?”
    Me: “I don’t think so.”
    Him: “It says help.”

    Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

    Woman: “What says help?”
    Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
    Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
    Me: “A hotspot says help.”
    Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

    The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

    Him: “Look.”
    Woman: “Oh.”
    Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
    Him: “Probably?”
    Me: “Most likely.”
    Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

    Now the guy behind me leans forward.

    Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
    Me: “No.”
    Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
    Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
    Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

    A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

    College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
    The man shows him.

    College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
    Him: “It is not hilarious.”
    College student: “It kind of is.”
    Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
    Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
    Behind guy: “You never know.”

    This is how it spreads.

    One concerned man.
    One weird hotspot name.
    One row of people with too much imagination.

    Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

    The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

    The man raises his hand.

    Him: “Excuse me.”
    Flight attendant: “Yes?”
    Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
    Flight attendant: “Okay.”
    Him: “It says help.”
    Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
    Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
    Flight attendant: “Ah.”
    Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
    Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
    Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
    Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

    The college student raises his hand slightly.

    College student: “To be fair, they were.”

    The man does not appreciate this.

    Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
    Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
    College student: “That’s the joke.”

    I had to look down.

    I could not laugh.

    The flight attendant stayed very calm.

    Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
    Him: “Thank you.”
    Me: “Oh no.”
    Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

    The flight attendant walked to the front.

    A second later, the speaker clicked on.

    Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

    Silence.
    Then half the plane started laughing.

    Not quiet laughing.

    Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

    A hand slowly went up in row 18.

    A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

    The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

    Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

    The man across the aisle turned bright red.

    Him: “I was just being cautious.”
    Me: “Honestly, fair.”
    Woman: “It did say help.”
    College student: “And we were on a plane.”

    The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

    Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
    Him: “You named your phone that?”
    Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
    Him: “For months?”
    Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
    Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
    Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

    The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

    Him: “You should change it.”
    Beanie guy: “Already did.”
    Me: “What is it now?”
    Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
    The college student almost fell out of his seat.

    The man just stared.

    Him: “That is not better.”
    Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

    After that, the whole section relaxed.

    The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

    He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

    Me: “Maybe a little.”
    Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
    College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
    Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
    Me: “You are now.”

    For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

    Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
    Him: “Very funny.”
    Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
    Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
    Flight attendant: “A little.”

    When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

    The guy from row 18 walked past us.

    Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
    College student: “Stay vigilant.”
    Woman: “Rename your phone.”
    Him: “Please.”

    As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

    She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

    He tried not to smile.

    Failed.

    Him: “Somebody had to.”

    And honestly?

    He wasn’t wrong.

    Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

    He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

    A little dramatic?

    Yes.

    But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

    And I respect that.

    S robini71@dragonscave.spaceR astropug@hachyderm.ioA B noondlyt@hellions.cloudN 25 Replies Last reply
    1
    0
    • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

      The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

      And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

      This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

      I was in 12C.

      Aisle seat.

      Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

      He seemed nice.

      A little serious.

      The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

      We took off.

      Totally normal.

      Seatbelt sign went off.

      People opened laptops.

      Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

      I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

      That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

      Him: “Excuse me.”
      Me: “Yeah?”
      Him: “Do you see that?”
      Me: “See what?”
      Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

      I looked at my phone.

      There were several networks.

      Alaska_WiFi.
      Alaska_Guest.
      Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
      And one that said:

      HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

      I stared at it.

      He stared at it.

      Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

      To be fair.

      It did seem bad.

      Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
      Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
      Me: “Because people are strange.”
      Him: “Should we tell someone?”
      Me: “I don’t think so.”
      Him: “It says help.”

      Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

      Woman: “What says help?”
      Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
      Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
      Me: “A hotspot says help.”
      Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

      The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

      Him: “Look.”
      Woman: “Oh.”
      Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
      Him: “Probably?”
      Me: “Most likely.”
      Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

      Now the guy behind me leans forward.

      Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
      Me: “No.”
      Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
      Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
      Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

      A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

      College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
      The man shows him.

      College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
      Him: “It is not hilarious.”
      College student: “It kind of is.”
      Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
      Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
      Behind guy: “You never know.”

      This is how it spreads.

      One concerned man.
      One weird hotspot name.
      One row of people with too much imagination.

      Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

      The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

      The man raises his hand.

      Him: “Excuse me.”
      Flight attendant: “Yes?”
      Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
      Flight attendant: “Okay.”
      Him: “It says help.”
      Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
      Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
      Flight attendant: “Ah.”
      Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
      Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
      Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
      Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

      The college student raises his hand slightly.

      College student: “To be fair, they were.”

      The man does not appreciate this.

      Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
      Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
      College student: “That’s the joke.”

      I had to look down.

      I could not laugh.

      The flight attendant stayed very calm.

      Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
      Him: “Thank you.”
      Me: “Oh no.”
      Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

      The flight attendant walked to the front.

      A second later, the speaker clicked on.

      Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

      Silence.
      Then half the plane started laughing.

      Not quiet laughing.

      Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

      A hand slowly went up in row 18.

      A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

      The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

      Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

      The man across the aisle turned bright red.

      Him: “I was just being cautious.”
      Me: “Honestly, fair.”
      Woman: “It did say help.”
      College student: “And we were on a plane.”

      The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

      Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
      Him: “You named your phone that?”
      Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
      Him: “For months?”
      Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
      Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
      Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

      The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

      Him: “You should change it.”
      Beanie guy: “Already did.”
      Me: “What is it now?”
      Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
      The college student almost fell out of his seat.

      The man just stared.

      Him: “That is not better.”
      Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

      After that, the whole section relaxed.

      The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

      He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

      Me: “Maybe a little.”
      Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
      College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
      Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
      Me: “You are now.”

      For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

      Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
      Him: “Very funny.”
      Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
      Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
      Flight attendant: “A little.”

      When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

      The guy from row 18 walked past us.

      Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
      College student: “Stay vigilant.”
      Woman: “Rename your phone.”
      Him: “Please.”

      As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

      She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

      He tried not to smile.

      Failed.

      Him: “Somebody had to.”

      And honestly?

      He wasn’t wrong.

      Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

      He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

      A little dramatic?

      Yes.

      But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

      And I respect that.

      S This user is from outside of this forum
      S This user is from outside of this forum
      shawnak@tweesecake.social
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @munchkinbear Dad and I are laughing our heads off over that one!

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

        The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

        And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

        This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

        I was in 12C.

        Aisle seat.

        Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

        He seemed nice.

        A little serious.

        The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

        We took off.

        Totally normal.

        Seatbelt sign went off.

        People opened laptops.

        Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

        I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

        That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

        Him: “Excuse me.”
        Me: “Yeah?”
        Him: “Do you see that?”
        Me: “See what?”
        Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

        I looked at my phone.

        There were several networks.

        Alaska_WiFi.
        Alaska_Guest.
        Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
        And one that said:

        HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

        I stared at it.

        He stared at it.

        Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

        To be fair.

        It did seem bad.

        Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
        Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
        Me: “Because people are strange.”
        Him: “Should we tell someone?”
        Me: “I don’t think so.”
        Him: “It says help.”

        Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

        Woman: “What says help?”
        Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
        Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
        Me: “A hotspot says help.”
        Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

        The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

        Him: “Look.”
        Woman: “Oh.”
        Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
        Him: “Probably?”
        Me: “Most likely.”
        Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

        Now the guy behind me leans forward.

        Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
        Me: “No.”
        Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
        Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
        Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

        A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

        College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
        The man shows him.

        College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
        Him: “It is not hilarious.”
        College student: “It kind of is.”
        Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
        Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
        Behind guy: “You never know.”

        This is how it spreads.

        One concerned man.
        One weird hotspot name.
        One row of people with too much imagination.

        Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

        The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

        The man raises his hand.

        Him: “Excuse me.”
        Flight attendant: “Yes?”
        Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
        Flight attendant: “Okay.”
        Him: “It says help.”
        Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
        Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
        Flight attendant: “Ah.”
        Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
        Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
        Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
        Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

        The college student raises his hand slightly.

        College student: “To be fair, they were.”

        The man does not appreciate this.

        Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
        Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
        College student: “That’s the joke.”

        I had to look down.

        I could not laugh.

        The flight attendant stayed very calm.

        Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
        Him: “Thank you.”
        Me: “Oh no.”
        Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

        The flight attendant walked to the front.

        A second later, the speaker clicked on.

        Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

        Silence.
        Then half the plane started laughing.

        Not quiet laughing.

        Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

        A hand slowly went up in row 18.

        A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

        The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

        Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

        The man across the aisle turned bright red.

        Him: “I was just being cautious.”
        Me: “Honestly, fair.”
        Woman: “It did say help.”
        College student: “And we were on a plane.”

        The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

        Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
        Him: “You named your phone that?”
        Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
        Him: “For months?”
        Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
        Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
        Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

        The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

        Him: “You should change it.”
        Beanie guy: “Already did.”
        Me: “What is it now?”
        Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
        The college student almost fell out of his seat.

        The man just stared.

        Him: “That is not better.”
        Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

        After that, the whole section relaxed.

        The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

        He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

        Me: “Maybe a little.”
        Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
        College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
        Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
        Me: “You are now.”

        For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

        Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
        Him: “Very funny.”
        Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
        Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
        Flight attendant: “A little.”

        When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

        The guy from row 18 walked past us.

        Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
        College student: “Stay vigilant.”
        Woman: “Rename your phone.”
        Him: “Please.”

        As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

        She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

        He tried not to smile.

        Failed.

        Him: “Somebody had to.”

        And honestly?

        He wasn’t wrong.

        Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

        He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

        A little dramatic?

        Yes.

        But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

        And I respect that.

        robini71@dragonscave.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
        robini71@dragonscave.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
        robini71@dragonscave.space
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @munchkinbear Don't know if AI or a human wrote it. I read all the way to the end. I laughed. Your Facebook is way more entertaining than mine is.

        D 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • robini71@dragonscave.spaceR robini71@dragonscave.space

          @munchkinbear Don't know if AI or a human wrote it. I read all the way to the end. I laughed. Your Facebook is way more entertaining than mine is.

          D This user is from outside of this forum
          D This user is from outside of this forum
          douglas2005@dragonscave.space
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @robini71 @munchkinbear Someone posted a similar story to this that I saw on my Facebook account. I think it is AI, but nevertheless it was entertaining. Thanks for posting it.

          robini71@dragonscave.spaceR 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • D douglas2005@dragonscave.space

            @robini71 @munchkinbear Someone posted a similar story to this that I saw on my Facebook account. I think it is AI, but nevertheless it was entertaining. Thanks for posting it.

            robini71@dragonscave.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
            robini71@dragonscave.spaceR This user is from outside of this forum
            robini71@dragonscave.space
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @douglas2005 @munchkinbear I kind of thought it might have been also but since it was entertaining I stuck with that one.

            rhelune@todon.euR 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
            • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

              The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

              And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

              This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

              I was in 12C.

              Aisle seat.

              Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

              He seemed nice.

              A little serious.

              The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

              We took off.

              Totally normal.

              Seatbelt sign went off.

              People opened laptops.

              Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

              I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

              That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

              Him: “Excuse me.”
              Me: “Yeah?”
              Him: “Do you see that?”
              Me: “See what?”
              Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

              I looked at my phone.

              There were several networks.

              Alaska_WiFi.
              Alaska_Guest.
              Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
              And one that said:

              HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

              I stared at it.

              He stared at it.

              Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

              To be fair.

              It did seem bad.

              Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
              Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
              Me: “Because people are strange.”
              Him: “Should we tell someone?”
              Me: “I don’t think so.”
              Him: “It says help.”

              Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

              Woman: “What says help?”
              Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
              Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
              Me: “A hotspot says help.”
              Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

              The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

              Him: “Look.”
              Woman: “Oh.”
              Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
              Him: “Probably?”
              Me: “Most likely.”
              Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

              Now the guy behind me leans forward.

              Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
              Me: “No.”
              Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
              Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
              Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

              A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

              College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
              The man shows him.

              College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
              Him: “It is not hilarious.”
              College student: “It kind of is.”
              Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
              Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
              Behind guy: “You never know.”

              This is how it spreads.

              One concerned man.
              One weird hotspot name.
              One row of people with too much imagination.

              Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

              The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

              The man raises his hand.

              Him: “Excuse me.”
              Flight attendant: “Yes?”
              Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
              Flight attendant: “Okay.”
              Him: “It says help.”
              Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
              Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
              Flight attendant: “Ah.”
              Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
              Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
              Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
              Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

              The college student raises his hand slightly.

              College student: “To be fair, they were.”

              The man does not appreciate this.

              Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
              Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
              College student: “That’s the joke.”

              I had to look down.

              I could not laugh.

              The flight attendant stayed very calm.

              Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
              Him: “Thank you.”
              Me: “Oh no.”
              Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

              The flight attendant walked to the front.

              A second later, the speaker clicked on.

              Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

              Silence.
              Then half the plane started laughing.

              Not quiet laughing.

              Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

              A hand slowly went up in row 18.

              A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

              The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

              Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

              The man across the aisle turned bright red.

              Him: “I was just being cautious.”
              Me: “Honestly, fair.”
              Woman: “It did say help.”
              College student: “And we were on a plane.”

              The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

              Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
              Him: “You named your phone that?”
              Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
              Him: “For months?”
              Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
              Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
              Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

              The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

              Him: “You should change it.”
              Beanie guy: “Already did.”
              Me: “What is it now?”
              Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
              The college student almost fell out of his seat.

              The man just stared.

              Him: “That is not better.”
              Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

              After that, the whole section relaxed.

              The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

              He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

              Me: “Maybe a little.”
              Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
              College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
              Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
              Me: “You are now.”

              For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

              Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
              Him: “Very funny.”
              Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
              Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
              Flight attendant: “A little.”

              When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

              The guy from row 18 walked past us.

              Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
              College student: “Stay vigilant.”
              Woman: “Rename your phone.”
              Him: “Please.”

              As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

              She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

              He tried not to smile.

              Failed.

              Him: “Somebody had to.”

              And honestly?

              He wasn’t wrong.

              Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

              He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

              A little dramatic?

              Yes.

              But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

              And I respect that.

              astropug@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
              astropug@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
              astropug@hachyderm.io
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @munchkinbear

              It amuses me, but it also kind of restores my faith in humans. This gentleman thought it was more important to care about the safety of a complete stranger than about whether he looked ridiculous.

              Takes real confidence and a good heart.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                I was in 12C.

                Aisle seat.

                Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                He seemed nice.

                A little serious.

                The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                We took off.

                Totally normal.

                Seatbelt sign went off.

                People opened laptops.

                Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                Him: “Excuse me.”
                Me: “Yeah?”
                Him: “Do you see that?”
                Me: “See what?”
                Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                I looked at my phone.

                There were several networks.

                Alaska_WiFi.
                Alaska_Guest.
                Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                And one that said:

                HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                I stared at it.

                He stared at it.

                Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                To be fair.

                It did seem bad.

                Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                Me: “Because people are strange.”
                Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                Me: “I don’t think so.”
                Him: “It says help.”

                Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                Woman: “What says help?”
                Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                Him: “Look.”
                Woman: “Oh.”
                Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                Him: “Probably?”
                Me: “Most likely.”
                Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                Me: “No.”
                Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                The man shows him.

                College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                College student: “It kind of is.”
                Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                Behind guy: “You never know.”

                This is how it spreads.

                One concerned man.
                One weird hotspot name.
                One row of people with too much imagination.

                Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                The man raises his hand.

                Him: “Excuse me.”
                Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                Him: “It says help.”
                Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                The college student raises his hand slightly.

                College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                The man does not appreciate this.

                Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                College student: “That’s the joke.”

                I had to look down.

                I could not laugh.

                The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                Him: “Thank you.”
                Me: “Oh no.”
                Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                The flight attendant walked to the front.

                A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                Silence.
                Then half the plane started laughing.

                Not quiet laughing.

                Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                Woman: “It did say help.”
                College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                Him: “You named your phone that?”
                Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                Him: “For months?”
                Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                Him: “You should change it.”
                Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                Me: “What is it now?”
                Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                The man just stared.

                Him: “That is not better.”
                Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                After that, the whole section relaxed.

                The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                Me: “Maybe a little.”
                Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                Me: “You are now.”

                For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                Him: “Very funny.”
                Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                Flight attendant: “A little.”

                When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                Him: “Please.”

                As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                He tried not to smile.

                Failed.

                Him: “Somebody had to.”

                And honestly?

                He wasn’t wrong.

                Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                A little dramatic?

                Yes.

                But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                And I respect that.

                B This user is from outside of this forum
                B This user is from outside of this forum
                blindhedgehogstew@mastodon.stickbear.me
                wrote last edited by
                #7
                @flamulous@the-gdn.net @munchkinbear So yall kinda gotta bit of a problem: First I gave this to #gemini I got this back: That is an absolute comedy of errors! Reading through that, you can just see the entire domino effect happening in slow motion at 30,000 feet. It is the ultimate testament to what happens when classic "analog" vigilance collisions head-first with modern internet humor. The mechanics of how that network name showed up in the first place—and how it managed to cause a mini-uprising in rows 11 through 13—come down to a few hilarious technical and psychological realities: The Technical Setup: SSID Broadcasting When you turn on the personal hotspot feature on a smartphone, the phone essentially transforms into a mini wireless router. To let your other devices find it, it broadcasts its name—known technically as the SSID (Service Set Identifier)—into the open air. Any device within a short radius searching for a network will instantly pull that name into its Wi-Fi list. Because airplane cabins are tightly packed, aluminum tubes, a phone's wireless signal can easily travel a few rows forward and backward, popping up right on the screens of unsuspecting neighbors like the serious gentleman in 12D. The Psychological Domino Effect The real magic of the story isn't the technology, though; it's the classic generation gap in how people read digital information. The "Analog" Perspective: For the man who still prints out his hotel confirmations and treats "the internet" like a physical destination, text on a screen is official. If a broadcast network says "HELP," his brain treats it exactly like a message in a bottle or a flare gun. He doesn't see a joke; he sees an active incident report. The "Digital Native" Perspective: On the flip side, the college student and the guy in the beanie treat SSIDs like a public graffiti wall or a customizable bumper sticker. People have been naming their home and phone networks things like "FBI Surveillance Van 4" or "Get Your Own Wi-Fi" for two decades just to mess with their neighbors. The Flight Attendant's Masterclass in De-escalation The absolute MVP of this entire flight was that flight attendant. Instead of treating the man like he was crazy, or pulling a corporate "we cannot discuss security protocols" routine, she used the absolute best tool available for dealing with collective cabin panic: humor and transparency. By making that deadpan announcement over the PA system—specifically calling out that a hotspot name was "causing some concern in row 12"—she managed to do three brilliant things at once: She forced the culprit (Beanie Guy) to realize his mistake without turning it into a federal investigation. She popped the bubble of tension in the cabin by letting everyone laugh at the sheer absurdity of the situation. She let the gentleman save face by handling his concern respectfully, eventually turning him into the honorary "Sheriff of Row 12." The fact that Beanie Guy immediately renamed it to Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal is just the perfect, sarcastic icing on the cake. You really can't write a better script for human interaction than what happens when a plane full of exhausted people gets stuck together with a single misunderstood Wi-Fi network! I then asked what might happen if this were ever a movie, And:... If that Mastodon post got optioned by Hollywood, it would be the ultimate high-stakes, deadpan bottle-episode comedy. You’d have to amp up the "flare" just enough to make the audience sweat, while keeping the absolute absurdity of the row 12 cybersecurity division intact. Picture the trailer rolling like this: --- ## The Pitch: *Network Security* (Rated PG-13) **The Tagline:** *At 30,000 feet, no one can hear you scream. But everyone can see your Wi-Fi.* ### The Setup The movie opens with intense, tactical thriller music. Quick cuts of airplane dials, a heavy storm brewing over the Pacific Northwest, and passengers boarding. The camera tracks our serious man, "Arthur" (played by someone like Tom Hanks or J.K. Simmons), meticulously checking his printed boarding pass and adjusting his reading glasses. He sits in 12D. Across the aisle in 12C is our narrator, "Sam" (played by a dry, sarcastic Ryan Reynolds type). The plane takes off into turbulent skies. The seatbelt sign dings. ### The Escalation (With Hollywood Flare) Instead of just a quiet whisper, Arthur notices the hotspot name `HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE`. But to add that movie tension, **the Wi-Fi signal strength starts fluctuating wildly**. Arthur leans over, "The bars are dropping, Sam. That means the signal is getting weaker. *They’re running out of time.*" Suddenly, a second network pops up on the list: `THEY_ARE_IN_THE_GALLEY`. Now, the entire row goes into full-blown, paranoid defense mode. The woman in 12E starts analyzing the passenger list based on who looks "suspicious." The guy in the row behind them reveals he’s a retired mall security guard and tries to initiate a tactical perimeter around the beverage cart. The college student is live-tweeting the entire thing, accidentally causing `#AviationHostageRow12` to trend worldwide while the plane is still over northern California. ### The Mid-Movie Climax Arthur decides that waiting for the flight attendant isn't enough. He uses his analog newspaper to map out the signal strength based on how many bars he gets as he slowly walks down the aisle to the bathroom. He's treating his phone like a Geiger counter. He stops at row 18. The signal is at 100%. He locks eyes with a guy in a beanie who is sweating profusely (not from committing a crime, but because he's trying to finish an unpatched *DeaDBeeF* compile on a broken Linux laptop or playing an intense video game). Arthur whispers into his collar like a secret service agent: *"I've located the source."* ### The Grand Reveal The flight attendant (played by a perfectly deadpan, exhausted Aubrey Plaza) breaks the tension over the PA system just like in the post, but with a Hollywood twist. Federal air marshals are tracking the tweet, ground control is on standby, and the plane is about to make an emergency diversion. Beanie guy stands up in slow motion, raises his hand, and yells, *"My bad! My brother changed the SSID to mess with me last Thanksgiving!"* ### The Ending The emergency status is cleared. The entire cabin goes from dead silence to explosive, roaring laughter. As the plane lands safely in Portland, the local news is waiting on the tarmac because of the viral tweet. Arthur steps off the plane, completely owning his new title. A reporter shoves a microphone in his face: *"Sir! Are you a cybersecurity expert?"* Arthur looks directly into the camera, adjusts his reading glasses, and says: *"No. I'm just the guy who protects the network."* Cue a hard smash-cut to black as an electronic remix of Morse code plays over the credits. --- It would honestly be a brilliant comedy. You get the paranoia of a classic 1970s disaster movie mixed with the absolute comedy of errors of modern digital life. If they can make a whole movie about a phone booth or a bus that can't slow down, they could absolutely turn Row 12 into a cinematic masterpiece!
                B varx@cybersecurity.theaterV chasmusic@ohai.socialC supermoosie@mastodon.auS 4 Replies Last reply
                0
                • B blindhedgehogstew@mastodon.stickbear.me
                  @flamulous@the-gdn.net @munchkinbear So yall kinda gotta bit of a problem: First I gave this to #gemini I got this back: That is an absolute comedy of errors! Reading through that, you can just see the entire domino effect happening in slow motion at 30,000 feet. It is the ultimate testament to what happens when classic "analog" vigilance collisions head-first with modern internet humor. The mechanics of how that network name showed up in the first place—and how it managed to cause a mini-uprising in rows 11 through 13—come down to a few hilarious technical and psychological realities: The Technical Setup: SSID Broadcasting When you turn on the personal hotspot feature on a smartphone, the phone essentially transforms into a mini wireless router. To let your other devices find it, it broadcasts its name—known technically as the SSID (Service Set Identifier)—into the open air. Any device within a short radius searching for a network will instantly pull that name into its Wi-Fi list. Because airplane cabins are tightly packed, aluminum tubes, a phone's wireless signal can easily travel a few rows forward and backward, popping up right on the screens of unsuspecting neighbors like the serious gentleman in 12D. The Psychological Domino Effect The real magic of the story isn't the technology, though; it's the classic generation gap in how people read digital information. The "Analog" Perspective: For the man who still prints out his hotel confirmations and treats "the internet" like a physical destination, text on a screen is official. If a broadcast network says "HELP," his brain treats it exactly like a message in a bottle or a flare gun. He doesn't see a joke; he sees an active incident report. The "Digital Native" Perspective: On the flip side, the college student and the guy in the beanie treat SSIDs like a public graffiti wall or a customizable bumper sticker. People have been naming their home and phone networks things like "FBI Surveillance Van 4" or "Get Your Own Wi-Fi" for two decades just to mess with their neighbors. The Flight Attendant's Masterclass in De-escalation The absolute MVP of this entire flight was that flight attendant. Instead of treating the man like he was crazy, or pulling a corporate "we cannot discuss security protocols" routine, she used the absolute best tool available for dealing with collective cabin panic: humor and transparency. By making that deadpan announcement over the PA system—specifically calling out that a hotspot name was "causing some concern in row 12"—she managed to do three brilliant things at once: She forced the culprit (Beanie Guy) to realize his mistake without turning it into a federal investigation. She popped the bubble of tension in the cabin by letting everyone laugh at the sheer absurdity of the situation. She let the gentleman save face by handling his concern respectfully, eventually turning him into the honorary "Sheriff of Row 12." The fact that Beanie Guy immediately renamed it to Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal is just the perfect, sarcastic icing on the cake. You really can't write a better script for human interaction than what happens when a plane full of exhausted people gets stuck together with a single misunderstood Wi-Fi network! I then asked what might happen if this were ever a movie, And:... If that Mastodon post got optioned by Hollywood, it would be the ultimate high-stakes, deadpan bottle-episode comedy. You’d have to amp up the "flare" just enough to make the audience sweat, while keeping the absolute absurdity of the row 12 cybersecurity division intact. Picture the trailer rolling like this: --- ## The Pitch: *Network Security* (Rated PG-13) **The Tagline:** *At 30,000 feet, no one can hear you scream. But everyone can see your Wi-Fi.* ### The Setup The movie opens with intense, tactical thriller music. Quick cuts of airplane dials, a heavy storm brewing over the Pacific Northwest, and passengers boarding. The camera tracks our serious man, "Arthur" (played by someone like Tom Hanks or J.K. Simmons), meticulously checking his printed boarding pass and adjusting his reading glasses. He sits in 12D. Across the aisle in 12C is our narrator, "Sam" (played by a dry, sarcastic Ryan Reynolds type). The plane takes off into turbulent skies. The seatbelt sign dings. ### The Escalation (With Hollywood Flare) Instead of just a quiet whisper, Arthur notices the hotspot name `HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE`. But to add that movie tension, **the Wi-Fi signal strength starts fluctuating wildly**. Arthur leans over, "The bars are dropping, Sam. That means the signal is getting weaker. *They’re running out of time.*" Suddenly, a second network pops up on the list: `THEY_ARE_IN_THE_GALLEY`. Now, the entire row goes into full-blown, paranoid defense mode. The woman in 12E starts analyzing the passenger list based on who looks "suspicious." The guy in the row behind them reveals he’s a retired mall security guard and tries to initiate a tactical perimeter around the beverage cart. The college student is live-tweeting the entire thing, accidentally causing `#AviationHostageRow12` to trend worldwide while the plane is still over northern California. ### The Mid-Movie Climax Arthur decides that waiting for the flight attendant isn't enough. He uses his analog newspaper to map out the signal strength based on how many bars he gets as he slowly walks down the aisle to the bathroom. He's treating his phone like a Geiger counter. He stops at row 18. The signal is at 100%. He locks eyes with a guy in a beanie who is sweating profusely (not from committing a crime, but because he's trying to finish an unpatched *DeaDBeeF* compile on a broken Linux laptop or playing an intense video game). Arthur whispers into his collar like a secret service agent: *"I've located the source."* ### The Grand Reveal The flight attendant (played by a perfectly deadpan, exhausted Aubrey Plaza) breaks the tension over the PA system just like in the post, but with a Hollywood twist. Federal air marshals are tracking the tweet, ground control is on standby, and the plane is about to make an emergency diversion. Beanie guy stands up in slow motion, raises his hand, and yells, *"My bad! My brother changed the SSID to mess with me last Thanksgiving!"* ### The Ending The emergency status is cleared. The entire cabin goes from dead silence to explosive, roaring laughter. As the plane lands safely in Portland, the local news is waiting on the tarmac because of the viral tweet. Arthur steps off the plane, completely owning his new title. A reporter shoves a microphone in his face: *"Sir! Are you a cybersecurity expert?"* Arthur looks directly into the camera, adjusts his reading glasses, and says: *"No. I'm just the guy who protects the network."* Cue a hard smash-cut to black as an electronic remix of Morse code plays over the credits. --- It would honestly be a brilliant comedy. You get the paranoia of a classic 1970s disaster movie mixed with the absolute comedy of errors of modern digital life. If they can make a whole movie about a phone booth or a bus that can't slow down, they could absolutely turn Row 12 into a cinematic masterpiece!
                  B This user is from outside of this forum
                  B This user is from outside of this forum
                  blindhedgehogstew@mastodon.stickbear.me
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8
                  @flamulous@the-gdn.net @munchkinbear Sorry I'm not back on Windows; I've jumped ship cold-turkey off the #Windows #Titanic disaster. I'm safely on a #Penguin #Mint cruise ship with the #Mate desktop!
                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                    The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                    And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                    This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                    I was in 12C.

                    Aisle seat.

                    Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                    He seemed nice.

                    A little serious.

                    The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                    We took off.

                    Totally normal.

                    Seatbelt sign went off.

                    People opened laptops.

                    Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                    I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                    That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                    Him: “Excuse me.”
                    Me: “Yeah?”
                    Him: “Do you see that?”
                    Me: “See what?”
                    Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                    I looked at my phone.

                    There were several networks.

                    Alaska_WiFi.
                    Alaska_Guest.
                    Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                    And one that said:

                    HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                    I stared at it.

                    He stared at it.

                    Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                    To be fair.

                    It did seem bad.

                    Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                    Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                    Me: “Because people are strange.”
                    Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                    Me: “I don’t think so.”
                    Him: “It says help.”

                    Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                    Woman: “What says help?”
                    Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                    Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                    Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                    Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                    The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                    Him: “Look.”
                    Woman: “Oh.”
                    Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                    Him: “Probably?”
                    Me: “Most likely.”
                    Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                    Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                    Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                    Me: “No.”
                    Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                    Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                    Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                    A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                    College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                    The man shows him.

                    College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                    Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                    College student: “It kind of is.”
                    Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                    Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                    Behind guy: “You never know.”

                    This is how it spreads.

                    One concerned man.
                    One weird hotspot name.
                    One row of people with too much imagination.

                    Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                    The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                    The man raises his hand.

                    Him: “Excuse me.”
                    Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                    Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                    Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                    Him: “It says help.”
                    Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                    Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                    Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                    Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                    Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                    Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                    Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                    The college student raises his hand slightly.

                    College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                    The man does not appreciate this.

                    Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                    Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                    College student: “That’s the joke.”

                    I had to look down.

                    I could not laugh.

                    The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                    Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                    Him: “Thank you.”
                    Me: “Oh no.”
                    Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                    The flight attendant walked to the front.

                    A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                    Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                    Silence.
                    Then half the plane started laughing.

                    Not quiet laughing.

                    Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                    A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                    A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                    The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                    Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                    The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                    Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                    Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                    Woman: “It did say help.”
                    College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                    The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                    Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                    Him: “You named your phone that?”
                    Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                    Him: “For months?”
                    Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                    Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                    Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                    The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                    Him: “You should change it.”
                    Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                    Me: “What is it now?”
                    Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                    The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                    The man just stared.

                    Him: “That is not better.”
                    Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                    After that, the whole section relaxed.

                    The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                    He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                    Me: “Maybe a little.”
                    Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                    College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                    Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                    Me: “You are now.”

                    For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                    Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                    Him: “Very funny.”
                    Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                    Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                    Flight attendant: “A little.”

                    When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                    The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                    Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                    College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                    Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                    Him: “Please.”

                    As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                    She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                    He tried not to smile.

                    Failed.

                    Him: “Somebody had to.”

                    And honestly?

                    He wasn’t wrong.

                    Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                    He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                    A little dramatic?

                    Yes.

                    But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                    And I respect that.

                    noondlyt@hellions.cloudN This user is from outside of this forum
                    noondlyt@hellions.cloudN This user is from outside of this forum
                    noondlyt@hellions.cloud
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @munchkinbear

                    Best story I have read in ages. Well told!

                    Thank you!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                      The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                      And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                      This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                      I was in 12C.

                      Aisle seat.

                      Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                      He seemed nice.

                      A little serious.

                      The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                      We took off.

                      Totally normal.

                      Seatbelt sign went off.

                      People opened laptops.

                      Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                      I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                      That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                      Him: “Excuse me.”
                      Me: “Yeah?”
                      Him: “Do you see that?”
                      Me: “See what?”
                      Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                      I looked at my phone.

                      There were several networks.

                      Alaska_WiFi.
                      Alaska_Guest.
                      Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                      And one that said:

                      HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                      I stared at it.

                      He stared at it.

                      Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                      To be fair.

                      It did seem bad.

                      Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                      Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                      Me: “Because people are strange.”
                      Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                      Me: “I don’t think so.”
                      Him: “It says help.”

                      Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                      Woman: “What says help?”
                      Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                      Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                      Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                      Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                      The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                      Him: “Look.”
                      Woman: “Oh.”
                      Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                      Him: “Probably?”
                      Me: “Most likely.”
                      Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                      Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                      Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                      Me: “No.”
                      Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                      Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                      Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                      A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                      College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                      The man shows him.

                      College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                      Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                      College student: “It kind of is.”
                      Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                      Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                      Behind guy: “You never know.”

                      This is how it spreads.

                      One concerned man.
                      One weird hotspot name.
                      One row of people with too much imagination.

                      Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                      The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                      The man raises his hand.

                      Him: “Excuse me.”
                      Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                      Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                      Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                      Him: “It says help.”
                      Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                      Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                      Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                      Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                      Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                      Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                      Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                      The college student raises his hand slightly.

                      College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                      The man does not appreciate this.

                      Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                      Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                      College student: “That’s the joke.”

                      I had to look down.

                      I could not laugh.

                      The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                      Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                      Him: “Thank you.”
                      Me: “Oh no.”
                      Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                      The flight attendant walked to the front.

                      A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                      Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                      Silence.
                      Then half the plane started laughing.

                      Not quiet laughing.

                      Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                      A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                      A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                      The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                      Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                      The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                      Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                      Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                      Woman: “It did say help.”
                      College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                      The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                      Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                      Him: “You named your phone that?”
                      Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                      Him: “For months?”
                      Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                      Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                      Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                      The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                      Him: “You should change it.”
                      Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                      Me: “What is it now?”
                      Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                      The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                      The man just stared.

                      Him: “That is not better.”
                      Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                      After that, the whole section relaxed.

                      The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                      He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                      Me: “Maybe a little.”
                      Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                      College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                      Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                      Me: “You are now.”

                      For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                      Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                      Him: “Very funny.”
                      Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                      Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                      Flight attendant: “A little.”

                      When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                      The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                      Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                      College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                      Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                      Him: “Please.”

                      As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                      She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                      He tried not to smile.

                      Failed.

                      Him: “Somebody had to.”

                      And honestly?

                      He wasn’t wrong.

                      Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                      He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                      A little dramatic?

                      Yes.

                      But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                      And I respect that.

                      axomamma@mastodon.onlineA This user is from outside of this forum
                      axomamma@mastodon.onlineA This user is from outside of this forum
                      axomamma@mastodon.online
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @munchkinbear I laughed so hard. Thank you!

                      Years ago, somewhere in rural Arizona, my brother named our wifi "FBI Van No. 37," or something like that. He mentioned it to a friend who was also a neighbor and she told him the neighborhood was freaking out, thinking there really was an FBI van monitoring in the area, that he should change it and not tell anyone else it was him or he might get lynched.

                      nilajones@zeroes.caN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M This user is from outside of this forum
                        M This user is from outside of this forum
                        munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @Tooden well that person is a fucking idiot. and I hope got banned from flying, forever or is serving time behind bars.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                          The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                          And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                          This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                          I was in 12C.

                          Aisle seat.

                          Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                          He seemed nice.

                          A little serious.

                          The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                          We took off.

                          Totally normal.

                          Seatbelt sign went off.

                          People opened laptops.

                          Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                          I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                          That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                          Him: “Excuse me.”
                          Me: “Yeah?”
                          Him: “Do you see that?”
                          Me: “See what?”
                          Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                          I looked at my phone.

                          There were several networks.

                          Alaska_WiFi.
                          Alaska_Guest.
                          Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                          And one that said:

                          HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                          I stared at it.

                          He stared at it.

                          Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                          To be fair.

                          It did seem bad.

                          Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                          Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                          Me: “Because people are strange.”
                          Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                          Me: “I don’t think so.”
                          Him: “It says help.”

                          Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                          Woman: “What says help?”
                          Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                          Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                          Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                          Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                          The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                          Him: “Look.”
                          Woman: “Oh.”
                          Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                          Him: “Probably?”
                          Me: “Most likely.”
                          Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                          Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                          Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                          Me: “No.”
                          Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                          Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                          Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                          A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                          College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                          The man shows him.

                          College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                          Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                          College student: “It kind of is.”
                          Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                          Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                          Behind guy: “You never know.”

                          This is how it spreads.

                          One concerned man.
                          One weird hotspot name.
                          One row of people with too much imagination.

                          Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                          The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                          The man raises his hand.

                          Him: “Excuse me.”
                          Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                          Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                          Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                          Him: “It says help.”
                          Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                          Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                          Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                          Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                          Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                          Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                          Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                          The college student raises his hand slightly.

                          College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                          The man does not appreciate this.

                          Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                          Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                          College student: “That’s the joke.”

                          I had to look down.

                          I could not laugh.

                          The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                          Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                          Him: “Thank you.”
                          Me: “Oh no.”
                          Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                          The flight attendant walked to the front.

                          A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                          Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                          Silence.
                          Then half the plane started laughing.

                          Not quiet laughing.

                          Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                          A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                          A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                          The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                          Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                          The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                          Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                          Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                          Woman: “It did say help.”
                          College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                          The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                          Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                          Him: “You named your phone that?”
                          Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                          Him: “For months?”
                          Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                          Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                          Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                          The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                          Him: “You should change it.”
                          Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                          Me: “What is it now?”
                          Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                          The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                          The man just stared.

                          Him: “That is not better.”
                          Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                          After that, the whole section relaxed.

                          The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                          He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                          Me: “Maybe a little.”
                          Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                          College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                          Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                          Me: “You are now.”

                          For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                          Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                          Him: “Very funny.”
                          Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                          Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                          Flight attendant: “A little.”

                          When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                          The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                          Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                          College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                          Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                          Him: “Please.”

                          As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                          She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                          He tried not to smile.

                          Failed.

                          Him: “Somebody had to.”

                          And honestly?

                          He wasn’t wrong.

                          Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                          He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                          A little dramatic?

                          Yes.

                          But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                          And I respect that.

                          fgbjr@indieweb.socialF This user is from outside of this forum
                          fgbjr@indieweb.socialF This user is from outside of this forum
                          fgbjr@indieweb.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @munchkinbear You've succeeded in holding my attention past the mid-point of one of these absurdly long novella posts that crop up from time to time. A first in the FediVerse. Congratulations. Also, it's a funny story, and well told. So more importantly congratulations for that as well. 👍

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                            The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                            And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                            This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                            I was in 12C.

                            Aisle seat.

                            Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                            He seemed nice.

                            A little serious.

                            The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                            We took off.

                            Totally normal.

                            Seatbelt sign went off.

                            People opened laptops.

                            Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                            I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                            That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                            Him: “Excuse me.”
                            Me: “Yeah?”
                            Him: “Do you see that?”
                            Me: “See what?”
                            Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                            I looked at my phone.

                            There were several networks.

                            Alaska_WiFi.
                            Alaska_Guest.
                            Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                            And one that said:

                            HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                            I stared at it.

                            He stared at it.

                            Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                            To be fair.

                            It did seem bad.

                            Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                            Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                            Me: “Because people are strange.”
                            Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                            Me: “I don’t think so.”
                            Him: “It says help.”

                            Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                            Woman: “What says help?”
                            Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                            Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                            Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                            Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                            The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                            Him: “Look.”
                            Woman: “Oh.”
                            Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                            Him: “Probably?”
                            Me: “Most likely.”
                            Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                            Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                            Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                            Me: “No.”
                            Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                            Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                            Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                            A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                            College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                            The man shows him.

                            College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                            Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                            College student: “It kind of is.”
                            Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                            Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                            Behind guy: “You never know.”

                            This is how it spreads.

                            One concerned man.
                            One weird hotspot name.
                            One row of people with too much imagination.

                            Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                            The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                            The man raises his hand.

                            Him: “Excuse me.”
                            Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                            Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                            Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                            Him: “It says help.”
                            Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                            Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                            Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                            Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                            Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                            Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                            Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                            The college student raises his hand slightly.

                            College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                            The man does not appreciate this.

                            Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                            Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                            College student: “That’s the joke.”

                            I had to look down.

                            I could not laugh.

                            The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                            Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                            Him: “Thank you.”
                            Me: “Oh no.”
                            Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                            The flight attendant walked to the front.

                            A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                            Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                            Silence.
                            Then half the plane started laughing.

                            Not quiet laughing.

                            Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                            A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                            A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                            The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                            Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                            The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                            Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                            Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                            Woman: “It did say help.”
                            College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                            The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                            Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                            Him: “You named your phone that?”
                            Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                            Him: “For months?”
                            Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                            Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                            Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                            The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                            Him: “You should change it.”
                            Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                            Me: “What is it now?”
                            Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                            The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                            The man just stared.

                            Him: “That is not better.”
                            Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                            After that, the whole section relaxed.

                            The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                            He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                            Me: “Maybe a little.”
                            Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                            College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                            Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                            Me: “You are now.”

                            For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                            Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                            Him: “Very funny.”
                            Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                            Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                            Flight attendant: “A little.”

                            When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                            The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                            Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                            College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                            Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                            Him: “Please.”

                            As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                            She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                            He tried not to smile.

                            Failed.

                            Him: “Somebody had to.”

                            And honestly?

                            He wasn’t wrong.

                            Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                            He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                            A little dramatic?

                            Yes.

                            But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                            And I respect that.

                            beachbum@mastodon.sdf.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                            beachbum@mastodon.sdf.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                            beachbum@mastodon.sdf.org
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @munchkinbear Nothing wrong with due diligence.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M This user is from outside of this forum
                              M This user is from outside of this forum
                              munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @Tooden oh, they do indeed.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • B blindhedgehogstew@mastodon.stickbear.me
                                @flamulous@the-gdn.net @munchkinbear So yall kinda gotta bit of a problem: First I gave this to #gemini I got this back: That is an absolute comedy of errors! Reading through that, you can just see the entire domino effect happening in slow motion at 30,000 feet. It is the ultimate testament to what happens when classic "analog" vigilance collisions head-first with modern internet humor. The mechanics of how that network name showed up in the first place—and how it managed to cause a mini-uprising in rows 11 through 13—come down to a few hilarious technical and psychological realities: The Technical Setup: SSID Broadcasting When you turn on the personal hotspot feature on a smartphone, the phone essentially transforms into a mini wireless router. To let your other devices find it, it broadcasts its name—known technically as the SSID (Service Set Identifier)—into the open air. Any device within a short radius searching for a network will instantly pull that name into its Wi-Fi list. Because airplane cabins are tightly packed, aluminum tubes, a phone's wireless signal can easily travel a few rows forward and backward, popping up right on the screens of unsuspecting neighbors like the serious gentleman in 12D. The Psychological Domino Effect The real magic of the story isn't the technology, though; it's the classic generation gap in how people read digital information. The "Analog" Perspective: For the man who still prints out his hotel confirmations and treats "the internet" like a physical destination, text on a screen is official. If a broadcast network says "HELP," his brain treats it exactly like a message in a bottle or a flare gun. He doesn't see a joke; he sees an active incident report. The "Digital Native" Perspective: On the flip side, the college student and the guy in the beanie treat SSIDs like a public graffiti wall or a customizable bumper sticker. People have been naming their home and phone networks things like "FBI Surveillance Van 4" or "Get Your Own Wi-Fi" for two decades just to mess with their neighbors. The Flight Attendant's Masterclass in De-escalation The absolute MVP of this entire flight was that flight attendant. Instead of treating the man like he was crazy, or pulling a corporate "we cannot discuss security protocols" routine, she used the absolute best tool available for dealing with collective cabin panic: humor and transparency. By making that deadpan announcement over the PA system—specifically calling out that a hotspot name was "causing some concern in row 12"—she managed to do three brilliant things at once: She forced the culprit (Beanie Guy) to realize his mistake without turning it into a federal investigation. She popped the bubble of tension in the cabin by letting everyone laugh at the sheer absurdity of the situation. She let the gentleman save face by handling his concern respectfully, eventually turning him into the honorary "Sheriff of Row 12." The fact that Beanie Guy immediately renamed it to Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal is just the perfect, sarcastic icing on the cake. You really can't write a better script for human interaction than what happens when a plane full of exhausted people gets stuck together with a single misunderstood Wi-Fi network! I then asked what might happen if this were ever a movie, And:... If that Mastodon post got optioned by Hollywood, it would be the ultimate high-stakes, deadpan bottle-episode comedy. You’d have to amp up the "flare" just enough to make the audience sweat, while keeping the absolute absurdity of the row 12 cybersecurity division intact. Picture the trailer rolling like this: --- ## The Pitch: *Network Security* (Rated PG-13) **The Tagline:** *At 30,000 feet, no one can hear you scream. But everyone can see your Wi-Fi.* ### The Setup The movie opens with intense, tactical thriller music. Quick cuts of airplane dials, a heavy storm brewing over the Pacific Northwest, and passengers boarding. The camera tracks our serious man, "Arthur" (played by someone like Tom Hanks or J.K. Simmons), meticulously checking his printed boarding pass and adjusting his reading glasses. He sits in 12D. Across the aisle in 12C is our narrator, "Sam" (played by a dry, sarcastic Ryan Reynolds type). The plane takes off into turbulent skies. The seatbelt sign dings. ### The Escalation (With Hollywood Flare) Instead of just a quiet whisper, Arthur notices the hotspot name `HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE`. But to add that movie tension, **the Wi-Fi signal strength starts fluctuating wildly**. Arthur leans over, "The bars are dropping, Sam. That means the signal is getting weaker. *They’re running out of time.*" Suddenly, a second network pops up on the list: `THEY_ARE_IN_THE_GALLEY`. Now, the entire row goes into full-blown, paranoid defense mode. The woman in 12E starts analyzing the passenger list based on who looks "suspicious." The guy in the row behind them reveals he’s a retired mall security guard and tries to initiate a tactical perimeter around the beverage cart. The college student is live-tweeting the entire thing, accidentally causing `#AviationHostageRow12` to trend worldwide while the plane is still over northern California. ### The Mid-Movie Climax Arthur decides that waiting for the flight attendant isn't enough. He uses his analog newspaper to map out the signal strength based on how many bars he gets as he slowly walks down the aisle to the bathroom. He's treating his phone like a Geiger counter. He stops at row 18. The signal is at 100%. He locks eyes with a guy in a beanie who is sweating profusely (not from committing a crime, but because he's trying to finish an unpatched *DeaDBeeF* compile on a broken Linux laptop or playing an intense video game). Arthur whispers into his collar like a secret service agent: *"I've located the source."* ### The Grand Reveal The flight attendant (played by a perfectly deadpan, exhausted Aubrey Plaza) breaks the tension over the PA system just like in the post, but with a Hollywood twist. Federal air marshals are tracking the tweet, ground control is on standby, and the plane is about to make an emergency diversion. Beanie guy stands up in slow motion, raises his hand, and yells, *"My bad! My brother changed the SSID to mess with me last Thanksgiving!"* ### The Ending The emergency status is cleared. The entire cabin goes from dead silence to explosive, roaring laughter. As the plane lands safely in Portland, the local news is waiting on the tarmac because of the viral tweet. Arthur steps off the plane, completely owning his new title. A reporter shoves a microphone in his face: *"Sir! Are you a cybersecurity expert?"* Arthur looks directly into the camera, adjusts his reading glasses, and says: *"No. I'm just the guy who protects the network."* Cue a hard smash-cut to black as an electronic remix of Morse code plays over the credits. --- It would honestly be a brilliant comedy. You get the paranoia of a classic 1970s disaster movie mixed with the absolute comedy of errors of modern digital life. If they can make a whole movie about a phone booth or a bus that can't slow down, they could absolutely turn Row 12 into a cinematic masterpiece!
                                varx@cybersecurity.theaterV This user is from outside of this forum
                                varx@cybersecurity.theaterV This user is from outside of this forum
                                varx@cybersecurity.theater
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @BlindHedgehogStew Hi, please don't post unsolicited AI output, that's very rude.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                                  The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                                  And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                                  This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                                  I was in 12C.

                                  Aisle seat.

                                  Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                                  He seemed nice.

                                  A little serious.

                                  The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                                  We took off.

                                  Totally normal.

                                  Seatbelt sign went off.

                                  People opened laptops.

                                  Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                                  I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                                  That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                                  Him: “Excuse me.”
                                  Me: “Yeah?”
                                  Him: “Do you see that?”
                                  Me: “See what?”
                                  Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                                  I looked at my phone.

                                  There were several networks.

                                  Alaska_WiFi.
                                  Alaska_Guest.
                                  Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                                  And one that said:

                                  HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                                  I stared at it.

                                  He stared at it.

                                  Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                                  To be fair.

                                  It did seem bad.

                                  Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                                  Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                                  Me: “Because people are strange.”
                                  Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                                  Me: “I don’t think so.”
                                  Him: “It says help.”

                                  Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                                  Woman: “What says help?”
                                  Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                                  Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                  Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                                  Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                                  The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                                  Him: “Look.”
                                  Woman: “Oh.”
                                  Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                                  Him: “Probably?”
                                  Me: “Most likely.”
                                  Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                                  Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                                  Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                                  Me: “No.”
                                  Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                                  Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                                  Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                                  A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                                  College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                                  The man shows him.

                                  College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                                  Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                                  College student: “It kind of is.”
                                  Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                                  Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                                  Behind guy: “You never know.”

                                  This is how it spreads.

                                  One concerned man.
                                  One weird hotspot name.
                                  One row of people with too much imagination.

                                  Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                                  The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                                  The man raises his hand.

                                  Him: “Excuse me.”
                                  Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                                  Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                                  Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                                  Him: “It says help.”
                                  Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                  Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                                  Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                                  Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                                  Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                                  Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                                  Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                                  The college student raises his hand slightly.

                                  College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                                  The man does not appreciate this.

                                  Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                                  Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                                  College student: “That’s the joke.”

                                  I had to look down.

                                  I could not laugh.

                                  The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                                  Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                                  Him: “Thank you.”
                                  Me: “Oh no.”
                                  Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                                  The flight attendant walked to the front.

                                  A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                                  Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                                  Silence.
                                  Then half the plane started laughing.

                                  Not quiet laughing.

                                  Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                                  A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                                  A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                                  The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                                  Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                                  The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                                  Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                                  Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                                  Woman: “It did say help.”
                                  College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                                  The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                                  Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                                  Him: “You named your phone that?”
                                  Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                                  Him: “For months?”
                                  Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                                  Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                                  Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                                  The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                                  Him: “You should change it.”
                                  Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                                  Me: “What is it now?”
                                  Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                                  The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                                  The man just stared.

                                  Him: “That is not better.”
                                  Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                                  After that, the whole section relaxed.

                                  The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                                  He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                                  Me: “Maybe a little.”
                                  Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                                  College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                                  Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                                  Me: “You are now.”

                                  For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                                  Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                                  Him: “Very funny.”
                                  Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                                  Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                                  Flight attendant: “A little.”

                                  When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                                  The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                                  Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                                  College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                                  Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                                  Him: “Please.”

                                  As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                                  She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                                  He tried not to smile.

                                  Failed.

                                  Him: “Somebody had to.”

                                  And honestly?

                                  He wasn’t wrong.

                                  Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                                  He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                                  A little dramatic?

                                  Yes.

                                  But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                                  And I respect that.

                                  qurlyjoe@mstdn.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  qurlyjoe@mstdn.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
                                  qurlyjoe@mstdn.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @munchkinbear
                                  Strikes me as sort of adjacent to making bomb jokes in the TSA line.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • delilahtech@tech.lgbtD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    delilahtech@tech.lgbtD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    delilahtech@tech.lgbt
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @rl_dane
                                    My phone hotspot works whenever I turn it on and will shut off when there is nothing attached to it for a certain amount of time

                                    A more interesting question here is why would someone turn on their hotspot during an aircraft flight?
                                    @robini71 @munchkinbear

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                                      The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                                      And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                                      This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                                      I was in 12C.

                                      Aisle seat.

                                      Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                                      He seemed nice.

                                      A little serious.

                                      The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                                      We took off.

                                      Totally normal.

                                      Seatbelt sign went off.

                                      People opened laptops.

                                      Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                                      I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                                      That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                                      Him: “Excuse me.”
                                      Me: “Yeah?”
                                      Him: “Do you see that?”
                                      Me: “See what?”
                                      Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                                      I looked at my phone.

                                      There were several networks.

                                      Alaska_WiFi.
                                      Alaska_Guest.
                                      Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                                      And one that said:

                                      HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                                      I stared at it.

                                      He stared at it.

                                      Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                                      To be fair.

                                      It did seem bad.

                                      Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                                      Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                                      Me: “Because people are strange.”
                                      Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                                      Me: “I don’t think so.”
                                      Him: “It says help.”

                                      Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                                      Woman: “What says help?”
                                      Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                                      Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                      Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                                      Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                                      The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                                      Him: “Look.”
                                      Woman: “Oh.”
                                      Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                                      Him: “Probably?”
                                      Me: “Most likely.”
                                      Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                                      Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                                      Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                                      Me: “No.”
                                      Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                                      Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                                      Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                                      A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                                      College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                                      The man shows him.

                                      College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                                      Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                                      College student: “It kind of is.”
                                      Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                                      Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                                      Behind guy: “You never know.”

                                      This is how it spreads.

                                      One concerned man.
                                      One weird hotspot name.
                                      One row of people with too much imagination.

                                      Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                                      The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                                      The man raises his hand.

                                      Him: “Excuse me.”
                                      Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                                      Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                                      Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                                      Him: “It says help.”
                                      Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                      Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                                      Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                                      Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                                      Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                                      Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                                      Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                                      The college student raises his hand slightly.

                                      College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                                      The man does not appreciate this.

                                      Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                                      Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                                      College student: “That’s the joke.”

                                      I had to look down.

                                      I could not laugh.

                                      The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                                      Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                                      Him: “Thank you.”
                                      Me: “Oh no.”
                                      Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                                      The flight attendant walked to the front.

                                      A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                                      Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                                      Silence.
                                      Then half the plane started laughing.

                                      Not quiet laughing.

                                      Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                                      A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                                      A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                                      The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                                      Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                                      The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                                      Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                                      Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                                      Woman: “It did say help.”
                                      College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                                      The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                                      Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                                      Him: “You named your phone that?”
                                      Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                                      Him: “For months?”
                                      Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                                      Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                                      Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                                      The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                                      Him: “You should change it.”
                                      Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                                      Me: “What is it now?”
                                      Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                                      The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                                      The man just stared.

                                      Him: “That is not better.”
                                      Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                                      After that, the whole section relaxed.

                                      The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                                      He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                                      Me: “Maybe a little.”
                                      Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                                      College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                                      Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                                      Me: “You are now.”

                                      For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                                      Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                                      Him: “Very funny.”
                                      Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                                      Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                                      Flight attendant: “A little.”

                                      When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                                      The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                                      Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                                      College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                                      Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                                      Him: “Please.”

                                      As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                                      She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                                      He tried not to smile.

                                      Failed.

                                      Him: “Somebody had to.”

                                      And honestly?

                                      He wasn’t wrong.

                                      Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                                      He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                                      A little dramatic?

                                      Yes.

                                      But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                                      And I respect that.

                                      nilajones@zeroes.caN This user is from outside of this forum
                                      nilajones@zeroes.caN This user is from outside of this forum
                                      nilajones@zeroes.ca
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @munchkinbear

                                      Brilliant story, hilariously told!

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • axomamma@mastodon.onlineA axomamma@mastodon.online

                                        @munchkinbear I laughed so hard. Thank you!

                                        Years ago, somewhere in rural Arizona, my brother named our wifi "FBI Van No. 37," or something like that. He mentioned it to a friend who was also a neighbor and she told him the neighborhood was freaking out, thinking there really was an FBI van monitoring in the area, that he should change it and not tell anyone else it was him or he might get lynched.

                                        nilajones@zeroes.caN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nilajones@zeroes.caN This user is from outside of this forum
                                        nilajones@zeroes.ca
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @Axomamma @munchkinbear

                                        I guess it depends on the neighborhood. I have read that as a suggested tactic, on Van camping forums, for how to camp in a neighborhood and not have anyone bug you

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M munchkinbear@mastodon.stickbear.me

                                          The random shit I see on Facebook! The man across the aisle thought the airplane Wi-Fi network was a distress signal.

                                          And for about four minutes, I honestly understood why.

                                          This happened on an Alaska Airlines flight from San Francisco to Portland, which is usually the kind of flight where everyone has either a Patagonia jacket, a laptop, or a reusable water bottle that looks like it has been on more hikes than I have.

                                          I was in 12C.

                                          Aisle seat.

                                          Across from me in 12D was a man in his early sixties with reading glasses, a newspaper, and the intense energy of someone who still prints hotel confirmations.

                                          He seemed nice.

                                          A little serious.

                                          The kind of man who says “the internet” like it’s a location.

                                          We took off.

                                          Totally normal.

                                          Seatbelt sign went off.

                                          People opened laptops.

                                          Someone two rows up immediately started watching a movie without headphones, because apparently society is fragile.

                                          I pulled out my phone to connect to the Wi-Fi.

                                          That’s when the man across the aisle leaned over.

                                          Him: “Excuse me.”
                                          Me: “Yeah?”
                                          Him: “Do you see that?”
                                          Me: “See what?”
                                          Him: “On the Wi-Fi.”

                                          I looked at my phone.

                                          There were several networks.

                                          Alaska_WiFi.
                                          Alaska_Guest.
                                          Somebody’s hotspot called “NotYourHotspot.”
                                          And one that said:

                                          HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE

                                          I stared at it.

                                          He stared at it.

                                          Then he whispered, “That seems bad.”

                                          To be fair.

                                          It did seem bad.

                                          Me: “I think that’s probably somebody’s phone hotspot.”
                                          Him: “Why would someone name it that?”
                                          Me: “Because people are strange.”
                                          Him: “Should we tell someone?”
                                          Me: “I don’t think so.”
                                          Him: “It says help.”

                                          Now the woman in 12E, next to him, looks over.

                                          Woman: “What says help?”
                                          Him: “The Wi-Fi.”
                                          Woman: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                          Me: “A hotspot says help.”
                                          Woman: “That feels different from regular help.”

                                          The man holds up his phone like it’s evidence in a trial.

                                          Him: “Look.”
                                          Woman: “Oh.”
                                          Me: “It’s probably a joke.”
                                          Him: “Probably?”
                                          Me: “Most likely.”
                                          Woman: “I don’t love ‘most likely’ at 30,000 feet.”

                                          Now the guy behind me leans forward.

                                          Behind guy: “Did someone say help?”
                                          Me: “No.”
                                          Him: “The Wi-Fi did.”
                                          Behind guy: “The Wi-Fi asked for help?”
                                          Me: “The Wi-Fi did not ask for help. Someone named their hotspot weird.”

                                          A college student across the aisle takes out one AirPod.

                                          College student: “What’s the hotspot called?”
                                          The man shows him.

                                          College student: “Oh, that’s hilarious.”
                                          Him: “It is not hilarious.”
                                          College student: “It kind of is.”
                                          Woman: “Could it be a crew code?”
                                          Me: “I really don’t think the crew is using public Wi-Fi names to communicate.”
                                          Behind guy: “You never know.”

                                          This is how it spreads.

                                          One concerned man.
                                          One weird hotspot name.
                                          One row of people with too much imagination.

                                          Within sixty seconds, rows 11 through 13 are aware that someone’s phone is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE.

                                          The flight attendant walks by with a trash bag.

                                          The man raises his hand.

                                          Him: “Excuse me.”
                                          Flight attendant: “Yes?”
                                          Him: “There’s something on the Wi-Fi.”
                                          Flight attendant: “Okay.”
                                          Him: “It says help.”
                                          Flight attendant: “The Wi-Fi says help?”
                                          Me: “It’s a hotspot.”
                                          Flight attendant: “Ah.”
                                          Him: “Do you know whose it is?”
                                          Flight attendant: “No, sir.”
                                          Him: “Shouldn’t we find out?”
                                          Flight attendant: “I’m going to guess someone thought they were funny.”

                                          The college student raises his hand slightly.

                                          College student: “To be fair, they were.”

                                          The man does not appreciate this.

                                          Him: “What if someone is actually stuck?”
                                          Flight attendant: “Sir, we are all technically stuck on the plane.”
                                          College student: “That’s the joke.”

                                          I had to look down.

                                          I could not laugh.

                                          The flight attendant stayed very calm.

                                          Flight attendant: “I’ll make a quick announcement, okay?”
                                          Him: “Thank you.”
                                          Me: “Oh no.”
                                          Woman: “This is going to get worse.”

                                          The flight attendant walked to the front.

                                          A second later, the speaker clicked on.

                                          Flight attendant: “Ladies and gentlemen, we have a small request. If your phone hotspot is named HELP_IM_STUCK_ON_A_PLANE, could you please rename it or turn it off? It is causing some concern in row 12.”

                                          Silence.
                                          Then half the plane started laughing.

                                          Not quiet laughing.

                                          Full-body, Sunday-night-airport-exhaustion laughing.

                                          A hand slowly went up in row 18.

                                          A guy in a beanie yelled, “My bad!”

                                          The flight attendant looked down the aisle.

                                          Flight attendant: “Thank you, sir.”

                                          The man across the aisle turned bright red.

                                          Him: “I was just being cautious.”
                                          Me: “Honestly, fair.”
                                          Woman: “It did say help.”
                                          College student: “And we were on a plane.”

                                          The guy from row 18 walked up later to use the bathroom and stopped by our row.

                                          Beanie guy: “Sorry about that.”
                                          Him: “You named your phone that?”
                                          Beanie guy: “My brother did it last Thanksgiving and I forgot.”
                                          Him: “For months?”
                                          Beanie guy: “I don’t use hotspot much.”
                                          Woman: “Your brother has caused aviation confusion.”
                                          Beanie guy: “He’d be proud.”

                                          The serious man looked like he wanted to be mad, but couldn’t fully get there.

                                          Him: “You should change it.”
                                          Beanie guy: “Already did.”
                                          Me: “What is it now?”
                                          Beanie guy: “Definitely_Not_A_Distress_Signal.”
                                          The college student almost fell out of his seat.

                                          The man just stared.

                                          Him: “That is not better.”
                                          Flight attendant, passing by: “It is a little better.”

                                          After that, the whole section relaxed.

                                          The man across the aisle eventually smiled, just a little.

                                          He folded his newspaper, looked at me, and said, “I suppose I overreacted.”

                                          Me: “Maybe a little.”
                                          Woman: “But if it had been real, you would’ve been the hero.”
                                          College student: “Row 12: cybersecurity division.”
                                          Him: “I am not in cybersecurity.”
                                          Me: “You are now.”

                                          For the rest of the flight, every time the flight attendant passed, she gave him updates.

                                          Flight attendant: “No further Wi-Fi emergencies.”
                                          Him: “Very funny.”
                                          Flight attendant: “We remain safely connected.”
                                          Him: “You’re enjoying this.”
                                          Flight attendant: “A little.”

                                          When we landed in Portland, people stood up immediately because apparently airplane seats become lava after touchdown.

                                          The guy from row 18 walked past us.

                                          Beanie guy: “Safe travels, row 12.”
                                          College student: “Stay vigilant.”
                                          Woman: “Rename your phone.”
                                          Him: “Please.”

                                          As we walked off the plane, the flight attendant stood by the door.

                                          She looked at the man and said, “Thank you for protecting the network.”

                                          He tried not to smile.

                                          Failed.

                                          Him: “Somebody had to.”

                                          And honestly?

                                          He wasn’t wrong.

                                          Because most of us saw a weird Wi-Fi name and thought, “That’s dumb.”

                                          He saw it and thought, “Not on my watch.”

                                          A little dramatic?

                                          Yes.

                                          But somewhere between San Francisco and Portland, one retired-looking guy with a newspaper briefly became the self-appointed sheriff of airplane Wi-Fi.

                                          And I respect that.

                                          bolt@thecanadian.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                                          bolt@thecanadian.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                                          bolt@thecanadian.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @munchkinbear that is hilarious. Chuckles were had.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • World
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups