Pwn is a leetspeak slang term derived from the verb own, meaning to appropriate or to conquer to gain ownership. The term implies domination or humiliation of a rival, used primarily in the Internet-based video game culture to taunt an opponent who has just been soundly defeated (e.g., "You just gotpwned!").
Pwn
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Pwn is a leetspeak slang term derived from the verb own,[1][2][3] meaning to appropriate or to conquer to gain ownership. The term implies domination or humiliation of a rival,[4] used primarily in the Internet-based video game culture to taunt an opponent who has just been soundly defeated (e.g., "You just got pwned!").[5]
In script kiddie jargon, pwn means to compromise or control, specifically another computer (server or PC), website, gateway device, or application. It is synonymous with one of the definitions of hacking or cracking, including iOS jailbreaking. The Pwnie Awards are awarded by a group of security researchers.[4]
Popularity of the term among teenagers rose in the mid-2000s, with the spread from the Internet written form to use in spoken language.[6]
Pronunciations
Because pwn is primarily used in written form, it has no single generally accepted pronunciation: renditions include /oʊn/ OHN, /pwoʊn/ PWOHN, /poʊn/ POHN, /pəˈʔoʊn/, /pɔːn/ PAWN, /piˈoʊn/ pee-OHN, /pwiːn/ PWEEN, and /puːn/ POON (perhaps from Welsh, and with an obvious double entendre[further explanation needed]). Originally, pwn and its variants were pronounced /oʊn/ in the same way as the verb own, the tail of the p being "silent". A notable usage of this pronunciation can be seen in the Internet distributed series Pure Pwnage (pronounced "pure ownage").[7][8][9][10]
In culture
- Have I Been Pwned?, a website that reports Internet security breaches
- Pwn2Own, a contest
- Pwnage is the online identity of Samuel Anderson-Anderson, the protagonist in Nathan Hill's novel The Nix (2017)[11]
- Pwnsauce was the online identity of a leading hacktivist member of LulzSec.
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