Go back to 1 minute before they posted that and post it before they do.
I am now the person who posted the highest upvoted meme ever!
The Original OP in the original timeline would be so confused while I stand in the spotlight of GLORY! 😎
Also:
I ask c/asklemmy questions in which the OP didn’t answer their own question, right before they conceive the idea of asking that question, in order to see if they would answer their question that they originally posted in the original timeline to what they would answer. Basically use jedi-timetravel tricks to make people ask themselves questions from a different timeline.
Register a domain of a popular sites before they get registered
When a post is crossposted, the term OOP is used instead (Original Original Poster), as opposed to the OP of the crosspost.
Its used in r/SubredditDrama or r/BestOfLegalAdvice where the OP would say “I’m not OOP”, in order to to reminds commeters to not direct their rage against OP.
In this context, OOP refers to the user who originally posted it on the original timeline.
Ah okay, thanks for clearing it up! I had no idea that double-original-op was actually a thing, and made me question myself about the meaning of the acronym.
Check the top meme on lemmy of all time.
Go back to 1 minute before they posted that and post it before they do.
I am now the person who posted the highest upvoted meme ever!
The Original OP in the original timeline would be so confused while I stand in the spotlight of GLORY! 😎
Also:
I ask c/asklemmy questions in which the OP didn’t answer their own question, right before they conceive the idea of asking that question, in order to see if they would answer their question that they originally posted in the original timeline to what they would answer. Basically use jedi-timetravel tricks to make people ask themselves questions from a different timeline.
Register a domain of a popular sites before they get registered
I love time-trolling.
Wait, what does OP stand for?
OP is Original Poster.
When a post is crossposted, the term OOP is used instead (Original Original Poster), as opposed to the OP of the crosspost.
Its used in r/SubredditDrama or r/BestOfLegalAdvice where the OP would say “I’m not OOP”, in order to to reminds commeters to not direct their rage against OP.
In this context, OOP refers to the user who originally posted it on the original timeline.
Ah okay, thanks for clearing it up! I had no idea that double-original-op was actually a thing, and made me question myself about the meaning of the acronym.