Chat Room Etiquette
http://www.ehow.com/how_10204
_practice-chat-room.html
http://www.dummies.com/WileyC
DA/DummiesTip/id-2006,subcatUSING.html
Step One

Find out whether a particular chat room has
its own FAQ (frequently asked questions)
section before you enter. If it does, review the
FAQ section for specific etiquette guidelines.
Step Two

Introduce yourself when you enter a room by
typing your age and gender. In some rooms,
a general location, such as your city, is also
appropriate to mention (a/s/l—standing for
age/sex/location, or age/male-female/STATE,
or country, if outside the U.S.).
Step Three

If you want to address an individual in the
room without sending an instant message,
introduce your statement or question with the
person's screen name and a colon or hyphen
(for example, 'SportsFan: What's your
favorite football team?').
Step Four

Avoid referring to users by their real names.
Step Five

Allow all users to make comments and ask
questions. Don't try to take control of the
room by flooding it with your own entries.
Step Six

Avoid direct confrontations with rude users.
Report disruptive users to the chat host if a
host is available. Otherwise, leave the chat
room.
Step Seven

Don't harass other users with threats,
unwanted sexual comments or anything else
that might make them uncomfortable.
Tips and Warnings



Some chat rooms offer you the option of blocking out
messages and chat room entries from specific users.
This feature is a good alternative to abandoning the
room or getting the chat host involved.
To get a feel for how a chat room operates, try
"lurking" - observing the room without making any
entries - for a while before offering your own
comments.
Don't type the same sentence, word or phrase into
the chat room over and over again. This is called
"scrolling" and is heavily frowned upon by chat room
users and hosts.
Additional behavioral tips



The first rule of chat is that a real person with real
feelings is at the other end of the computer chat
connection. Hurting him or her is not okay.
The second rule is that because you really have no
idea who that other person is, being cautious is okay.
Read messages for a while to figure out what is
happening before sending a message to a chat
group.


Keep your comments short and to the point.
Many systems let you create a profile about
yourself, which other members can access.
Having a profile is polite. You don't have to
tell everything about yourself in your profile,
although what you do say should be truthful.


If you want to talk to someone in private,
send a message saying Hi, who you are, and
what you want.
More people are out there whom you don't
want to meet than people whom you do,
although quite a few potential friends are
chatting too. If the rudeness and banality of
the chat turn you off at first, try other groups.
Example:
AOL Chat Room Etiquette Rule

http://site.aol.com/community/rules.html