Some of the virtual slambook websites are listed below:
From Abba to Zoom: A Pop Culture Encyclopedia of the Late 20th Century.
"Passing handwritten notes or 'slam books' has since been replaced with online tools such as IM, websites, blogs, cell phones etc." References Some point to slam books as the analog precursor to anonymous trolling and negative social interactions on Twitter and Facebook. Web-based slam book sites have attracted controversy for hosting virtual slam books in which individuals or organizations are targeted for criticism that constitutes bullying or defamation. Slam books can also exist in virtual formats. It was billed as a "kinder and gentler" slam book for teens and pre-teens with the goal of encouraging them to think and communicate, write and express themselves. In 1999, Claire Morris-Dobbie launched SLAM: A New Way to Tell the Truth, a pre-made "slam book" with online tie-in features in an attempt to combine nostalgia with the growing World Wide Web. In 2005, friends created a slam book as a going away present for 16-year-old Richa Thapa who emigrated from Nepal to the US. And the books were not limited to the US. Slam books crossed racial barriers and were popular among African American high school communities in the 1950s. A slam book was briefly the focus in the murder investigation of Carole Lee Kensinger in 1948. In general, however, slam books were seen in a negative light. The youngsters of today are facing life and themselves as is." We have learned the price of sentimentality. "Psychology, industry and the ghastly exposure to the late war have changed.
One newspaper article from 1930 argued that slam books could be a great thing for humanity. It was defined in The Vocabulary of Jazzdom in 1922 as "a diary in which you "knock" your friends". One early reference to slam books can be found in the Novemissue of The Central New Jersey Home News where it was reported as a new fad among New Brunswick high school students.
A slam book containing cruel comments was featured in episode 3.20 ("Kids Can Be Cruel") of the 1980s TV show Facts of Life. Slam books were also a source of bullying between students-where students "lived in fear" of the "biting comments" written anonymously under their names, "on the order of what today might be a Tweet or a Facebook comment". We can say that modern social sites are analogous to slambook, where each post or tweet is actually a leaf of slambook and a facebook or twitter account is a slambook itself. We can say that current voting system which we see in election was actually designed for those who were unable to write.Hence they just press evm button or use voting seal. We can also view a leaf of slambook as a voter slip of litrate people where the asker of the question takes the opinion of the answerer on that question. The keeper of the book starts by posing a question (which may be on any subject) and the book is then passed round for each contributor to fill in their own answer to the question. A slam book is a notebook (commonly the spiral-bound type) which is passed among children and teenagers.