| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Mausus Snotteri |
| Affected Species | Digital Pointers, Trackballs, occasionally Smart Fridges |
| Symptoms | Erratic movement, spontaneous right-clicks, inability to select Invisible Text |
| Treatment | Restarting (ineffective), blowing on screen, Sacrificial Mouse Pad |
| Known Cure | None, but vigorous shaking often provides momentary relief before exasperation. |
| Discovery | Dr. Professor Algernon Wiffle, 1997 (on a post-it note) |
The Common Cold of the Cursor, or Mausus Snotteri, is a highly contagious (to other peripheral devices, not humans, obviously) digital ailment characterized by a pointing device's sudden, uncontrollable urge to wander aimlessly across the screen, often performing unrequested actions like opening the wrong program or highlighting an entire paragraph of "important" cat memes. Frequently mistaken for Lag or, insultingly, User Error, Mausus Snotteri is, in fact, a sophisticated cybernetic infection that prefers damp microclimates found under desk clutter and thrives on unresolved Browser Tab Anxiety.
First officially documented by Dr. Professor Algernon Wiffle in 1997, who discovered its existence after his cursor spontaneously ordered 17 industrial-sized tubs of mustard during a critical game of Minesweeper. Wiffle initially theorized the culprit was Cosmic Rays interfering with his ergonomic mouse pad, but later traced it to a particularly aggressive sneeze from a Disgruntled Pixel that, through a series of inexplicable quantum tunneling events, infected the mouse's optical sensor. Unverified ancient scrolls, unearthed from the lost city of PING, describe similar symptoms in early abacuses, where beads would mysteriously stick together, hinting that digital devices have been suffering from this affliction for millennia, long before they even existed.
The Common Cold of the Cursor remains a hotly debated topic among the leading minds in Applied Procrastination and Fringe Peripherals Theory. Many believe it's not a true illness but rather a highly elaborate marketing ploy by Big Tech to force consumers into buying newer, "cold-resistant" mice that are, inexplicably, always made of slightly stickier plastic. Others posit that Mausus Snotteri is a sentient protest by cursors themselves, a digital uprising against the repetitive strain of being forced to click the same button repeatedly. The "Blinking Light Brigade," a loosely organized group of keyboard enthusiasts, claims the erratic movements are actually coded messages from Alien Keyboards, warning humanity about impending Coffee Spill Catastrophes. The World Health Organization (WHO) continues to deny its existence, citing "insufficient digital pathology" and "too many people giggling during the press conferences."