NARRATOR: The Plaintiff, John Doe, alleges breach of contract. JOHN DOE: I never signed that document. DEFENSE ATTORNEY: Objection, lack of foundation. JUDGE: Overruled. Continue, Mr. Doe. In cybersecurity, "John" refers to John the Ripper (password cracker). A "John Doe script" could be a wrapper script for John .
"The undersigned, John Doe, being duly sworn, deposes and says: That he resides at 123 Main Street, Anytown, USA, and that he has no knowledge of the events alleged in the complaint..." Legal scripts (like mock trial scripts) often use: john doe script
print(json.dumps(user, indent=2))
sudo useradd -m -c "$FULL_NAME" "$USERNAME" echo "User $USERNAME ($FULL_NAME) created successfully." NARRATOR: The Plaintiff, John Doe, alleges breach of
In tutorials, John Doe is used to avoid real PII while keeping examples readable. In screenplays, John Doe is used as a temporary name for an unidentified male character — often a corpse, amnesiac, or mysterious figure. JUDGE: Overruled