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AI companies are violating a basic social contract of the web and and ignoring robots.txt
(www.theverge.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£ "robots.txt is a social contract" π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£ π€‘
If you have something to say, actually explain it instead of the obnoxious emoji spam.
It's completely off-topic, but you know 4chan filters? Like, replacing "fam" with "senpai" and stuff like this?
So. It would be damn great if Lemmy had something similar. Except that it would replace emojis, "lol" and "lmao" with "I'm braindead."
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/word-replacer-max/
That extension is fun, but it doesn't "gently shame" the person spamming emojis by replacing their emojis with "I'm braindead" in a way that themself would see.
Contrariwise to your blatant assumption, I'm not proposing a system where users can edit each others' posts. I'm just toying with the idea of word filters, not too different from the ones that already exist for slurs in Lemmy.
For example. If you write [insert slur here], it gets replaced with removed. What if it replaced emojis with "I'm braindead."? That's it.
(Before yet another assumer starts doing its shit: the idea is not too serious.)
Arenβt they effective when used sparingly π
They would be less obnoxious if used sparingly, but they wouldn't be effective unless the reason why they're used changed, from graphical echo ("I saw a cat today π±") and mood/attitude particles (like you did) to ideographic usage (e.g. "I saw a π± today"). Plus they're still colourful and attention-grabbing drawings within text, they detract attention from the text itself.
Canβt distractions from the text sometimes be exactly what you want?
And have you seen an emoji perfectly complete a meme when being used for mood? How about convey lighthearted intent when discussing a serious subject?
They can but most of the time they aren't. That's the key here: most of the time emojis only add noise, to the point that the shreds of legitimate usage (that can be conveyed through other means) don't really justify keeping the cons of the noise.
It isn't like anyone would implement my idea though. I'm mostly doing like that old man screaming at the sky, or something like this.
π΄π£οΈπ£π
What is the point that you're trying to convey by relexing "old man screaming at the sky" to use emojis?
If the point is that "they could be used to convey meaning": I've already addressed it. Usually, they aren't. (If the point is something else, please clarify.)
Wouldnβt you agree the perfect reply to:
β¦is a string of emoji? :)
If that was my point, it would be a great answer.
However my point is not against the usage of emojis to convey linguistic meaning, like that. (It's a bit pointless, but at least you're saying something through the emojis.)
Well of the three usages:
graphical echo ("I saw a cat today π±")
mood/attitude particles (βI wish I were just a cat πβ)
ideographic usage ("I saw a π± today")
The echo is almost certainly the least useful.
When overused gratuitously, it can be funny (NSFW examples included)!
That overuse feels a lot like a fourth category. It's almost meta-, as if using emojis to parody emoji usage!
I'm not sure if it's usage for echo or as mood particles makes me roll my eyes the most. Perhaps echo, too.
More like "ability to remember vocab from uni times" (My second grad included Linguistics, although I don't work on the field nowadays.)
Are you a linguist? Fabulous descriptive capabilities you have there.
That would be amazing.
A lot of post-September 1993 internet users wouldn't understand, I get it.
you're talking nonsense, for all I know today is Wed 11124 set 1993
I've just converted to polytheism and have begun praying to the Emoji God asking them to use 1,000 origami cry laughing Emojis to smite you down, so that you may die how you lived.
I hope it won't be quick, or painless, but that's up to the Gods now.
Considering that we're talking about emojis, it'll definitely be silent.
Silent, but deadly.