It depends how obvious, but honestly I don’t think it’s that bad. Some non-native English speakers might not get sarcasm, and it also depends a bit on culture. British people are a fair bit more sarcastic than Americans and it’s not always obvious in text.
To be fair to the /s we do live in a world with flat-earthers and antivaxxers. These days it can be exceedingly difficult to tell between the smartasses and dumbasses
I used to be a big proponent of “/s”. My rationale was that reddit was a worldwide site, and it wasn’t fair to exclude people who weren’t fluent in English. Plus, I didn’t want to live up to the stereotype of the selfish, arrogant American.
Now, I just don’t worry about it. Over time, I realized I could say something obvious and seemingly non-controversial, like “the sky is blue”, and people will disagree anyway. If somebody a thousand miles away takes a sarcastic statement literally, and decides that I’m an asshole, then so be it.
I don’t care too much whether people mark their sarcasm or not.
I usually do because I’ve seen enough fucked-up takes back at the other site (that I confirm they truly believe from their profile) that I don’t want people misunderstanding me, especially when my comment would begin with a sarcastic tone.
To be fair, that stemmed from an inability to sense tone through text. It doesn’t matter if something seems obviously sarcastic to you, other people don’t know you, or your sense of humor, and are more likely just to think you’re an asshole or blatantly wrong
/s on stuff that’s so obviously sarcastic. The begining of that to me was a big indicator for how stupid the reddit userbase had become.
It depends how obvious, but honestly I don’t think it’s that bad. Some non-native English speakers might not get sarcasm, and it also depends a bit on culture. British people are a fair bit more sarcastic than Americans and it’s not always obvious in text.
No, really?
I heard that comment in my head.
Yes bro that’s what we are talking about
Also autistic people can struggle with sarcasm especially over text.
Poe’s Law does run a bit rampant on Reddit
That cropped up about the same time people started calling anything and everything “trolling”.
You could make the most hyperbolically obvious joke that was designed to be picked up on, and somebody would accuse you of “trolling”.
Everything is fascism, Nazism, x-phobic and trolling at the same time
Enjoy people who can’t read tone through text (most people) getting angry at the sentiment expressed in your ‘obviously’ sarcastic comments.
To be fair to the /s we do live in a world with flat-earthers and antivaxxers. These days it can be exceedingly difficult to tell between the smartasses and dumbasses
Poe’s law, isn’t it?
I used to be a big proponent of “/s”. My rationale was that reddit was a worldwide site, and it wasn’t fair to exclude people who weren’t fluent in English. Plus, I didn’t want to live up to the stereotype of the selfish, arrogant American.
Now, I just don’t worry about it. Over time, I realized I could say something obvious and seemingly non-controversial, like “the sky is blue”, and people will disagree anyway. If somebody a thousand miles away takes a sarcastic statement literally, and decides that I’m an asshole, then so be it.
People argue about EVERYTHING there. Think they’re smart playing devil’s advocate on reddit
You mean people are still arguing about weather or not Indy was irrelevant to the movie’s plot?
I don’t care too much whether people mark their sarcasm or not.
I usually do because I’ve seen enough fucked-up takes back at the other site (that I confirm they truly believe from their profile) that I don’t want people misunderstanding me, especially when my comment would begin with a sarcastic tone.
To be fair, that stemmed from an inability to sense tone through text. It doesn’t matter if something seems obviously sarcastic to you, other people don’t know you, or your sense of humor, and are more likely just to think you’re an asshole or blatantly wrong
Even worse is when someone doesn’t add it and someone else complains about it.
Seriously? /s /s
We should start a group of people called the Sarcasm Service. We could abbreviate it as SS for short. And use them to monitor correct Sarcasm usage.
/s