Every time somebody sends me a thumb I take it as “whatever you say you fucking dumbass” and it pisses me off.

And ya, I’m aware that that the replies are going to be thumbs, let’s see em ya jerks!!!

  • Reil@beehaw.org
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    27 minutes ago

    Depends on who’s saying it and to what, and in what manner (message reaction, its own separate text).

    “Hey who wants pizza tonight?” in the group text.

    Bunch of👍reactions mixed in with some 🍕 and 🕺

    That’s normal and people agreeing with you.

    “Hey could you pick up some toilet paper on the way home?”

    👍 reaction.

    That’s a neutral kind of acknowledgement.

    “Hey man, that was pretty fucked what you said back at the party. I think the others want to talk to you about it.”

    “👍”

    That’s rude and dismissive, and not just an acknowledgement text.

  • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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    42 minutes ago

    I’m going to say it’s not a “you” problem, but a “who you’re surrounded by” problem. Is this something you’re used to percieving accurately? Do you have friends or family who would actually mean it rudely? Because, as others have mentioned, I simply would not be able to function at work if I interpreted 👍 as rude/sarcastic.

    I have to assume you’re young or your work doesn’t involve communicating with coworkers or clients over text. I’d also be curious if you look back at this post 5-10 years from now and think “wtf was I on about?” (I’d also be curious if civilization still exists 5-10 years from now, but I digress…)

  • CountryBreakfast@lemmygrad.ml
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    55 minutes ago

    It has too much function to take it as a dismissive reply… unless it’s obvious.

    For work I use it all the time to confirm I got an email. I can see how it may ruffle feathers, but my other colleagues don’t even confirm they got the message. Using the thumbs up also helps me organize what I need to do because half it is just in emails I gave a thumbs up to.

    If I just replied 👍 to this post, I can see how that would be bullshit but that’s not how Im using it.

    Its kinda like saying “sir” or “ma’am.” Some people are too good for it imo and some people may have good reasons to feel uneasy about it, but to me it is respectful to use it as long as you aren’t clearly a shit head.

  • moakley@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    I had this discussion with my wife a few weeks ago. She did that to a work colleague who took offense to it. I explained that that’s because her colleague is about 8 years younger than us.

    Basically, if the recipient is 35 and under, it’s offensive. If they’re 40 and older, it’s not. Anywhere in between, look for context.

  • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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    1 hour ago

    You see it as dismissive. Low effort reply, like they couldn’t be bothered. It’s not inviting continued conversation so you see it as someone telling you to stop talking to them.

    If I were to guess. In your eyes. They might as well have replied with “cool story bro”.

    Which is now forever a sarcastic term and no one regardless of what you say, will believe that you actually found their story cool.

  • saigot@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    Just like a curt “yes” or even “yes sir” can be seen as somewhat rude in some contexts, so to can its emoji equivalent.

  • DreasNil@feddit.nu
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    4 hours ago

    No. Thumbs up means that I agree with you. I know that the younger generation has started interpreting a thumbs up as something negative though, which just blows my mind.

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      1 hour ago

      It’s not the thumbs up in itself that is seen as rude, but the short dismissive affirmative.

      Someone that sees it as rude would feel like they put effort into their message and expect some kind of effort back in the reply,

      the single emoji response can also make it seem like you didn’t even care to read it, and just say replied with something to make them shut up.

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    13 hours ago

    No. Your reading of it is unusual, in most contexts. It almost always means “agreement, and I have nothing of substance to add”.

    It can be rude if the thing you’ve said should warrant a substantial response. Like if you wrote “my brother just died in a car wreck”, a thumbs up (or probably any emoji) would be an inappropriate response. Heavier stuff warrants whole words.

    But if it’s like “Can you get cat food at the store? The kind we always get” then a thumbs up is an acceptable shorthand for "yes, I understand and commit to this request "

  • pastermil@sh.itjust.works
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    11 hours ago

    Depending on the context, it is can be used sarcastically, which may be rude. But I’ve used this even in semi-formal settings.

    I have to ask, are people these days that easily offended?

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      Yes lmao, where you been? People want to be offended now to the degree where they look for things that aren’t really offensive but they can use it for sympathy likes.

      Maybe I just have tuned my ability to notice it from years of “nothing is ever good enough” parents, teachers, and employers, but it’s literally the same mechanism that made my mom say “well a B is good but you need to be getting As. (And later) Well that low A is good but you need to get it higher.” Or my boss just always saying “faster faster” no matter how much “faster faster” you go, so I now just say “you got it boss” and continue at my pace instead of breaking my back just to hear “faster faster” again in response like he’s some kind of weird Gull that gained the ability to mimic human speech it can’t comprehend. It all comes from the same place, plus a dash of clickbait.

      • CountryBreakfast@lemmygrad.ml
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        50 minutes ago

        For a long time when I worked in restaurants and the boss would start blasting us with “faster!!!” we just all go “working hard, working hard” with no added enthusiasm or energy.

  • Commiunism@beehaw.org
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    10 hours ago

    Depends on context - if it’s a yes/no question or something that can be replied to with a simple “great” or “okay”, thumbs up serves as a “yes” or as a gesture that the person has read the message and doesn’t have any problems with it.

    It might be considered rude though for more complex discussions, where you need to respond in sentences