1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one synced 2024-11-30 15:22:09 +00:00
seirdy.one/content/notes/semantic-tone-indicators.md
2023-07-17 14:50:45 -07:00

1.9 KiB

title date replyURI replyTitle replyType replyAuthor replyAuthorURI syndicatedCopies
Semantic tone indicators 2023-07-17T14:50:50-07:00 https://kitty.town/@gingerrroot/110713923558139130 why are people so against just using tone indicators? /g SocialMediaPosting ginger https://kitty.town/@gingerrroot
title url
The Fediverse https://pleroma.envs.net/notice/AXnYXHG8hUmMSwuZRA

We need semantic markup for sarcasm for the best of both worlds! Style sarcasm with CSS and have your client/browser indicate it to you however you prefer.

{{}}The WAI-Adapt task force at the W3C is working on the {{}}{{}} to, among many other things, annotate in markup the literal interpretation of metaphorical statements, jokes, and sarcasm so you can style and switch between them. Lots of planning, vocabulary, and proof-of-concept work is done. It'll take some years for real implementations to roll out and for it to mature; implementation-wise, they're focused on really basic stuff like adding an attribute to HTML.

Spending time on an HTML attribute sounds petty but this is the HTML Standard we're talking about! Every browser, e-reader, screen reader, tutorial, course, Samsung Smart Fridge (ok that last one was a joke), etc. will have to support it forever. It takes time to figure out what to do so it doesn't have to get re-done.

Once that happens, we'll need authoring tools to let people annotate sarcasm and such before posting. We'll need to normalize a "write then edit" workflow, where "edit" includes adding alt-text, semantic tone indicators, content-warnings, etc.