(Q113650858)

English

reaction

feature of communication software used to quickly express an emotion in response to a post, often based on Internet slang acronyms or Emoji-like icons

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24 February 2016
1 reference
Facebook Enhances Everyone’s Like With Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, Angry Buttons (English)
24 February 2016
Today after tests in a few countries, Facebook is rolling out its augmented Like button “Reactions” to all users. (English)
11 April 2019
1 reference
LinkedIn adds celebrate, love, insightful and curious reactions to spur more engagement (English)
11 April 2019
Today, LinkedIn [introduced] four new reactions people can use in response to posts in their timelines. In addition to “like,” you can now react in four other ways to posts with icons that indicate “celebrate,” “love,” “insightful” and “curious.” [...] The reactions are rolling out globally to the company’s nearly 600 million users starting today, to both the desktop and mobile apps. (English)
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5 May 2022
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Reactions, 2GB File Sharing, 512 Groups (English)
5 May 2022
emoji reactions are now available on the latest version of the app. (English)
WhatsApp will now let you use any emoji as a reaction on WhatsApp (English)
Ivan Mehta
11 July 2022
WhatsApp is rolling out a new update that will let you use any emoji as a reaction. The company first announced the emoji reaction feature in April, but started to make it available to everyone in May. At that time, you could only react via six available emoji: thumbs up, heart, joined hands, tears of joy, mouth open and crying face. [...] The company is making the extended emoji reaction feature available to everyone starting today. (English)
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13 November 2011
4 references
13 November 2011
BuzzFeed Help (English)
What are Reactions? Reactions are a simple way for you to express your reaction to a post. (English)
Emotional Reactions on FB Timeline with BuzzFeed (English)
Peter Prestipino
22 January 2012
Social content aggregator BuzzFeed announced an integration with Facebook that enables users to indicate their emotional reactions of content they encounter at BuzzFeed to their Facebook timeline. (English)
Users can select “reactions” ranging from LOL, WIN, OMG, CUTE, WTF, FAIL, OLD, and TRASHY to name a few. (English)
Facebook Reactions and the Problems With Quantifying Likes Differently (English)
29 February 2016
Four years ago, YouTube added Reaction buttons to their comments section …and removed them sometime after without fanfare, replacing it with the simple Like/Dislike bar. [...] Even after YouTube’s failure, another data-driven website implemented reaction buttons: BuzzFeed (who else?). At the end of each article (in most categories), registered users can select a quirky reaction to indicate how they felt about the article. (English)
Predicting Emotional Reaction Distributions from BuzzFeed Articles (English)
Ilan Goodman
Vivek Jain
Sunil Pai
For each article, users can vote for up to three out of the thirteen categories: “cute,”“drab,” “ew,” “fab,” “fail,” “hate,” “lol,” “love,”“omg,” “trashy,” “win,” “wtf,” and “yaaass.” (English)
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YouTube Reactions (English)
2 June 2011
YouTube tests a new feature that allows users to express their reactions without posting silly comments. They can just click one of the six buttons (LOL, OMG, EPIC, CUTE, WTF, FAIL) and instantly tag the video. (English)
Alex Chitu
Facebook Reactions and the Problems With Quantifying Likes Differently (English)
29 February 2016
Four years ago, YouTube added Reaction buttons to their comments section …and removed them sometime after without fanfare, replacing it with the simple Like/Dislike bar. (English)
6 November 2008
1 reference
Reactions: easily engage your readers (English)
We're launching Reactions, simple annotations chosen by authors and given by readers. With Reactions, readers can easily respond with one click, increasing feedback on posts. (English)
6 November 2008

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