Comment by Aachen

Comment by Aachen 10 months ago

32 replies

I was similarly fascinated by the stylistic choices made here. No capitalisation of even any names, no hyphen in a compound adjective, but dots and commas and spaces are deemed necessary, also before "and" where the word clearly acts as separator already. If you look at the waveform of speech, we have no spaces between regular words so, if they want to eliminate unnecessary flourishes... though perhaps (since text largely lacks intonation markers) that makes it too unreadable compared to the other changes. All this is somehow at least as fascinating to me as the vulnerability being described!

latexr 10 months ago

It’s just another dumb social media trend, like tYpiNg LiKe tHiS. Hopefully it too will phase out. Search for “lowercase trend” and you’ll find reports of it going years back, there’s nothing worth being fascinated about.

It has seeped into HN as well. Look closely and you’ll notice several commenters type like that.

  • Wingy 10 months ago

    I use it to indicate tone. Proper capitalization and punctuation reads with a formal, cold tone.

    lowercase without caps reads with a warmer, informal tone

    there’s a Tom Scott Language Files video documenting it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fS4X1JfX6_Q

    • PKop 10 months ago

      It's extremely irritating, distracting, and breaks focus on the content instead of the annoying stylistic choice, just an fyi..but I imagine you probably like that this is true and purposely try to annoy the people that aren't in the little club. If not, then I suggest not doing it. The tone I perceive from it is "F**** the reader"

      • Aachen 10 months ago

        > ... you probably like that this is true and purposely try to annoy ...

        I don't know if you meant to direct this at the person you're replying to but I'm convinced the overwhelming majority of people don't get out of bed in the morning with any of that in mind

        It's comments like these that make me reconsider what hateful meanings others might read into my communications or mistakes

        • PKop 10 months ago

          Yes I mean this to anyone repeatedly, consciously fighting natural convention and muscle memory to purposely type every letter in lowercase, knowing that this produces in the reader a slight dissonance and distraction constantly, and choosing to do this instead of using convention that everyone understands so that "syntax" does not become the focus and instead the content of the message does.

          Otherwise they're "drawing attention" to the style and themselves for narcissistic reasons. I would simply assume they'd have to know the annoyance this brings to the reader, so I assume it's on purpose.

          I would feel the same about someone writing code in a consistently purposeful unorthodox style and against convention in such an obvious and effortful way that no one is used to. Personally, and YMMV, I like to try to write in as clear a way as I can to get my point across as much as possible. Useless stylistic fluff in something that isn't poetry, seems counter to that purpose.

          >mistakes

          It's not a mistake though to ensure every letter one writes is not following convention and English syntax. Accidents and mistakes are a different thing.

    • bluehatbrit 10 months ago

      That's really interesting, I personally don't read those tone differences based on the casing. Neither approach carries different warmth or formality to me at all.

      I wonder if this is a regional or generational thing?

      • latexr 10 months ago

        > I wonder if this is a regional or generational thing?

        Generational is a good bet:

        https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41537994

        • Wingy 10 months ago

          It's definitely primarily generational. In my experience, capitalization-as-tone is used by many Generation Z people. On the other hand, it is not widely used by older generations, or the younger Generation Alpha.

      • PKop 10 months ago

        [flagged]

    • latexr 10 months ago

      > lowercase without caps reads with a warmer, informal tone

      Personally, and I’m certain I’m not alone on this, it reads as annoying. It’s harder to follow and looks as if the writer didn’t care to do the bare minimum to make the text accessible and clear to the reader.

      > there’s a Tom Scott Language Files video documenting it

      Per that video (thank you for sharing), capital letters “make a paragraph easier to read” and “context matters” and “the conventions change fairly quickly” and typing in all lowercase is “sometimes okay”.

      This is a post documenting a serious browser vulnerability, shared to the wide internet, not an informal conversation between buddies. Clarity matters. I don’t fully buy the tone argument and find words and sentence structure are more important. Take the following two examples:

      > Just heard about your promotion, you beautiful bastard! Let’s go get pissed to celebrate, on me!

      And:

      > good afternoon mrs bartlet. the limousine will be available in twenty minutes. i would also like to apologise for my behaviour yesterday when i inadvertently insulted your husband it was a faux pas i promise will not be repeated. my resignation will be on your desk by noon.

      I get that language evolves. You do you. Personally I hope this trend subsides like so many others before it. Maybe you don’t like to read properly structured text and prefer all lowercase. My preference is the reverse. And that’s OK, we don’t all have to be the same. I merely wish that people who prefer a certain style understand not everyone will see it the same way they do (and I’m including myself).

      • Wingy 10 months ago

        That's true. I agree with you that anything less than a formal tone would be, and is, inappropriate for this context. I also respect that you prefer standard capitalization and punctuation at all times. Being aware of the audience is critical for any writer.

    • bigstrat2003 10 months ago

      > lowercase without caps reads with a warmer, informal tone

      No, it reads as "I'm uneducated and don't know how to write the English language properly". It's incredibly obnoxious for people to use as an affectation.

      • AnimalMuppet 10 months ago

        To me, proper capitalization is easier to parse - not massively so, but a little bit. So writing without caps is a bit of a jerk move. You're making it harder for me to read, either because you're lazy or because you want to affect a style. In either case it's a bit of a jerk move.

        It's more of a jerk move when it's done on a discussion board, because what you write once is read multiple times. So the cost multiplies, but (if due to laziness) the benefit only occurs once.

        Now, in something like texting, I understand, when you're trying to type on that teeny phone keyboard. It's harder to hit the shift key when you don't have a spare finger because you're only using one. But for something like here, take the time and the effort to make it better for your readers.

    • [removed] 10 months ago
      [deleted]
  • squigz 10 months ago

    Strange to label a failure to capitalize words as a "dumb social media trend", as I'm sure people have been doing that for many years prior to social media.

    And nobody tYpEs lIkE tHiS except when making a joke.

    • latexr 10 months ago

      > Strange to label a failure to capitalize words

      It’s not a failure, it’s a conscious choice.

      > as I'm sure people have been doing that for many years prior to social media.

      But now it’s happening more frequently. That’s what “trend” means. It doesn’t mean it never happened before.

      > And nobody tYpEs lIkE tHiS except when making a joke.

      Just because you don’t know people like that, does not mean they don’t exist. The world is bigger than one person’s knowledge. I personally knew several teenagers who did it for all their communication, before smartphones. The speed at which they were able to do it was astounding.

    • Aachen 10 months ago

      What do you mean by "before" social media here? Surely not handwritten or typewritered letters, I guess you mean like 2005-2010ish?

      The term wasn't popular then but with reddit's and Facebook's infancies being twenty years ago, "social media" (which I understand to refer to platforms where you can talk to people and post things about different topics, so broader and more person-oriented than an SMF forum but narrower than the WWW) have been around for a while

      The first time I saw lowercase writing like this was two years ago on the Discord guild/community of a game which got popular on tiktok. I don't know the average age but the (statistical) mode was probably in the range of 13–16

    • PKop 10 months ago

      [flagged]

      • squigz 10 months ago

        Good luck with that. I'm sure people will respond the way you want when you call them dumb.

  • segasaturn 10 months ago

    Social media? I remember people doing the lowercase thing back on IRC. It was an indicator of informality and "coolness".