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I think your comment is a great example of a ruthless and cuthtroat nature that we're seeing with "insensitivity pushed policies". To call something unkind when making an option to refuse to play nickleback is absurd and an overrecation.

Contextually (for those who didn't suffer through the Nickleback age) Nickleback was a highly overplayed ban that produced similarly sounding songs with very weak albums with "one hit wonders". It spawned it's own genre called Butt Rock. It's a sign of a monopoly held by the music industry to influence what you heard and how much you heard it on the radio.

https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Butt%20Rock

The way I see it is that the feature is a confirming nod to the users' sense of humor and it gives an application a bit of personality. We used to have easter eggs, boss modes, and suprises in applications. (I think excel had a full on game built in)

Now it's all about a commoditize labor pushing code out to deliever underdeveloped features on an unreasonable timeline.



> To call something unkind when making an option to refuse to play nickleback is absurd and an overrecation.

I don't agree, especially considering that the option was enabled by default.

Taste is something that's often dear to a person, and telling someone they have bad taste is rude.

I've been trying over time to stop saying "this sucks" and instead say "I'm not a fan of this", when talking about pretty much anything subjective that's a matter of taste: music, TV, movies, art, food, architecture, etc. It's a way to recognize that I'm not the absolute arbiter of taste, and that what I like and don't like doesn't represent any sort of absolute positive or negative about anything.

> The way I see it is that the feature is a confirming nod to the users' sense of humor and it gives an application a bit of personality.

No, it's a nod to the developer's sense of humor. Regardless of Nickelback's provenance and their style of music (I was not a fan of them back then, but, again, I'm not the arbiter of what is good and bad, and neither are you), there were some people who did genuinely like them. Shitting on those people (especially when you're selling a product!) is just tacky and rude.

> We used to have easter eggs, boss modes, and suprises in applications. (I think excel had a full on game built in)

Yes, and, by and large, those things are positive, joyful things. They weren't dissing a particular type of person who likes a particular type of $THING or $ACTIVITY. And when they were, they tended to fall flat, like this music app's unkind option.

I agree that there are unfortunately fewer easter eggs out there now, but I don't think that has anything to do with whether or not this particular feature is a good or bad easter egg.

I'll close with:

> I think your comment is a great example of a ruthless and cuthtroat nature that we're seeing with "insensitivity pushed policies". To call something unkind when making an option to refuse to play nickleback is absurd and an overrecation.

Maybe look in the mirror a for a bit; calling the GP's comment "ruthless and cutthroat" is the real absurd overreaction here.


> Taste is something that's often dear to a person, and telling someone they have bad taste is rude.

The perception of rude is in the eye of the beholder.(Within context of course)

I could see a much better argument here if this was for a specific small struggling artist. But we're not, we're talking about a multi-platinum RIAA over promoted band.

> I've been trying over time to stop saying "this sucks" and instead say "I'm not a fan of this", when talking about pretty much anything subjective that's a matter of taste: music, TV, movies, art, food, architecture, etc. It's a way to recognize that I'm not the absolute arbiter of taste, and that what I like and don't like doesn't represent any sort of absolute positive or negative about anything.

Congrats. I think it is great that you're self acknowledging and modifying your own behavior. However, your decision not to put in a harsh description of your opinion "this sucks" comes off as an insecurity rather than an improvement. You're softing your language over fear of perception. It's not adding anything to the conversation.

Tell me that Scala sucks... I won't take offense. Telling me it sucks tells me you've had experience here and there were things that you really didn't like. This leads me to ask "why? what happened?"

Tell me that you're not a fan of scala... this comes of as a thing that you didn't even try here. You don't even have an emotional response enough to indicate that you had any investment into it.

> not the arbiter of what is good and bad,

Yea you are. Your decisions, your preferences, your experiences shape that. You're not what many would be considered to be a trusted arbiter.

-----

Where I was going with the easter egg and ruthless/cutthroat commentary: What I'm talking about is that we're seeing applications that are extremely ridged, minimally featured only for their value on the market, and we're seeing an elimination of the individual who created them. Saying that a "ban nickleback option" is unkind is promoting the idea that the creator should not be perceived as unkind.


> However, your decision not to put in a harsh description of your opinion "this sucks" comes off as an insecurity rather than an improvement. You're softing your language over fear of perception. It's not adding anything to the conversation.

Your decision to hate Nickelback comes across as insecurity, trying to have "right" opinions by piling onto the same opinion as a bunch of people on the internet. Posturing that you don't care about other people's opinions fools no one, because a) your entire hatred of Nickelback is other people's opinions that you adopted, b) you're here trying to change people's opinions, and c) you should care about other people's opinions; you can't please everyone but other people's opinions do affect you, and staying likable when it's absurdly simple to do so, is worth doing.

And hating Nickelback is not adding anything to the conversation.


That assumes that the person actually hates Nickelback. Personally, I actually like Nickelback and I would find the option funny. That is to say, I think it's more likely that the inclusion of the option was a joke rather than an actual hatred of Nicelback.


In the original app, sure, it's probably just a joke.

The person I'm responding to, however, pretty clearly actually hates Nickelback.


As an aside to changing your wording so slightly, everyone with two fingers of forehead will very quickly determine that whenever you say "this sucks" it's your biased personal opinion. Maybe such a strong statement from you will cause some people not to mention that they actually like X but, functionally, they will just ignore your opinion on this topic and move on.


If someone goes out of their way to say Nickelback sucks, sure, obviously that's their biased personal opinion. But the bias that leads to saying Nickelback sucks is going to show up in all sorts of other areas and cause much worse problems.

If you hate Nickelback because it's popular to hate Nickelback, I have to wonder what other things do you hate because it's popular to hate them?


(cause much worse problems) Like what, making Chad Kuger make more IG reels where he's annoyed by still touring and people who don't go shitting on the band?


No, like hating a child[1]. Or like hating furries. Or trans people. Or black people. Or any other people it's popular to hate, even though there's no good reason to hate them. And that's setting aside more nuanced discussions which you've already demonstrated yourself incapable of having, because your hatred is more important to you than basic reasoning.

One effect of your Nickelback hate which affects you personally, is that whenever Nickelback comes up, you make yourself less likeable than Nickelback to most listeners whenever you talk about them. I think less of you for holding this opinion, and I'm not the only one.

Your hatred is indefensible. Why even form an opinion on this? It literally only makes things worse for everyone, especially for you. I mean, I don't particularly care for Nickelback myself, so I do what any sane person does when they don't care for a band: I don't think about them. I probably haven't thought of Nickelback in 5 years before this conversation. Right now I'm actually a little curious and might go listen to them since I literally don't remember what they sound like.

[1] Remember Rebecca Black?


I think it's a stretch to go from "someone hates Nickelback" to "therefore they probably are transphobic or racist". Especially since "hate" in this instance is an exaggeration used for effect. It's highly unlikely that their "hatred" of Nickelback has any meaningful similarity to a racist's hatred of black people.


I'm not saying that everyone who hates Nickelback is a racist or transphobic.

I'm saying that the same thinking (or lack thereof) which causes people to pile onto hating Nickelback is the one that causes people to be racist or transphobic.

Not thinking for yourself means that you'll hate what the people around you hate. If the people around you are left-leaning, you probably won't hate black or trans people. But, there's definitely some irrational hate going around in left-leaning communities.

Probably the greatest correlation I'd point out is between hating Nickelback and hating Rebecca Black--because if you're getting your opinions on who to hate from internet culture, internet culture was going to tell you to hate both those people. And here's the problem: unlike Nickelback, when Rebecca Black started getting hated on the internet she was 14. Blogs and news sources written by adults were piling onto hating a child. Anyone with a shred of empathy who thought for themselves at all, imagined what it was like to be Rebecca Black in 2011 and was horrified by people's behavior.


> I think your comment is a great example of a ruthless and cuthtroat nature that we're seeing with "insensitivity pushed policies". To call something unkind when making an option to refuse to play nickleback is absurd and an overrecation.

1. You don't know me at all if you think I'm pushing "insensitivity pushed policies". I'm not pushing "policies" at all, I'm encouraging people to be kind and to use their brains to figure out what "kind" is, instead of piling onto hating something.

2. You drastically overestimated the tone of my post if you think it's "ruthless and cutthroat". I don't think it's kind to ridicule a band or it's fans, but it's not that big a deal. Remember where I said, "albeit a minor one"?

If hating something as bland as Nickelback is the hill you choose to die on, I dunno man, maybe pick better battles?

> Contextually (for those who didn't suffer through the Nickleback age) Nickleback was a highly overplayed ban that produced similarly sounding songs with very weak albums with "one hit wonders". It spawned it's own genre called Butt Rock. It's a sign of a monopoly held by the music industry to influence what you heard and how much you heard it on the radio.

Eh, I wouldn't say I like Nickelback; their music bores me a bit. But a) they're people, and b) people are allowed to like what they like.

> The way I see it is that the feature is a confirming nod to the users' sense of humor and it gives an application a bit of personality. We used to have easter eggs, boss modes, and suprises in applications. (I think excel had a full on game built in)

Yeah, and those things are pretty different from a mean-spirited joke at someone else's expense.

> Now it's all about a commoditize labor pushing code out to deliever underdeveloped features on an unreasonable timeline.

Bro, look at my comment history. I'm definitely not about commoditizing labor. :D




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