The Secret Life of Emoticons

Wed Jul 11, 2007 9:16AM EDT

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According to a recent Yahoo! survey of 40,000 Yahoo! Messenger* users, 82 percent use emoticons in their IM conversations. I must hang out with the other 18 percent. To date, my weblife has been fairly devoid of emoticons with the exception of the occasional grin.

Nerd Times says that it was Kevin McKenzie who first used the -) to mean tongue in cheek way back in 1979. A few years later, Scott Fahlman at Carnegie Mellon University realized that some people had no ear for humor on the web. He wanted to create a symbol to let people know that something was said in jest. He suggested -) to show pleasure (or indicate a joke) and :-( to show displeasure. It caught on. Get the story from the horse's mouth by visiting Scott Fahlman's home page.

Emoticons are used for a lot more than humor these days. The Yahoo! survey found that 83 percent of respondents say that "happiness" is one of the two emotions they express most often using emoticons. "Flirting" is the second. More than half felt that love is easier to convey using emoticons than in person—57 percent of respondents would rather tell a "crush" their true feelings using an emoticon. Ten percent of respondents would go as far as proposing marriage to their loved one via IM.

Not everything is better said via messaging, though. The survey found that men and women both agree that telling someone "things aren't working out" or "we should break up" is better said face to face.

As for memory retention, get this: 66 percent of Yahoo! Messenger users have memorized the text characters for three or more emoticons. Nineteen percent of respondents have memorized more than 10.

The most avid emoticoners are between the ages of 19 and 25 (68 percent use emoticons daily). But nearly half (48 percent) of respondents over the age of 50 used them every day as well. I was surprised to hear that.

Originally you had two variations on the theme: emoticons and smileys. Emoticons are those funny symbols you create with special keystrokes. The creations look like stick figures of facial expressions or a body (though you have to look pretty hard at some of them to "get it." >-) is an evil grin, for example and :'-) is happy, but crying. Smileys, like the yellow happy face we're all so tired of looking at, are a bit more sophisticated, using graphic symbols rather than keystrokes.

Today emoticons have gotten pretty elaborate. You can download extras from the web. They come in 3D, they dance and sing, recite messages, and can look almost photographic. But they should also bring unease to users. A number of studies conducted by Internet security firms conclude that adware and spyware can often come from downloading things like screensavers and emoticons.

The best guarantee for emoticons free of adware or spyware is to get them right from your service providers (for free). Yahoo!, MSN, AOL, and even Google Gmail have their own emoticons and smileys for popping into an chat or IM. They are not always guaranteed to display properly on other systems though.

There are hundreds of third party companies in the emoticon business as well. SweetIM, myemoticons, and Smiley Central each have an incredible selection (myemoticons tends towards the raunchier, Smiley Central has an abundance of yellow smilers, and SweetIM actually looks relatively sophisticated). All are totally animated, many have sounds, and the sites have thousands of them for free use with AOL, MSN, and Yahoo! SweetIM can also be an add-on tool bar for Internet Explorer; this allows you to add an emoticon to any web based application: blogs, Gmail, Hotmail, etc.

No matter how popular emoticons are, I'm not sure if these perpetual motion, jumping, kissing, crying, or heart throbbing blobs express the real me. They always remind me of Mexican jumping beans. And I'm always a bit worried about the darker side of the smiley world, as in adware and spyware. How about you? Do you speak emoticon?

*The survey was conducted as part of a celebration of 25 years of emoticons. In 2002, Yahoo! Messenger was the first major IM service to incorporate emoticons. You can join in their contest to design a new emoticon.

* Yahoo! Tech is owned by Yahoo!, which also owns Yahoo! Messenger.

 

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  • 1 Posted by theobromacrunch on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    i use emoticons a lot when i'm chatting with my friends and i like it very much gives more spice with chatting.

  • 2 Posted by jameslongstrider on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    I use emoticons, but I tend to dislike smileys. Especially the enforced smileys that just don't look right and don't get the point across. (You may know the type. the ones that appear when you enter in an emote and it auto-inputs the smiley and there's almost no way to get it to not do so.) My main beef in this situation is the use of the :-P emoticon. (tongue sticking out to show you're goofing around) but in many forums and some IM programs it shows what looks more like an open smiley mouth. But my main point is that emoticons really do add a bit more emotion than using just plain text, of course if you don't like to use emoticons or smileys you can always use asterixes around whatever action you're intending or feeling and still get the point across. *nods satisfactorily*

  • 3 Posted by neo8268 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'd just like to point out that a "survey of 40,000 Yahoo! Messenger" users is probably not even representative of the Yahoo! Messenger community unless it was conducted from a simple random sample (it wasn't, unless it says it was). Furthermore, assuming that it IS a representative survey, the Yahoo! Messenger community certainly does not represent the entire instant messenging community, let alone all internet users (emails rather than IMs). Too many of these "surveys" conducted online in manners that are clearly biased and unrepresentative are being given credibility by both the people that choose to run them and the people that choose to write about them. Too bad writers don't have to know the first week of a high school level statistics class to be allowed to write about statistics.

  • 4 Posted by rickhavoc1@att.net on Wed Sep 19, 2007 8:59AM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't use them much myself. I type too slow for chat or IM. I do use smileys occasionally on a forum I post on that offers them. I want to add to what neo8268 said. I don't generally trust polls or surveys, because it's too easy to frame the questions in a manner that predetermines the answers. Political pollsters are experts at this. I also agree with what Mark Twain said, "There are lies, danged lies, and then there are statistics.":-) I've seen too many debates over the years where people with opposite views use statistics to support their opinions.

  • 5 Posted by lmf1950 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    At the end of the day, who cares? I am more worried about losing my job because of the greed and negligence of the banking community than whether anyone uses emoticons or not.

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