Asmus,

 

I agree 100%. Asking where is the harm was an actual question intended to 
surface problems. It wasn’t rhetoric for saying there is no harm.

 

Also, it may not be obvious to social media, messaging platforms, that there is 
a possibility of a solution. Often when a problem exists for a long time, it 
fades into unconsciousness. The pain is accepted as that is the way it is and 
has to be.

It becomes part of the culture. Asking if there is a pain and whether a 
solution would be welcomed is consciousness raising.

 

I agree about leading standardization. I thought some legitimate needs were 
raised. The questions were designed to quantify the use case as well as the 
potential damage.

 

I didn’t think anyone was recommending more math abuse. I thought it was raised 
as an example of people resorting to them as a solution for a need. Of course 
they are also an example of playful experimentation.

 

Separately,

Regarding messaging platforms, although twitter is one example in the social 
media space, today there are many business, commercial, and other applications 
that embed messaging capabilities for their communities and for servicing 
customers.

I wouldn’t dismiss the need just based on twitter’s assessment or on the idea 
that social media is just for casual or “fun” use. Clarity of communications 
can be significant for many organizations. Having the proposed capabilities in 
plain text rather than requiring all of the overhead of a more rich text 
solution could be a big win for these apps.

 

tex

 

 

From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of Asmus Freytag 
via Unicode
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2019 1:21 PM
To: unicode@unicode.org
Subject: Re: A last missing link for interoperable representation

 

On 1/14/2019 2:08 AM, Tex via Unicode wrote:

Perhaps the question should be put to twitter, messaging apps, text-to-voice 
vendors, and others whether it will be useful or not.

If the discussion continues I would like to see more of a cost/benefit 
analysis. Where is the harm? What will the benefit to user communities be?

The "it does no harm" is never an argument "for" making a change. It's 
something of a necessary, but not a sufficient condition, in other words.

More to the point, if there were platforms (like social media) that felt an 
urgent need to support styling without a markup language, and could articulate 
that need in terms of a proposal, then we would have something to discuss. (We 
might engage them in a discussion of the advisability of supporting "markdown", 
for example).

Short of that, I'm extremely leery of "leading" standardization; that is, 
encoding things that "might" be used.

As for the abuse of math alphabetics. That's happening whether we like it or 
not, but at this point represents playful experimentation by the exuberant 
fringe of Unicode users and certainly doesn't need any additional extensions. 

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