I guess it was too bold a move of ours to use an emoji as the main title of our paper, but I'm glad to finally see “🙏” published. https://brill.com/view/journals/rmdc/11/2/article-p198_003.xml
@felwert nice move! And you may really be the first to use emoji, at least on the main title level. Congrats!
Also interested in the article itself, is there an #OpenAccess version? Thanks!
@felwert Congrats to this publication! I look forward to all the editors trying to force removal or transcription of Emojis from references.
@dta_cthomas I am afraid Emily Bender and Gebru Timnit were earlier by including a parrot icon in the title of their paper "On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big? 🦜" https://doi.org/10.1145/3442188.3445922
Now I see what you did here by specifically mentioning "on the main title level", @dta_cthomas.
I just dug through #Brill's HTML for @felwert 's paper trying to import it into Zotero and it turned out that the #emoji is not included in the machine-actionable metadata:
- `"pf:contentName" : ": Emoji and Religion in the Twitter Discourses on the Notre Dame Cathedral Fire"`
- `<meta content=": Emoji and Religion in the Twitter Discourses on the Notre Dame Cathedral Fire" property="og:title">`
- `<meta content=": Emoji and Religion in the Twitter Discourses on the Notre Dame Cathedral Fire" name="twitter:title">`
- `<meta name="citation_title" content=": Emoji and Religion in the Twitter Discourses on the Notre Dame Cathedral Fire">`
- `<title>: Emoji and Religion in the Twitter Discourses on the Notre Dame Cathedral Fire in: Journal of Religion, Media and Digital Culture Volume 11 Issue 2 (2022) </title>`
And it is not even an #Emoji at all: `<img src="/view/journals/rmdc/11/2/21659214_011_02_s003_text-if0001.jpg">`
@tillgrallert @dta_cthomas Yes, they chickened out and simply inserted an image. I think this was a little over their head. The typesetting was also rather painful, we had multiple rounds of corrections and I did a lot by myself. Looks like the publishers are not yet quite ready for emoji.
@felwert @dta_cthomas this screams for a blog post on the process and socio-technological challengers and linguistic imperialism, treating emjois as one of many under-resourced scripts in a monolingual technology stack
@felwert @tillgrallert @dta_cthomas I’m certainly not a fan of Brill, but I do think they’re well aware of other scripts. https://brill.com/page/290?language=en
@felwert @tillgrallert @dta_cthomas I know that there’s more than LGC, but what I was trying to say is that issues with color emoji aren’t necessarily due to a lack of awareness of non-Latin scripts.
@true_mxp @tillgrallert @dta_cthomas Sure, I agree!
@true_mxp @tillgrallert @dta_cthomas Brill is a nice font, but it also only contains Latin (+ diacritics), Greek and Cyrillic, if I see it correctly. I don’t say a single font should cover all scripts, but there’s a lot more required to cover non-Western scripts (let alone color emoji).