

Anyway, very sadly for me, I came across in my friends two I new very personally and in person for years, and one of them, an autistic man and his wife, I always called my adopted grandchildren. I remember that I had so many people who friended me over the years, and I was going through those to see who to remove as once they friend you, you never hear from them again. I have never had anything removed in my posts before, but then I don’t use Facebook much at all anymore because it seems like everything you might say in the most innocent meaning of your own brings an angry criticism from someone. You know, the responses to the blog remind me of the people on Facebook who read a name of someone they personally dislike, and they immediately go on the attack. They’re the ones that should be suppressed. Let’s save the angry face for those posts that express hatred, vilification, prejudice, discrimination or violence. That way, your friends and their posts will actually receive support rather than potential suppression. Post a gif that expresses thoughts or feelings about the content of the post.There are, after all, much more helpful alternatives: unless someone posts content that is completely objectionable, I will not use the angry face reaction. While I cannot prove that this is what has happened to me and to others, it seems to me that it is better to be safe than sorry. It would be most unfair if the algorithm were to completely misinterpret that and set in place consequences that are both unintended by the responder while they are trying to be supportive of the author of the post. It’s not the post they object to, it’s whatever the writer is angry about that makes them angry, too. It may be that they are sharing the anger, frustration or dislike expressed by the author of the post about something entirely different. The problem with that is that people might not intend for that to happen at all when they use the angry face reaction. Having read a number of conversations on forums in the hope of discovering the cause of my problems, I have a strong suspicion that the algorithm may well interpret an angry face reaction as meaning that people don’t like the post, or object to it somehow. Whether or not this causes that post to undergo more scrutiny by the algorithm, and whether or not that might result in the post being deleted by Facebook, and the user having certain types of access or posting permissions suspended for a time, can only be a matter of conjecture, but it would certainly explain my circumstances.

It turns out that this theory may well be correct. In a recent post, I commented that someone suggested that the angry face reaction to one or more of my Facebook posts may have contributed to some of the problems I have been having with them flagging and suspending my posts for no obvious reason.
