We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

Looks like eBay Community on dotcom got a do-over today. Spoiler alert: no one likes it. 

 

Especially the badges. 

 

I'd like to be a Rockstar, personally. 

 

http://www.ecommercebytes.com/C/abblog/blog.pl?/pl/2016/10/1477616190.html

 

And http://community.ebay.com/t5/Building-A-Better-Online/New-Community-Experience-Lots-to-Explore/m-p/2...

 

and http://www.ebay.com/sts

 

No telling when we might see changes to this effect north of the border. 

 

 

 

Message 1 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

ebay actually pays people to come up with this nonsense.

 

A badge?!?  Is this like a star in grade 1?!?

 

What a load of piffle.

Message 2 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

And to think of all the issues and problems they could have fixed. 

Message 3 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

Enjoy them....  have a laugh ... and move on

 

Take a look  and do not let something new bother you!

 

It is not worth the effort.

Message 4 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

No stars, just stickers. I think they're kind of cute and amusing. But I do wonder at the deployment of resources. 

 

Screen Shot 2016-10-28 at 7.07.40 AM.png

and

 

 Screen Shot 2016-10-28 at 7.07.24 AM.png

 

Screenshots from a random user.

 

I think ebay is trying to get 'hip' with the 'in crowd'. Millennials need constant praise and reinforcement, from the studies I've read, in order to feel valued, appreciated and to stick-around for more than ten minutes. (Unlike GenXers such as myself who are happy with any scrap thrown our way.)

 

 

 

 

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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges


@mjwl2006 wrote:

 

I think ebay is trying to get 'hip' with the 'in crowd'. Millennials need constant praise and reinforcement, from the studies I've read, in order to feel valued, appreciated and to stick-around for more than ten minutes. (Unlike GenXers such as myself who are happy with any scrap thrown our way.) 

 


Yes, and unlike Baby Boomers like me, who were taught to accept criticism and correction as a necessary part of learning (and life, for that matter), at a time when A grades were rare things.  

 

Perhaps thirty years from now no one will remember how to write ordinary messages or thoughts, and these sorts of shorthand images and the acronyms that are now everywhere (LOL) will become the dominant means of informal, non-verbal communication, something akin to a new International Sign Language.  

 

Young people are already having trouble with cursive English and getting impatient with all the letters required to type a normal English word on a smartphone, even with the fastest flying thumbs.  Indeed there may need to be whole university departments in the future specializing in teaching and deciphering cursive writing.  They'll produce "experts" who will be the only people on earth who can read letters handwritten by people prior to about 1975, when electronic typewriters and later, personal computers, became widely available to the average person.  I'm just as guilty as everyone else in this respect -- I can't even recall the last completely handwritten letter I sent to a friend or relative.  It might have been around 1980. 

 

As a linguist, I can't help being intrigued by these phenomena.  They shape our world in ways that are subtle or amusing in the short run, but can have dramatic effects on language and culture over the longer term.  

 

It's fascinating to consider that due to its marriage with technology, colloquial written English could become a system of hieroglyphics in the future.  The same probably holds true for that matter for other major languages of the world whose users are now tied to the digital world. 

 

 

Message 6 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

Have you noticed the **bleep**-footing down of the language.

 

Problems become issues, contact morphs into 'reach out to'

 

The softerification of reality. Someone commented that hanging rould the new boards was uncomfortably like hanging round a primary school. Lord knows how he knew this but the point is well made.

 

The Canadian boards are now two redesigns behind so clearly no one cares and they should be safe.

Message 7 of 8
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Re: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Badges

Looks childish to me.

 

I'm still waiting for my Seller Dashboard to be fixed.

Message 8 of 8
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