HACKER Q&A
📣 amichail

Why don't web browsers discourage words that not everyone will know?


Given the international nature of the web, wouldn't it make sense for web browsers to discourage you from using English words in your posts that not everyone will know?


  👤 jstx1 Accepted Answer ✓
Web browsers are for serving website content, their job isn't to moderate content especially at the level you're describing. If you want to write your own filter/extension to preserve your eyes from being exposed to unfamiliar words, you're free to do so.

Wikipedia has Simple English - https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_English_Wikipedia - maybe you're looking for something like that.

But the idea that we should be discouraging difficult words, or that this should be done at a browser level is terrible in many ways.


👤 akira2501
I find this viewpoint astonishing.

That we would use technology to intentionally dumb writing down.

Instead of using that same technology to provide definitions for less common words to people who might need them.


👤 haunter
Interesting take for sure, not sure if trolling though. But why don't you double down then?

Why don't web browsers discourage languages that not everyone will know?

Given the international nature of the web, wouldn't it make sense for web browsers to discourage you from using any language other than English? If you can write in English that most and more people would understand then why would you write in Punjabi, Mandarin, Xhosa, or Russian?


👤 davesque
But English is not simply a language used for international communication. It's also spoken natively by millions of people. People should be entitled to develop and express a literary culture or eloquence in their own native language without censorship. You can criticize a person for using complex language if their intended audience is international. But can you really make that criticism in general regardless of context? Doing so seems to ignore some basic rights.

It's easy to forget, but things can be beautifully spoken in English. And, as with any other language, it can take some skill to perceive the beauty. Wouldn't it be wrong to modify browsers to effectively restrict the potential for that beauty? Given that the web is arguably the most popular communications platform, wouldn't restricting the use of English on the web place an unfair burden on native English speakers and on English literary culture?


👤 h2odragon
Persiflage and unprovoked sesquipedalianism in whatever language is the very core of the web. Indeed, one might say its the essence of humanity.

👤 vivegi
That is not for web browsers to decide. If the creator of the website/page intends a wider multilingual audience, nothing stops them from providing translations of the same content into different languages.

In this day and age when we have access to multilingual online dictionaries, thesauri and even translators like Google Translate, discouraging unfamiliar words sounds extreme.


👤 josephcsible
To see the flaw in that idea, take it a step further. Some people can't read at all, so why not force everything to be described in pictures or videos instead?

👤 bediger4000
No. Don't be part of dumbing down of the web.

Look how dumbing down UI ended up: baby talk that means different things for different people and cultures, inappropriate, illogical skeuomorphisms, magic touch navigation that not everyone discovers.

Don't be part of any such effort.


👤 imwillofficial
This is a terrible take. So bad I can’t even comprehend asking it.

Let me give an example of the inverse of this idea:

When I was 10 or so my mom had me read lord of the rings. She also gave me a dictionary to look up words I didn’t yet know. I learned so much. The resplendent delivery of my loquacious lexicon is beatific in its copious verbiage.

Momma dun learned me cuz I dint know words gud.


👤 cratermoon
How about, instead of discouraging uncommon words (English or any language), browsers provide a simple way for users to see the definition of words? I don't know about Windows, but on Mac, hover over the world and press ctrl-cmd-D to active the dictionary feature.

👤 true_religion
It would note your own pronouncement used many difficult words that could easily be replaced with shorter and more common words without sacrificing too much clarity.

Instead of international… use “global” or “world wide”. Instead of make sense… use “be good”. Instead of discourage… use “put a stop to” or “warn off”. Etc. So many substations are necessary that it would just be better to rewrite the sentence.

For example “The web is used by many people in different places. Should apps warn you if you are using words that many people do not know?”

I had to substitute browser as it is a jargon word to many people. They just go online using their phone. They don’t know what is actually handling the data of the web page.


👤 morninglight
The VOA did the research years ago, and they have extensively tested the vocabulary around the world. If you think "VOA Special English" would help your audience, go for it.

https://www.unsv.com/voanews/specialenglish/about/wordbook/V...

https://www.vocabulary.com/lists/160931 .


👤 seejayseesjays
Given the existence of and easy access to translators and dictionaries, language barriers are somewhat less of an issue, I'd presume.

👤 dave4420
No, I want to write using British English. I will not be bullied into using American English or Indian English.

👤 jethronethro
Just how would a web browser discourage a writer from using words not everyone will know?

Instead, why not just look up those unfamiliar words? It's easy enough to do in most browsers – highlight the word, right click it, and then select Search [your default search engine] for '[word]'.


👤 fuckcensorship
Google started testing similar functionality on Google Docs recently: https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/google-docs-writing-...

👤 night-rider
I think you mean highly specific slang that only a select few know about and is contained to one area. I have a huge vocabulary of slang that is only known in my local area, but I don't use it on The Internet. It confuses people.

👤 32gbsd
No. And also the web is not really international. It is filled with little pockets.

👤 prmoustache
"English words in your posts that not everyone will know?"

How do you define that?


👤 devonnull
I can't see this idea flying. Why should anyone or anything prevent someone from writing in the way in which they want to write? And, as one poster pointed out, how would that work?

👤 snoopy_telex
Why waste time say lot word when few word do trick?

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvPaEsuz-tY


👤 sys_64738
I don't need a web browser to be a nanny.

👤 zweifuss
You can install the Grammarly addon to do that, if you want. It shouldn't be a core browser feature.

👤 testing7787
you didn’t provide a reason. what would the reason be for doing that?

👤 RappingBoomer
doubleplusungood

👤 glyphy177
This question should be taken down. It implies no intelligence in asker.