What words / phrases don't you like?

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A Friday night subjective thread! Everyone will have different answers, so what are yours?

Right at the top of my list is, 'social media'. It was "social networking (Facebook, Friends Reunited etc) but that got changed to "social media" in the early 2010s, and *boom*, everything online is now social media. YouTube (2004), World of Warcraft (2004), forums (pre-WWW to present), instant messengers (pre-WWW to present) are apparently classed as such. Really? It's the bloody internet!

- 'climate change' - has become a press bingo word, where us kids were taught it as global warming. The greenhouse effect. The ozone layer, CFCs, smoking etc. Global warming.

- 'cost of living crisis' - I kinda understand this one, but it's still essentially a financial crisis, which we get in most decades. The press liked calling the 2008 financial crash the 'credit crunch' (at the time).

- 'online gaming' - when it refers to online gambling. Word-swapping gambling to gaming implies that it is a an innocent pastime. Granted I do online gambling myself, but I prefer to call it what it really is and admit that I do gamble.

- 'gentlemen's club' - is another word-swap where really it's a strip joint. Again it down-plays what it is.

- 'stay home' - old news is old, but it's stay AT home. Lazy writing! I'll accept stay @ home though if you want to be internet-cool, "down with the kids", late 90s style :p

- 'deep fake' - is the press' favourite term for what is basically a "Photoshop", by Photoshopping someone's head into a video or picture.

- 'AI' - similar to deepfake images, except that everything in the press is now apparently AI.

- 'meme' - is such an over-used term. Memes were small internet inside-jokes that later went viral and had a lasting effect. There would be a few memorable ones each year. Then maybe around 2015 onwards, 'memes' only last for a day then punters move onto the next, to the point that the whole idea of a meme loses all meaning because they're forgotten.

This last one is controversial, in that I find the gender terms rather pushy and political. Like unisex (e.g. toilets / items of clothing etc) is now gender neutral, and addressing someone by a he, she or they is called pronouns (instead of an address). HR departments are going to love this because of staff inadvertently miss-gendering someone because that someone didn't put their address he/she/they in their email signature. Stepping on eggshells.
 
"Myself": I can't think of the last time I've heard it used in the correct context. Even with professional writers, on TV or movies, anything. "If you have any questions, please contact Mark or myself and we'll try to assist." *cringe*

"Hack": overused as some kind of attention-getter when demonstrating a clever method of performing an everyday action. That is definitely not how that word was intended to be used. They have managed to deface the slang which it already was from back in the '80s when it meant breaking into a computer system.
Further on that, when a Facebook user states "my account has been hacked". No, it hasn't. Someone just created a new account using your name and started inviting all your friends in an effort to establish trust so they can eventually beg for money or phish information from them.
 
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@SourChipmunk - I hear you on "Hack", and also in another usage of that word: "My account has been hacked!" Normally refers to a forum or Facebook/deviantART (etc) account that has been hacked. Again, a buzz / bingo word that the press uses. In fact, it's not someone with computer skills coding for vulnerabilities in a website, but instead it's a imposter post or a phishing (again imposter) email that coax the user into giving out their credentials. So it's not really called hacking, but instead, it's called social engineering.

LOL @new boy - Queen Pawn's Opening, 1. d4 :p
 
"Myself": I can't think of the last time I've heard it used in the correct context. Even with professional writers, on TV or movies, anything. "If you have any questions, please contact Mark or myself and we'll try to assist." *cringe*

"Hack": overused as some kind of attention-getter when demonstrating a clever method of performing an everyday action. That is definitely not how that word was intended to be used. They have managed to deface the slang which it already was from back in the '80s when it meant breaking into a computer system.
Further on that, when a Facebook user states "my account has been hacked". No, it hasn't. Someone just created a new account using your name and started inviting all your friends in an effort to establish trust so they can eventually beg for money or phish information from them.

While "life hack" is more recent I've encountered the word hack or more usually hacked (as in "I hacked something up") in generally the same way as a "life hack" going back to at least the 80s outside of the computer context. Albeit I've had an above average number of acquaintances, especially in the 80s and 90s, with an interest or involvement with computers so may be more of a spillover from that than something in more general use.
 
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"Myself": I can't think of the last time I've heard it used in the correct context. Even with professional writers, on TV or movies, anything. "If you have any questions, please contact Mark or myself and we'll try to assist." *cringe*

"Hack": overused as some kind of attention-getter when demonstrating a clever method of performing an everyday action. That is definitely not how that word was intended to be used. They have managed to deface the slang which it already was from back in the '80s when it meant breaking into a computer system.
Further on that, when a Facebook user states "my account has been hacked". No, it hasn't. Someone just created a new account using your name and started inviting all your friends in an effort to establish trust so they can eventually beg for money or phish information from them.
 
"Myself": I can't think of the last time I've heard it used in the correct context. Even with professional writers, on TV or movies, anything. "If you have any questions, please contact Mark or myself and we'll try to assist." *cringe*

"Hack": overused as some kind of attention-getter when demonstrating a clever method of performing an everyday action. That is definitely not how that word was intended to be used. They have managed to deface the slang which it already was from back in the '80s when it meant breaking into a computer system.
Further on that, when a Facebook user states "my account has been hacked". No, it hasn't. Someone just created a new account using your name and started inviting all your friends in an effort to establish trust so they can eventually beg for money or phish information from them.

Hack. Yeah absolutely hate that in the context of saving some money or something.

Also

Side hussle.
 
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