Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

ORIGIN TALE: WHERE DO EMOJIS COME FROM?

- Jayati Bhola ■ jayati.bhola@hindustant­imes.com

There’s a lot of sushi on the emoji keyboard, and more meals in a bowl than most people need. And that’s not an accident.

The emoji was born in Japan. It is now administer­ed by the Unicode Consortium (UC), a US-based not-for-profit network started by software engineers Joe Becker, Mark Davis and Lee Collins.

Unicode is an open-source initiative that essentiall­y works with platforms like Google and Microsoft to ensure that languages look similar across websites, browsers and devices. They began working with emojis in 2010, uniformali­sing and expanding the little pictorial dictionary. Amid calls to make it more inclusive, there are now more races represente­d, and more cultures and cuisines.

THE PROCESS

Anyone can propose an emoji. Many of the new types of emojis have, in fact, been a response to public demand. The most notable was when Unicode added the option, in 2015, of picking between skin shades for its various hand and face symbols.

Actual emojis introduced on request include breastfeed­ing woman, mosquito (lobbied for by Johns Hopkins and the Gates foundation) and paella.

So how does one go about putting in such a request? You start by drafting a proposal online, on unicode.org, with a note on the proposed character, and samples of what the proposed emoji could look like.

The criteria for approval are compatibil­ity (whether it’s already being widely used as an icon or image on platforms like Snapchat and Twitter), expected usage level (it shouldn’t be too niche), distinctiv­eness, completene­ss (it should fill a gap in current set of emojis), and how often the

proposed emoji has been requested or searched for.

The consortium decides which emojis to add, through a poll of it subcommitt­ee members. Any individual can be on the subcommitt­ee, for an annual fee of $75 ($35 for students). The UC subcommitt­ee must reach a consensus on all proposals.

Once every three months, all proposals that make it past the first level go to the UC’s full voting members. There are currently 12 such members — including Netflix, Google, Adobe, Apple, and Facebook; any company or organisati­on can become such a member for an annual fee of $18,000.

Once approved, they are forwarded to the technical committee, for eventual design and rollout. Each new emoji is posted on the Unicode website for public feedback. A final batch of new emojis is released each June.

In 2017, 56 new emojis were added, along with 183 emojis sequences for gender, skin tone and flags variations.

Interestin­gly, likenesses of people (living, dead or fictional), deities and business logos are banned in the emoji world. Santa Claus is the only exception.

Once the new emojis are launched, it is up to the vendors [Apple, Facebook etc] to choose which ones they want to support on their operating systems.

THE CHALLENGES

Given the politics involved in trying to represent the world through a limited set of icons, emoji activism has become a fulltime affair.

There are activists campaignin­g for greater diversity; healthier food; equal representa­tion (the bunny-eared woman was given a friend to dance with; and has been counterbal­anced by dancing bunnyeared men) and peace over violence (which turned the gun emoji into a water pistol).

One such activist is Jennifer 8 Lee, founder of EmojiNatio­n, who became a Unicode subcommitt­ee member in 2015 and is now vice-chair of the subcommitt­ee.

“I wanted to move the needle by being a part of the system,” she says. It was Lee who proposed the dumpling emoji, which was added last year. Similarly, emoji activist Rayouf Alhumedhi, a student from Berlin, successful­ly campaigned for a headscarf emoji, also rolled out in 2017.

Emojis approved this year include a mango, tuk-tuk, diya, peacock and teddy bear. Got more in mind? Now you know what to do.

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