News

Girls are not happy with how they’re represented in emoji. The pink shirts, bunny ears, and princess crowns are limiting and stereotypical, a new study finds. Feminine care brand Always surveyed ...
That's about it, actually. All the professional and active emoji — swimmer, detective, ... while 67 percent believed that the existing female emoji imply girls are limited in what they can do.
Pretty much everyone texts, sends instant messages, and posts to social media with emoji. But when you use emoji for careers like construction worker, detective and police officer they are always ...
You’ve got your paramedic emoji, your policeman emoji, your private-detective emoji and many many more mostly male emojis. Isn’t it time we had at least a few professional-women characters out ...
July 17 is World Emoji Day and in celebration, Stanford University's Green Library is featuring the emoji-inspired artwork of ...
But this World Emoji Day (17 July) people are only just realising the real meaning behind the seemingly innocent 'dancing girls' emoji - and some are horrified to discover the truth. Whilst the ...
Not everyone speaks English, Baeten said, but girls around the world speak emoji. That’s why the campaign, heavy on digital distribution and social media outreach, will be a worldwide effort.
As emoji and emoticons have rocketed from web slang to the unofficial language of the Internet age, authorities contend the symbols have been used to stalk, harass, threaten or defame people.
Princesses. Girls in pink. Manicures and haircuts. These are the female-centric emoji that, apparently, are making young girls feel limited. According to a new study, almost half of 16 to 24-year ...