5 Instagram Era Behaviors That Need to Die

5 Instagram Era Behaviors That Need to Die

We’ve all been spending a lot more time on social media lately. Whether Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, or something else (that as a mid-thirty-something I’m not even aware of yet) is your preferred poison, I would like to respectfully submit that it’s time for us all to make some behavioral changes in how we socialize online. 

In my abundant surplus of free time (thank you, Coronavirus and the practical shutdown of the arts industry), I’ve lost countless hours to Instagram and Facebook scrolling. Well, actually, I’m a few sentences in, and it’s already time to correct myself. I say “countless hours”, but in actuality, I’ve counted thanks to my phone’s “Screen Time” analysis settings. So, here are the saddest of statistics of my life thus far: 

Instagram

In the past week, I opened Instagram 231 times, with a total of 5 hours of use, for an average of about 45 minutes of Instagram perusal a day. 

Facebook

In that same week, I disturbingly opened Facebook 409 times, with a total of 15.75 hours of use, with an average of about 2.25 hours per day (this data might be skewed by viewing links out of Facebook, as I’m not sure if those count toward the accrued time).

I may have a social media compulsion.

My phone doesn’t offer longitudinal data on Screen Time use. I can only judge myself for the past couple of weeks, but judge, I will, and extrapolate, I must. My collective social media time of about three hours a day means that in the past six months of quarantine, I’ve probably clocked over 500 hours on Instagram and Facebook. I would say a social media detox is in my future.

I tell you all of this because I want you to realize that for many of you, these statistics will be similar or potentially worse and I invite you to check up on yourself, and I want to firmly establish myself as a frequent user and therefore, a scrolling expert capable of pointing out what I view to be some of the worst offenders of social media behavior.

Ready? Here we go:

1) The Abbreviator of Words That Need Not Be Abbreviated

Examples: collab, gorg, fowsh, tog, preesh, etc.

This is the abbreviation I see the most and am therefore most irritated by. The English language is wide-ranging and nuanced. We have beautiful rolling words at our disposal like “mellifluous,” “serendipitous,” and “ineffable,” and yet, we end up with “collab,” “gorg,” “fowsh,” and "preesh." Must we really shorten every word to oblivion? I vote no.

No thank you, I’m not terribly interested in “collab-ing” with you.

2) The Incessant Re-share Bandit

Example: A photographer takes a gorgeous (not gorg, thank you) photo and shares it to their Instagram feed. They then re-share that post in their Instagram story, their Facebook personal page, their Facebook photography page, and every single photography group to which they belong. 

I don’t know about you, but when I see a photo come across my Facebook feed for the third time because a photographer’s marketing strategy is “more is more,” I get a little annoyed. That’s an immediate unfollow for sure. There are enough actual spam accounts out there; it's sad to see talented photographers spamming each other because they’re a little too click-happy with the re-share button. Keep in mind that many of the same people belong to multiple photography groups on Facebook (especially location-based groups), so you’re likely spamming the same folks with that eighth post of your photo.

3) The Meme Pirate

Example: Person A posts a funny photo with a caption that is relevant to them. Person B eventually sees it and recreates it as if it is their own. Persons C through Z never see the original post, only the plagiarized version. The Meme Pirate gets all of the laughs and re-shares. Person A, who had the original funny thought, is forgotten.

Who actually thinks this is a good idea? Some accounts were made an example of when they re-shared and profited off content without tagging the original creator. Many accounts seemingly solved the attribution problem by remaking the memes themselves. Don’t pretend like it’s yours because you changed the font and background color. Create your own funny meme. Boromir is waiting for you.

4) The Unsolicited Advisor

Example: Person A shares a photo to a photography group and does not ask for critique. Person B offers critique, or even worse, downloads the photo and re-edits it to show what they would have done differently. 

I have legitimately seen this happen. Multiple times. I know that we are all experts in our own minds and we have certain techniques that we love and styles that we strive for in our own work, but please, don’t re-edit someone else's photo without them asking you to. It’s just a dick move and seems like a no-brainer, and yet...

5) The Trojan Compliment Giver

Example: Instagram comments like “this is such a cool shot, you should really follow my friend @waycoolerthanyou76,” or “OMG LOVE THIS, can I get a follow? I know you’ll like my pics too,” or my personal favorite, “I would have cropped this differently but I see what you’re going for. Check out my photography tips on my feed @ilearnedphotographyoninstagramyesterday.”

The world is crashing and burning. We all need some positivity in our lives. If you like a photo and feel the need to comment, please make it valid and helpful. Don’t use comments as a means of self-promotion. If you really want more followers, you’ll get farther with genuine conversation and relationship-building than with veiled compliments.

Try a little harder to sound like a real human please.

What about you? Do any of these things get on your nerves? According to psychologists, we’re all at risk of being a little more irritable these days, so what’s been driving you up a wall? Get it off your chest in the comments! Thanks, togs! I fowsh can't wait to hear what you have to add. Preesh!

Lead image, "Device Love", by lukew, licensed under CC BY 2.0

Jordana Wright's picture

For over a decade Jordana has been a professional photographer and photography educator. In 2018 she published "The Enthusiast's Guide to Travel Photography" with Rocky Nook Inc. Check out "Focused On Travel", her online educational photography and travel series on her YouTube page!

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46 Comments

I’ll preface by saying it’s really not a big deal, and no one should ever be getting actually mad over how someone else uses Instagram... not to mention I’ve done this myself a few times. Buuut, this is the scenario that irks me: when photographers share to their stories someone else’s story that complimented them. And they do this multiple times per day. Photographer will post a photo to their feed, someone will share that photo to a story adding something like “woah this photo is gnarly,” then photographer reshares that story compliment on their own stories. I get the need to say thank you for the people who dig your work, but it seems so self-congratulating the way it’s being done. “Look at all these people saying how I’m awesome!” Just send a dm.

I'll get back to you on my Facebook annoyances. But first: the world is not crashing and burning. There are big problems as always. But there's also a lot of progress happening benhind the media "scenes".

AMEN TO ALL OF THESE

As I approach geezerdom, this is probably a generational peeve. But, I hate when words like "you're" are shortened to "ur", "thanks" to "tanx" and "see" to "c" which aren't even a words. On the upside, I make it a practice that if I'm not familiar with your IG handle and you give my work a like, I'll visit your profile and look around. If I like a lot of what I see there, I'll follow. If not, I give some likes to photos that I do enjoy.

How old is "geezerdom"? Asking for a friend...

60 in November.

Number 5 is obviously almost always software or bot spamming. It's always a comment that gives a compliment, put stays generic enough so it is applicable on almost every photo. Someday people will realise how much automation and "cheating" is going on on a platform like Instagram. Posts are scheduled automatically. Software is running to give automated likes or comments on new followers, accounts follow you and if you don't follow back, unfollow you. All done by software running the account.
Sometimes they are just downright idiotic. Last week I started following someone and within 2minutes they liked all my latest photos. About 20 pieces. It took him or her 5s to scroll that fast and like all those photos. Obviously I unfollowed. I'm sure the bot was deeply hurt.

The others I know - had to make out "preesh" because I've never seen it before - but what does "fowsh" mean?

Fowsh = For Sure

Okay... so.

Um.

Right. Where are you going online that people are using phrases from PubLIZity?

I'll take Instagram seriously when they show pics in normal sizes and not for the iphone 1. Facebook has been a ghost town for years now and the only reason some use it is because FB messenger which was forced on them. Zuckerberg stopped caring about more than ad revenue long ago. Problem is that anyone that tries to come out with something better either gets bought out or flat our ripped off by the Zuck.

FB is strong in photography/cinema groups. At least in my area. Tons of people use it for paid/TFP gigs. Even the younger crowd joins just to get shoots in. Also, for those setting up wildlife/landscape ventures.

It's nice that the reach has improved not that they completely screwed up country restrictions and are allowing every pervert around the world to start attacking model pages. About the only thing they try and keep working there is the login. They even released dark mode unfinished and they tell you it's not done. Who does that?

Wut?

My target market is on Facebook.

Moms.

I think Instagram and Youtubers need to stop saying the following three words. Epic,bro and fail.

Also "iconic."

Also cinematic

Also dope...For Peter McKinnon...

In all seriousness... it seems to me that most photographers today have come to detest FB and IG, resent the obligation to deal with them, and would be very happy indeed to see some new alternatives appear.

I rarely post to IG anymore but I'm not sure I'd like another alternative. IG was supposed to be for photos but it's definitely devolved from that. I'd imagine a new platform would eventually end up the same way.

The biggest site on the web for photos and the site is designed for 720 monitors and iphone 1. Anyone that comes out with something better, they will just try and buy out or flat out steal from (snapchat, instagram, etc.)

500px could be so much better than it currently is. But they're moving in a weird direction with the app.

Problem with 500px is it's mostly photographers viewing other photographer work and as usual, the nudes, lingerie or bikini pics get the most attention. I don't really care about posting my images on a site to be judged by other photographers. Social media is just a place where people already have accounts, can view my work and contact me there.

-- "and as usual, the nudes, lingerie or bikini pics get the most attention"

As usual, these types of assumptions about a site are pretty false.

https://500px.com/popular

Yup you got me. People like pics of butterflies and trees a little too.

Yep. There's something in it for everyone. It's not as one-sided and dominated by any one genre as you cried it out to be.

I stand behind what I said. Same for this site. You shoot the same stuff, are you mad that you're not more popular because of it?

Am I mad? What are you, 12? You pull out the popularity card because you have nothing grown up to bring to the table. Given your history of acting like a little man-child, I guess I shouldn’t surprised.

And as for this site, here, let me help you, aaagain. There is none so blind…

https://fstoppers.com/popular/photos
https://fstoppers.com/top/photos
https://fstoppers.com/potd

You're funny.

Lol. SMH So, you basically just proved my point, that there's something in it for everyone. Just based off the 12 members, you marked off 4. 4 out of 12. And, if you account just that one page, the odds fall out of your prudish favor even more. I'd do the math for you, but, I think you need to exercise your brain a little (at least do it more often) so you don't end up making the case for the person your arguing with. :D

Well you could be right. You shoot nudes and aren't popular at all, like anywhere. Like no matter how nude you talk the girl into getting for you, nope, nobody cares about your pics. Thanks for solving the case buddy.

You being a failed Youtuber, you’re no stranger to not being popular yourself. 7 years (at least). That’s how long you’ve been struggling with your channel. You tried to do the typical things like unboxings, reviews, tutorials, short films, etc. In the last 3 months, you have videos with 37 views. 37. LOL, wtf. That’s barely 1% of your subs. This must be frustrating for you. All the work you put in and nobody wants to take the 5 mins of their day.

Lol, I stopped caring about Youtube in 2010. The videos you see were posted to my Patreon and then made public on Youtube for the hell of it. I could care less about being an influencer. Youtube is another portfolio site and good for storage. Funny though.

Try the Chinese one. The international one is crap.

Really? I'm generally not a fan of the style of photography popular in China, but I'll take a look.

The Chinese site has photographers from all around the world posting, so don't worry.

A great deal about what's wrong with FB is explained by their total obsession with phones. They've decided the phone is the future of everything, larger displays are just for old people and office workers. This is actually warping - and trivializing - the whole concept of photography and imaging.

FB kept switching me to the new layout and I keep switching back to the classic with the reason of the photos are too small. They just switched me again, but, this time the images are larger, but, looks like they just stretched 'em. Those bastids.

We're not going to win, the "new version" is coming down the tracks.

Facebook today is basically a mobile ad platform. I'm seeing more ads, reading fewer posts, and my friends are doing the same. As this article points out, it's becoming a joke - a bundle of its own cliches.

Facebook will just keep on trying to wring more money out of advertising until they go the way of AOL. What comes next, no one knows.

I have https://www.fbpurity.com/ installed so I don't see ads on FB. Plus, I can customize some of features/behaviors. Even revert back to the classic layout and keep it there...for the time being at least.

500px? Probably?

#1. Oh, hell no, I know you didn’t just include “collab” in there. It’s for people like me who can’t spell callaburation to save my life. :D

#2. Yep, I had to block a few people that kept sharing across multiple FB groups with stupid crap like, “Have a blessed day.” and a link to their IG account . If they do it to just one, I’m okay with it. But, damn, 3 to 8. GTFO

#4. Another yep, I hate that. I usually say something like, “Your version looks like shit. You should have just left it alone.”

Hahahaha...I'm unsubscribing the insta mails..

I don't use either Instagram or Facebook.

The other one I hate is the glommer. The person that is similar to #4 but they HAVE to post one of their own pics in the discussion hoping to glom onto the original poster's thread. This happens on Fstoppers and other sites as well.