The Facebook Poke is a feature on the Facebook homepage, and has a number of potential meanings. An option located on the right side of the page allows people to “poke” someone else with the click of a mouse or tap of a touch screen. When a user opts to poke someone, the person chosen receives a message that they’ve been poked and by who. There is also an option with any new poke, to reciprocate. For many, this is just a means of saying hello, but other meanings have been suggested that are worth exploration.
Facebook informational pages explain the Facebook Poke as a way to say hello, or to get the attention of someone. It can also be a reciprocal hello, especially when a person has been poked and chooses to respond. Certainly the poke is quicker than writing on someone’s wall, and depending on privacy settings, it may be possible to poke people who aren’t presently friends. Often, this feature is restricted to people in a friends network, but privacy settings are subject to rapid changes on this social platform.
Some alternate meanings to the Facebook Poke have been suggested. People might principally use this feature to determine the level of someone else’s sexual interest. A reciprocal poke could lead to a real or virtual meeting with another similarly minded person. Of course, not everyone uses this, and people should be fairly certain that both people are likely to understand any sexual connotations of a poke before proceeding to a chat and flooring a friend with far too much private information.
Another explanation of the Facebook Poke is that it is meant to be mildly, moderately or greatly mischievous. When people have huge friend networks, responding to pokes can get annoying and it’s that much more content that may get in the way of reading other’s posts. Fortunately, people don’t have to respond in any way, but someone who keeps repeatedly sending pokes might have to be unfriended or hidden.
A Facebook Poke can also be used in a friend network to play a version of tag. People poke each other until the poke comes back to the initiator of a game. Again, different levels of participation and interest on the network may cause the game to come to a quick stop if a person poked doesn’t respond.
Ultimately, the poke is typically what people make of it: mostly a hello, and occasionally more significant. It is not advised that people use this option on everyone they know because it may seem annoying, and it’s usually perfectly okay to ignore a poke because it’s meant to be a very brief form of communication. In most cases, it’s about the equivalent to a tap on the shoulder.
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abiane
Post 4 |
@babyksay You can always send them a message. Or if their profile is not set on a private setting you could look through their pictures in order to better determine if they are the person you have been looking for or not. A lot of people like to put up photos of their kids or pets or something crazy that you don't even know what it is which really annoys me, but it is their page so what are you going to do? |
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bbpuff
Post 3 |
@babyksay - I don't think you can pole people you're not friends with. However, you CAN send them a message and ask them if they are Mr. or Ms. So and So. It might seem a little silly, but people usually don't have an issue with answering that kind of question because they know what it's like to be looking for some one. |
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babyksay
Post 2 |
@doppler - Do you know if you can poke people that you aren't friends with yet? I see people I think are old buddies from school and stuff all the time, but a lot of times they have a picture that's of their kids or something wacky on their profile so I'm never sure that it's really them. |
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doppler
Post 1 |
My friend and I use the facebook poke thing all the time. I actually find it a little annoying. There isn't a giant sign or notification that says you've been poked - it's just a little link thing so it really isn't that annoying or anything for most people. We just go back and forth literally every time we are on facebook. |