ID:181611
 
One of my friends got on MSN, and told me there's a new punctuation called the "SarcMark." It's a mark used to show sarcasm. It costs 2 dollars to download, so I reckon we could just use the "@" sign at the end of sentences so that we can enjoy the SarcMark, and still have 2 dollars!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/6995354/ Sarcasm-punctuation-mark-aims-to-put-an-end-to-email-confusi on.html
Yeah, let's just ignore the standard /s everybody. It has done a horrible job of denoting sarcasm in the past. Paying for something that nobody else can see is the only way.

/s
This will be completely forgotten in a few months.
I foresee that company doing very well@
In response to Kuraudo
At what/where will they do very well?

/s
In response to Danial.Beta
I prefer this tag:
</sarcasm>

People get you said.
In response to GhostAnime
The problem with the full </sarcasm> is two fold. First, many websites block anything with a <> around it as an attempt to block HTML. Second it takes a lot longer to type. /s gets the point across and only takes to keystrokes.
Sarcasm marks have been around for at least half-a-century, in English, and other languages have had similar punctuation marks since the middle ages. This is nothing new, or useful.
In response to GhostAnime
GhostAnime wrote:
I prefer this tag:
</sarcasm>

I concur.

Also: Sarcasm punctuation mark aims to put an end to email confusion

I would have figured by now, between forums, IRC and text messaging, that we'd have managed to do that by now... And we have!

Though, it's a pretty good scam. I can see a lot of people being stupid enough to buy it... and more people being smart enough to copy the logo and shrink it in Paint.NET or Photoshop.
I actual use this odd little whatchamacallit ~

Is it weird though, that when I speak aloud my own sarcastic comments, I do it in the stereotypical 'Mhmmm You got that right honey/oh no you didn't!' black lady voice?
I use no characters to denote sarcasm. I like to keep people guessing.
In response to Stephen001
Stephen001 wrote:
I use no characters to denote sarcasm. I like to keep people guessing.

OH MY WAS STEPHEN BEING SARCASTIC? The world may never know. /tootsie pop
In response to Rtbbvr
The ~ character is known as a tilde. (The more you know!)
i think the makers of this sarcasm mark were being sarcastic when they made it. "yeah, we totally just made a new punctuation mark for sarcasm. it's going to be so useful."