I might be imagining it, but I will say that it tends to appear most often at the end of a sentence, before or after the closing punctuation. ![]() There IS no “object” for it to represent. However, when you say that it is “used as a text placeholder for an otherwise unspecified object”, it doesn’t quite explain it accurately to me because the OBJ boxes appear randomly. ![]() I started noticing this happening quite some time ago when posting on Facebook from my iPhone 11, and though I can’t say for sure, it does seem like its appearance does occur when I use voice dictation to write a post. It means that OBJ is a replacement for a character that can’t be displayed on your screen.” ![]() “OBJ on Facebook posts is an “object replacement character” in Unicode that’s used as a text placeholder for an otherwise unspecified object.
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