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Small change brings gender equality to Facebook icons

The icons aren't big, but they're still important in terms of promoting equality and inclusion in every circumstance.
A Facebook Inc. logo is displayed at the top of the login page for facebook.com on a computer screen. (Photo by Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty)
A Facebook Inc. logo is displayed at the top of the login page for facebook.com on a computer screen.

Up there at the top of your Facebook page is a little "friends" icon. Perhaps you never noticed that it's a woman standing behind and in the shadow of a man — or perhaps you did, and wondered why it shouldn't be the other way around, or any other way. Facebook designer Caitlin Winner wondered the same thing, but since she was in a position to change things, she decided to give it a shot.

See old and new icons here

A few weeks of pixel-tweaking later and she had created new icons — an updated, more detailed woman in front, a less angular man, and even a gender-neutral icon for times when such things aren't known or don't need specifying. A few weeks more and the icons had made their way to apps and interfaces throughout the service.

It wasn't just male and female icons that are getting the treatment, either. People in the Americas might not have cared that the "notifications" icon showed those continents — but Africans, Europeans and others might have preferred a globe that shows their home instead. So the designers added it.

Perhaps few people will notice these subtle changes (the icons aren't big), but they're still important in terms of promoting equality and inclusion in every circumstance, no matter how small.

This story originally appeared on NBCNews.com