Most certainly. Think about it. Let's say:
A: Posts a spoiler. Let it be a mild or very mild one they don't consider worthy of withholding, as they believe its knowledge wouldn't impact one's enjoyment of a game/show/book/whatever. Or maybe the game/show/book is very old A considers it fair game.
B: "Hey, that's a spoiler, I'm mad!"
A: "No, it's not! It's irrelevant! Now I'm counter-mad! You can't even talk about XXX anymore these days!"
Let's assume that the spoiler is indeed mild. B expresses their dissatisfaction about getting spoiled, and what reason reason would they have to lie? It is reasonable to assume that most people who complain about spoilers were probably unhappy about getting spoiled. And no matter how irrelevant that spoiler is to A, it caused some measurable (if managable) harm to B. They might enjoy said media less for it, which sucks a bit or a lot, depending on the spoiler and the person. A on the other hand doesn't have a particularly strong case to get upset. They didn't get their show/game/book spoiled and no long-term harm was inflicted on them. Their feelings were clearly hurt for a little bit (else they'd not respond strongly), but it's temporary and presumably short-lived. A has the option to move on, B on the other hand can't get unspoiled. The damage is done.
I have therefore proven that complaining about spoiler culture is the epitome of nerd fragility.
A: Posts a spoiler. Let it be a mild or very mild one they don't consider worthy of withholding, as they believe its knowledge wouldn't impact one's enjoyment of a game/show/book/whatever. Or maybe the game/show/book is very old A considers it fair game.
B: "Hey, that's a spoiler, I'm mad!"
A: "No, it's not! It's irrelevant! Now I'm counter-mad! You can't even talk about XXX anymore these days!"
Let's assume that the spoiler is indeed mild. B expresses their dissatisfaction about getting spoiled, and what reason reason would they have to lie? It is reasonable to assume that most people who complain about spoilers were probably unhappy about getting spoiled. And no matter how irrelevant that spoiler is to A, it caused some measurable (if managable) harm to B. They might enjoy said media less for it, which sucks a bit or a lot, depending on the spoiler and the person. A on the other hand doesn't have a particularly strong case to get upset. They didn't get their show/game/book spoiled and no long-term harm was inflicted on them. Their feelings were clearly hurt for a little bit (else they'd not respond strongly), but it's temporary and presumably short-lived. A has the option to move on, B on the other hand can't get unspoiled. The damage is done.
I have therefore proven that complaining about spoiler culture is the epitome of nerd fragility.