The top-voted answers to this answer are saying say, "This feature is pointless, people should vote instead".
Neither the OP here, nor the blog post, say what you said on your private web site -- https://www.lisahpark.com/reactions -- that it allows reactions by visitors who don't have enough reputation to vote. Or it is mentioned in the Meta post ...
This feature is available to all registered users, regardless of reputation (unlike voting, which is only available for users with 15 reputation or more).
... but there it seems to be a description of the behaviour of the feature, not the reason for the feature, so it's easy to miss that or to fail to infer the purpose.
Perhaps if you posted this then people would have an idea of:
- Why this feature happened
- Why it happened without their input
- Why specific design choices were made (like "no inbox notifications")
PROBLEM
Stack Overflow users are not allowed to leave comments on a post until they reach at least 15 reputation points. This often leads to users abusing the Answers field and posting non-answers. We collected data on the content of comments across the site and found that although users are discouraged from saying thanks in the comments, it one of the most frequently added sentiments.
Goal
Quell the number of non-answer posts
promote helpful, relevant comments
give users a way to share their gratitude
Research & development
Ideation The Community Product team ideated on different solutions worth exploring and converged on Reactions as possible solution.
Quick creation I organized a design team brainstorm activity where product designers and UX researchers from across the organization gathered to work on different ways we could integrate and develop the Reaction feature.
Hallway testing I performed 1:1 interviews with coworkers who are also Stack Overflow users. This was an inexpensive method of user testing to gather quick insights.
Product divergence and iteration We identified different risks and needs between our Public and Private platforms. At this point the Reactions feature was going to be distinctly different than what we would deploy on StackOverflow.com
User Interviews A new design was created solely for Public Q&A. I recruited Stack Overflow users for 1:1 interviews to gather more targeted insight with our main audience.
Instead when you posted it here on Meta you posted it as a fait accompli.
IMO users dislike it because it doesn't solve their problem or they feel it's the wrong solution to their problem -- and IMO the reason for that is that you don't explain what you detailed step by step on your private web site, i.e. problem it does or is intended to solve.