It does not bother me. I'd often sit backwards on Amtrak going from Sacramento to the Bay Area (and sit forwards going the other way). As long as I got to sit forwards on one of the trips, I was fine.
I prefer forwards facing but my allocated seats for both outwards and return of a long journey I made last week were both rear facing. (Three and a half hours for that section, the whole trip using 3 separate trains.)
I prefer the window seat though. My journeys are not across vast empty plains, so I am more interested in the scenery than, say, reading. Further, I refuse point-blank to join the herd unable to travel more than three and a half minutes without immersion in a box of electronics! I don't own a lap-top anyway, and though I had my phone with me, I left it switched off for almost the entire three days I was away.
They are encouraged by modern railway coaches, on the main-line services at least, having Wi-Fi connections and standard mains sockets (for power-supplies and chargers).
At least the modern headphones don't subject everyone within a several yards radius with that annoying, rhythmic, sibilant "psst-psst-psst" sound the older versions leaked.
Something I have found though, if rearwards-facing but next to the window, I've tendency to try to look round, forwards. It's not so bad in an aisle seat, partly because if I did that I'd be staring rudely at the person opposite, but also thanks to a somewhat restricted but more balanced view out.