Table of Contents

Cyberbullying


What is cyberbullying?

Cyberbullying statistics

Did you know?

Read more and reflect!

https://www.broadbandsearch.net/blog/cyber-bullying-statistics

https://techjury.net/stats-about/cyberbullying/

https://www.comparitech.com/internet-providers/cyberbullying-statistics/

https://safeatlast.co/blog/cyberbullying-statistics/


Types of cyberbullying

Bera (2019) identifies 5 types of bullying on the web:

  1. Harassment: Threatening or abusive messages are sent in a sustained, repeated, and intentional way.
  2. Outing: This is a deliberate act meant to publicly humiliate a person by posting embarrassing, sensitive, or private photos.
  3. Fraping: This occurs when a cyberbully logs into a person’s account and impersonates them, posting comments, photos, and/or videos to cause emotional harm.
  4. Cyberstalking: The official cyberstalking definition varies from state to state. Often a criminal offense, this behavior involves stalking a victim via online platforms and using the collected information to bother them and cause harm. It’s often accompanied by offline stalking.
  5. Catfishing: This is when a person creates a fake social media presence or a fake identity intended to deceive, manipulate, and harm a specific person (Bera, 2019).

https://safeatlast.co/blog/cyberbullying-statistics/

Nycyk (2015) identifies 9 types of cyberbullying:

  1. Abuse, Threats and Name Calling. This is one of the most common form of cyberbullying based on someone’s physical appearance and weight, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, culture orbeliefs. Celebrities and high-profile people, such as politicians, are particularly bullie.
  2. Altering Photos. Using Photoshop for Altering someone’s photo and posting them online is a form of cyberbullying.
  3. Creating Fake, Unauthorised or Hurtful Profiles. Creating fake, unauthorised and hurtful profiles that misrepresent a person’s moral character is a form of cyberbullying.
  4. Disclosure of Personal Information. Making public someone's private home address, work address, phone numbers, email and real names is a form of cyberbullying.
  5. Flaming. Having arguments on social media is a form of Cyberbullying.
  6. Hacking and Desecrating of Memorial Websites. A computer hackers access websites and socialmedia memorial sites of those who have passed away.
  7. Impersonating Someone. On datingsites and in chat rooms where people can be emotionally vulnerable, Cyberbullies can also pretend to be the victim and post messages and emails to others to undermine the victim’s relationships they have with other people.
  8. Posting Gossip and Rumours. This strategies are used to persuade others about someone’s character that is often without fact or truth.
  9. Sexting. Sexting is where messages and photos are of a sexual nature that is unauthorised and unwanted. They are primarily sent by mobile phones. This is cyberbullying when the sendingof them to others is not consensual. If people send nude photos and explicit texts to eachother and they consent to do so, that is not bullying. It is not just taking photos of someone that can result in experiencing bullying. It is also if someone takes a ‘selfie’ or photo of one’s self and it is obtained by a bully. Additionally, if someone sends you unwanted photos of naked people or people engaged in sexual acts it is a form of cyberbullying if you did notwant to see them.

(https://www.academia.edu/11836687/Adult-to-Adult_Cyberbullying_An_Exploration_of_a_Dark_Side_of_the_Internet)

Blain (2017) identifies 9 Common Types of Cyberbullying:

  1. flaming (when a person sends electronic messages with angry and vulgar language)
  2. happy-slapping (posting or publishing embarrassing or damaging photos or videos)
  3. denigration (gossiping or spreading rumors about a person), impersonation (pretending to be someone else)
  4. outing (revealing private or embarrassing information about a person)
  5. trickery (persuading a person to reveal secret information they would not otherwise reveal)
  6. exclusion (engaging in activities intentionally to exclude someone from a formal or informal group)
  7. cyberstalking (monitoring a person's activities or placing a person under surveillance to instill fear)
  8. doxing or doxxing (publishing or making available personally-identifying information about another)
  9. self-harming (when a person anonymously sends himself/herself instructions to self-harm or self-injure)
  10. cyber harassment (repeatedly sending offensive messages to cause a person to fear for their safety)

(https://www.avvo.com/legal-guides/ugc/10-types-of-cyberbullying)

How to stop adult cyberbullying

According to a 2014 Pew Research Center survey, forty percent of adult Internet users say they’ve been harassed online, and almost three quarters say they’ve seen someone else being harassed.

We can stop cyberbullying by:

A. Silence

Most of the experts agree that we should respond with complete silence to a cyberbully. “Unfriend, unfollow, unlink, says Patricia Wallace, adjunct professor at the University of Maryland University College Graduate School and author of “Psychology of the Internet.” Block the bully from your phone and your social media accounts. Don't respond. It makes you seem vulnerable and a more interesting target” (Bernstein, 2016).

B. Writing

The next recommendation is to write everything you want to say down in a notebook or a Word document, then to file it away. “The writing will dissipate your anger, says Pamela Rutledge, director of the Media Psychology Research Center, in Newport, Calif. And you can recognize that the bully has a problem and you don’t.” (Bernstein, 2016).

C. New focus

Shifting your focus by writing a friend or loved one a nice note.

D. Save evidence

It is strongly recomended to make an archive of the evidence, ”with dates, times, descriptions and screenshots of messages or emails, says Tyler Cohen Wood, cybersecurity expert for Inspired eLearning, a San Antonio company that provides online digital awareness, compliance and harassment trening” (Bernstein, 2016).

E. Report to the site’s administrators

When cyberbullying happens on social media you should report to site’s administrators. ”You can also reach out to organizations that help people who are being attacked online: Crashoverridenetwork.com, iHollaback.org” (Bernstein, 2016).

F. Report to local law enforcement

If you are threat or if the cyberbullyied became extremely violent in cyber space, go to police and ask for help.

G. React when someonelse is cyberbullyied

”If you see cyberbullying happening to someone else, post something positive to the person being attacked. It is a powerful show of support to the victim and of rebuke to the bully, says Michelle Ferrier, an associate dean for innovation at the Scripps College of Communication at Ohio University and founder of TrollBusters, an organization that combats cyberbullying” (Bernstein, 2016).

Watch the next movie about how to beat cyberbullies!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jwu_7IqWh8Y


Didactic part

Find here inspirations and instructions for exercises to be applied in adult education. They were tested during common workshops. didactic_inspirations_cyberbullying.pdf


Author: Ciomaga Florentina, CJRAE Vrancea