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What is Bullying?

It is hurting or being mean to someone- repeatedly and on purpose. Bullying comes in many forms.

Bullying

1. Misuse of power

2. Ongoing and repeated

3. Behaviors that can cause harm

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Cyberbullying

1. The electronic posting of mean-spirited messages about a person (as a student) often done
anonymously.

2. The use of the internet and related technologies to harm other people, in a deliberate, repeated, and
hostile manner.

3. The use of cell phones, instant messaging, e-mail, chat rooms or social networking sites such as
facebook and twitter to harass, threaten or intimidate someone.

Example.

- How'd we get stuck with you??

- You're so SH*T!

- Loser of the year award goes to you

- I'm coming to kill you!

- I'll ruin your life!!

- Just die already...

- PI$$ OFF!!

-I'm gonna kick your A%*!!


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Cyber bullying, star suicides: The dark side of south korea's K-pop world

Depression and vowed to fight malicious online comment

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Teens di media sosial

In Total, 95 percent of teens are connected to the internet, and 85 percent are social media users,
according to a study from the pew research center.

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Social Media: Advertising audience profile

Share of the audience that marketers can reach with adverts on social media by age group and gender.

Source: extrapolations of data from social media platforms' self-service advertising tools (JAN 2021).
*notes: most social media platforms do not publish audience data for genders other that 'male' or
'female'. *advisories: users may identify by different genders and / or misrepresent their age on social
media, which may affect the comparability of social media vs demographic data from other sources,
"users" may not represent unique individuals.

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Cyberbullying is a real problem in today's society.

- Overall, 36,5 percent of people feel they have been cyberbullied in their lifetime, and 17,4 percent
have reported it has happened at some point in the last 30 days. [1]

-60 percent of teenagers have experienced some sort of cyberbullying.[2]

-70 percent of teenagers have reported someone spreading rumors about them online.[3]

-87 percent of young people have seen cyberbullying occurring online.[4]

-95 percent of teenagers are connected to the internet and 85 percent of them are using social media.
[5]
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Where are people cyberbullied?

Social media platforms

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Main reasons people get cyberbullied

-appearance

-academic achievement/intelligence

-other

-race

-sexuality

-financial status

-religion

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Issues kids feel result from cyberbullying

- began abusing alcohol and or drugs

- developed an eating disorder

- started skipping class

- Stopped using social media altogether

- engaged in self harm

- deleted their social media profiles

- had suicidal thoughts

- developed depression

- developed social anxiety

Effect of cyberbullying
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- The effects are worse than face to face bullying because the victim cannot respond due to the fact that
he (or she) doesn't know who is attacking him (or her).

- The anonymity of cyber bullying enables the bully user more aggressive language, thus making this
from of aggression more hurtful.

1. Any information on the internet can rapidly spread over social media and reach millions. This makes it
harder for the victim to carry on with their day-to-day life.

2. Unlike bullying, a cyberbullying victim finds it difficult to go to a safer place online. Even if victims
change their social media accounts, attackers can easily track them down and harass them again.

3. It is very difficult to remove pictures, videos, and comments used to bully someone online. Online
bullying victims have to deal with repeated taunts long after the incident.

"Hope Witsell was a 13-year-old student who was harassed and bullied by her schoolmates after
a private photo that she sent to her boyfriend was forwarded to everyone in the school by another girl.
The message kept circulating among the whole school, giving way to endless harassment both online in
real life. The incident reached the school authorities after a few months, and they immediately
dismissed her for one week, even without inquiring about the incident. The harassments continued and
on September 12, 2009, she killed herself."

4. Perpetrators can easily mask their identity behind a gadget. This makes it very difficult for school
administrators and parents to find the attacker or stop the harassments.

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9 Tipe Cyberbullying

1. Flaming - Flaming is the posting of sensitive or embarrassing content on someone's social media page
or writing rude comments for their posts.

2. Denigration - Spreading bad rumors and gossip about a person through online media.

3. Impersonation - Sometimes the perpetrator hacks into the targeted victim's account or creates a fake
account with the victim's information and sends messages in their name. This is also called identity theft
and is a crime.
4. Trickery or Blackmail - The perpetrators blackmail or trick the victim through texts or emails into doing
things against their will or force them to reveal secrets about their close friends.

5. Outing - An outing is when someone who pretends to be a friend reveals private and personal
information online about victims to embarrass them in front of their peers.

6. Cyberstalking - Cyberstalking is the constant monitoring of someone through their social media
accounts and keeping a tab on their daily activities with a motive to either harm the person, create fear
in the victim, seek sexual advancements, or for revenge.

7. Self-Cyberbullying - Self-Cyberbullying is the practice of sending abusive and hurtful messages about
themselves from fake accounts. Teens indulge in Self-Cyberbullying either to get attention or sympathy
from others.

8. Trolling - Trolling is the act of making hurtful and sarcastic comments about someone or something
they did.

9. Cyberbullying through online gaming - some people misuse the chat feature to harass others online.

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