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ANTI-SOCIAL NETWORK: Australia – the Facebook bullying capital

17 Jan

Cyber Bullying

Poll finds social networks the place where Australian kids are most likely to be bullied online. Picture: Getty Images
Source: Getty Images





AUSTRALIA rates number one in the world for bullying on social networks like Facebook, according to a global poll.


While Australia ranked fifth for cyber-bullying overall, nine out of ten parents said when the harassment occurred it was on these types of sites – much higher than the global average of six in 10.

The Ipsos Social Research Institute survey of 24 countries ranked Australia worse for bullying than all of the European countries, along with the US, Britain and China.

The four countries ranking higher than us, in order, were India, Indonesia, Sweden and Canada.

The research comes just a week after Victorian schoolgirl Sheniz Erkan took her own life after being tormented by Facebook bullies.

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Ispsos director Ryan Williams said the goal was to find out how prevalent cyber-bullying was and to find out where it was taking place.

“According to parents, Australian children were less likely to experience bullying in an online chat room, via email, or on their mobile phone, compared to global averages – but were more likely than any other nation to experience bullying via social networking sites, such as Facebook,” Mr Williams said.

Australia ranked 15th for mobile devices, 22nd for online chat, 17th for emails, 20th for instant messages, 21st for general websites and 18th for other forms of technology.

No Australian parent reported bullying was a persistent issue with their children.

Kids Helpline manager of strategy and research John Dalgleish said the rise of cyber bullying was a massive concern as it took it harassment from the playground directly into victim’s bedrooms.

Mr Dalgleish said the rise of social networking sites meant bullying was no longer limited to the classroom and teenagers faced further exposure to harassment thanks to the rise of social networking sites such as Facebook.

“Cyber bullying has a profound impact as it widens the audience (from school) and means it can be seen by anyone,” he said.

“It can be used as an extension of face-to-face bullying and takes it from the classroom and into a child’s own bedroom undermining their sense of safety and security.”

KidsHelpline, which offers hundreds of counselling services to bullying victims a year, urged young people affected by the harassment to come forward and speak out.

Mr Dalgleish said victims should tell a trusted adult or parent who can take action on their behalf, and in extreme cases take it to the police.

He added previous studies on the long-term effects of bullying had showed positive outcomes and an end to the behaviour after victims had told someone about it.

“The first thing victims need to know is it’s not their fault,” he said.

“Action can be taken and it can be stopped.”

Bullying can result in chronic anxiety, depression, fear, anxiety, withdrawal from school and in the worst cases, self-harm.

Parents are urged to monitor their children’s social networking use and speak to them about appropriate behaviour on the internet.

Anyone experiencing bullying or harassment is urged to visit KidsHelpline.

http://www.news.com.au/technology/anti-social-network-australia-the-facebook-bullying-capital/story-e6frfro0-1226246496953

Beware of Blipdar, an anonymous dumping ground for slander, insults and cyberbullying

1 Oct

online bullying, college(Credit:
iStockphoto)

(CBS) – As if we didn’t have enough to worry about in this wired modern society. After getting trapped in a chain of links, I stumbled upon a college site that literally caused my jaw to drop.

Blipdar launched in June of 2011 after a change of name and ownership in January. Originally called College Anonymous Confession Board (ACB), the site launched in 2008 and provided a forum for college students to post anonymously about any topic they wish. More often than not, topics are of other students.

After reading a few threads in the Relationships and Love area, I was flabbergasted. And I’m not easily shocked. The topic ranged from wildly inappropriate to downright rude. Students, who were accused of being promiscuous, also had their identity posted. Some were rumored to be serial date rapists or having STDs. Fear!

Nothing is sacred

Many of these allegations had full names, phone numbers and Facebook profiles to identify the person in question. Some names were redacted, but most were not. We can only speculate that the moderators received earnest requests from concerned parties.

The implications of sites like this can be best demonstrated with a plea for help from a helpless parent. It’s the worst form of cyberbullying we’ve ever seen.

Is your child being cyberbullied?

Cyberbullying signs decoded

How to spy on your kids online

I discovered a post on an unrelated help forum from a parent asking how to remove their daughter’s name from a Google search result, which lead to a slanderous post on Blipdar. Yikes!

Yes, Blipdar’s posts are indexed by Google and their SEO ranking is high. When I ran a search of a student that was being slandered badly on the site, Blipdar’s results were second only to YouTube, but above Twitter.

Blipdar’s predecessor, College ACB, stirred up controversy on college campuses with countless students threatening lawsuits. The site was operated by Peter Frank from February of 2009 to January of 2011, before selling his share to an undisclosed buyer. FYI, the domain’s new owners have a proxy to protect their identity. Figures.

The site’s mission statement says they champion anonymity because “everyone has something that they’re afraid to say out loud.” Speaking of the collective community, Blipdar states, “to censor words is to censor ideas.”

While Blipdar doesn’t have the immense popularity of College ACB – Frank claimed to have garnered 900,000 page views in a day – it’s damaging nonetheless. The most discouraging aspect to this story is that these bulletin boards have the potential for honest engagement.

How can you protect yourself?

If you find your identity or phone number posted on these sites, email Blipdar directly and ask them to pull down your information. 

Unfortunately in the the case of Blipdar, they claim to continuously dump IP addresses, so that they do not store any information. Therefor, in theory, they would not be able to identify the accused poster.

I spoke with retired FBI special agent Jeff Lanza on how a person could fight anonymous slander. Aside from contacting the person or site directly, you could hire a reputation defender or beat them at their own game. Creating social media profiles, blogs and websites with good content associated with your name is a way to beat the offending site at their own game. 

I reached out to Blipdar, but have yet to get a response.

Complete coverage of cyberbullying at CBSNews.com

The cautionary tale here is that we’ve definitely entered an age where Googling yourself is not a vanity move, it’s a matter of defending your reputation.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_162-20113539-501465.html

Online Bullying Pervasive Among Young People, Poll Shows

27 Sep

WASHINGTON — Catherine Devine had her first brush with an online bully in seventh grade, before she’d even ventured onto the Internet. Someone set up the screen name “devinegirl” and, posing as Catherine, sent her classmates instant messages full of trashy talk and lies. “They were making things up about me, and I was the most innocent 12-year-old ever,” Devine remembers. “I hadn’t even kissed anybody yet.”

As she grew up, Devine, now 22, learned to thrive in the electronic village. But like other young people, she occasionally stumbled into one of its dark alleys.

A new Associated Press-MTV poll of youth in their teens and early 20s finds that most of them – 56 percent – have been the target of some type of online taunting, harassment or bullying, a slight increase over just two years ago. A third say they’ve been involved in “sexting,” the sharing of naked photos or videos of sexual activity. Among those in a relationship, 4 out of 10 say their partners have used computers or cellphones to abuse or control them.

Three-fourths of the young people said they consider these darker aspects of the online world, sometimes broadly called “digital abuse,” a serious problem.

They’re not the only ones.

President Barack Obama brought students, parents and experts together at the White House in March to try to confront “cyberbullying.” The Education Department sponsors an annual conference to help schools deal with it. Teen suicides linked to vicious online bullying have caused increasing worry in communities across the country.

Conduct that rises to the point of bullying is hard to define, but the AP-MTV poll of youth ages 14 to 24 showed plenty of rotten behavior online, and a perception that it’s increasing. The share of young people who frequently see people being mean to each other on social networking sites jumped to 55 percent, from 45 percent in 2009.

That may be partly because young people are spending more time than ever communicating electronically: 7 in 10 had logged into a social networking site in the previous week, and 8 in 10 had texted a friend.

“The Internet is an awesome resource,” says Devine, “but sometimes it can be really negative and make things so much worse.”

Devine, who lives on New York’s Long Island, experienced her share of online drama in high school and college: A friend passed around highly personal entries from Devine’s private electronic journal when she was 15. She left her Facebook account open on a University of Scranton library computer, and a prankster posted that she was pregnant (she wasn’t). Most upsetting, when she was 18 Devine succumbed to a boyfriend’s pressure to send a revealing photo of herself, and when they broke up he briefly raised the threat of embarrassing her with it.

“I didn’t realize the power he could have over me from that,” Devine said. “I thought he’d just see it once and then delete it, like I had deleted it.”

The Internet didn’t create the turmoil of the teen years and young adulthood – romantic breakups, bitter fights among best friends, jealous rivalries, teasing and bullying. But it does amplify it. Hurtful words that might have been shouted in the cafeteria, within earshot of a dozen people, now can be blasted to hundreds on Facebook.

“It’s worse online, because everybody sees it,” said Tiffany Lyons, 24, of Layton, Utah. “And once anything gets online you can’t get rid of it.”

Plus, 75 percent of youth think people do or say things online that they wouldn’t do or say face to face.

The most common complaints were people spreading false rumors on Internet pages or by text message, or being downright mean online; more than a fifth of young people said each of those things had happened to them. Twenty percent saw someone take their electronic messages and share them without permission, and 16 percent said someone posted embarrassing pictures or video of them without their permission.

Some of these are one-time incidents; others cross into repeated harassment or bullying.

Sameer Hinduja, a cyberbullying researcher, said numerous recent studies taken together suggest a cyberbullying victimization rate of 20 to 25 percent for middle and high school students. Many of these same victims also suffer from in-person abuse. Likewise, many online aggressors are also real-world bullies.

“We are seeing offenders who are just jerks to people online and offline,” said Hinduja, an associate professor of criminal justice at Florida Atlantic University and co-director of the Cyberbullying Research Center.

And computers and cellphones increase the reach of old-fashioned bullying.

“When I was bullied in middle school I could go home and slam my door and forget about it for a while,” said Hinduja. “These kids can be accessed around the clock through technology. There’s really no escape.”

“Sexting,” or sending nude or sexual images, is more common among those over 18 than among minors. And it hasn’t shown much increase in the past two years. Perhaps young people are thinking twice before hitting “send” after publicity about adults – even members of Congress – losing their jobs over sexual images, and news stories of young teens risking child pornography charges if they’re caught.

Fifteen percent of young people had shared a nude photo of themselves in some way or another; that stood at 7 percent among teens and 19 percent among young adults. But almost a fourth of the younger group said they’d been exposed to sexting in some way, including seeing images someone else was showing around. And 37 percent of the young adults had some experience with “sexting” images.

Many young people don’t take sexting seriously, despite the potential consequences.

Alec Wilhelmi, 20, says girlfriends and girls who like him have sent sexual messages or pictures – usually photos of bare body parts that avoid showing faces. Once a friend made a sexual video with his girlfriend, and showed Wilhelmi on his cellphone.

“I thought that was funny, because I don’t know what kind of girl would allow that,” said Wilhelmi, a freshman at Iowa State University.

Technology can facilitate dating abuse. Nearly three in 10 young people say their partner has checked up on them electronically multiple times per day or read their text messages without permission. Fourteen percent say they’ve experienced more abusive behavior from their partners, such as name-calling and mean messages via Internet or cellphone.

The AP-MTV poll was conducted Aug. 18-31 and involved online interviews with 1,355 people ages 14-24 nationwide. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

The poll is part of an MTV campaign, “A Thin Line,” aiming to stop the spread of digital abuse.

The survey was conducted by Knowledge Networks, which used traditional telephone and mail sampling methods to randomly recruit respondents. People selected who had no Internet access were given it for free.

___

Associated Press Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta, AP Global Director of Polling Trevor Tompson and AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

___

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/27/online-bullying-pervasive_n_983052.html

Online bullies are the most dangerous ‘because abuse is 24-hour’

8 Aug

By
Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 1:43 AM on 8th August 2011

Victims of cyber-stalking suffer more than victims of ‘traditional’ bullying, research has found.

The inability to escape from the 24-hour online world and the public nature of threats posted on the internet make being bullied electronically more intense, it was claimed.

The research also found that four out of ten women have suffered  electronic harassment after dating online and 20 per cent of online stalkers use social networking sites to stalk their victims.

Cyber bullying: A report has found that internet bullying is far more intense because it is harder to escape from the 24-hour online world

Cyber bullying: A report has found that internet bullying is far more intense because it is harder to escape from the 24-hour online world

Addressing the American Psychological Association’s annual convention, researcher Elizabeth Carll said: ‘Increasingly, stalkers use modern technology to monitor and torment their victims, and one in four victims reports some form of cyber-stalking, such as threatening emails or instant messaging.’

Victims can feel stress, anxiety, fear and nightmares, as well as enduring eating and sleeping difficulties.

Dr Carll added: ‘It is my observation that the symptoms related to cyber-stalking and e-harassment may be more intense than in-person harassment, because the impact is more devastating due to the 24/7 nature of online communication, inability to escape to a safe place, and global access of the information.’

But Dr Carll said the strengths of the internet being exploited by bullies could be turned against them.

She said: ‘The same technologies used to harass can also be used to intervene and prevent harassment.

‘Imagine a cell phone application that can tell you if someone threatening you is nearby.

‘That could be life-saving.’

Action: Police are being urged to do more to stop electronic harassment

Action: Police are being urged to do more to stop electronic harassment

Police and social services should do more to use electronic methods to stop online harassment, she added.

The lecture came after research showed 36 per cent of students at schools in South Korea had been bullied online at least once in the previous year.

Dr YeoJu Chung, of Kyungil University, said: ‘The results revealed that cyber-bullying makes students socially anxious, lonely, frustrated, sad and helpless.

‘Lots of adolescents have trouble recovering from negative effects of cyber-bullying.

‘We can help them use emotion regulation skills to recover, rather than become bullies themselves.’

Cyber-bullying is more of a problem for British children than almost any others in the world.

A fifth of children aged six to nine reported being the victim of ‘aggressive or unpleasant’ behaviour online. This is partly because children in the UK use social networks for longer than any other country.

The proportion of 20 per cent reporting bullying they would consider ‘aggressive or unpleasant’ was far higher than in the U.S., Australia, Japan and France. It was second only to Spain, where the  figure was 25 per cent.

The study by internet security firm AVG found that 25 per cent of children aged between six and nine said they used email and a staggering 64 per cent used social networking sites.

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2023439/Online-bullies-dangerous-abuse-24-hour.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

Gillian Shaw: Vancouver is the cyberbullying capital of Canada

18 May

Vancouver is the cyberbullying
capital of Canada
according to the results of a survey released today by Norton Canada.

The statistics in the Norton study suggest that children and teens in Vancouver are more likely to be involved in online bullying than children in the other four major cities across Canada that were part of the survey.

Among parents
with children aged eight to 18, some 40 per cent of Vancouver
parents reported their child had been involved in online bullying, compared to
25 per cent of parents across Canada.
Toronto comes second to Vancouver, with 31 per cent of parents there
reporting that they have cyberbullying kids.

Close to three out of
four said their child was a victim, while 16 per cent said their child was the
bully. Eighteen per cent said their child witnessed a cyberbullying incident.


Photo by Chris Mikula, Ottawa Citizen

Among the Vancouver parents, 17 per cent said their children are
guilty of online bullying, putting Vancouver
only second to Calgary
at 22 per cent. Toronto was third at 15 per
cent, Montreal fourth at 11 per cent, followed
by Halifax at
eight per cent.

The majority of Vancouver parents ignore
the prohibition on many social media web sites that’s supposed to stop kids
under of 13 from joining. Some 55 per cent of parents here say they’re fine
with their kids joining such sites as long as they are supervised.

The survey found girls
are more likely to be bullied online than boys and social media channels are
the communications weapons of choice for cyberbullies. Social networks account
for 63 per cent of the online bullying, compared to 25 per cent for email and
19 per cent by phone.

“The connectivity and
immediacy of social networking sites has adults and children alike tethered to
the online world as a means of communicating,” said Lynn Hargrove, director of
consumer solutions for Norton Canada said in a release. “Words said online have
a different impact than words exchanged on a playground, because online
messages and posts have the potential to live on for an indefinite amount of
time.”

Tweens – those eight to
12 years of age – are somewhat more likely to be involved in online bullying.

While parents used to be
able to monitor their kids’ online activities by keeping their computers in the
kitchen, the family room or another spot where they could keep an eye on them,
the rise of mobile Internet access has lessened that control. Cyberbullying via
cell phones was the most common among kids aged 13 and 14.

More
than 50 per cent of the parents surveyed said they use online monitoring
software to keep tabs on their children’s Internet use and 42 per cent check
the browser history when their kids are surfing to see where they’ve been
online.

 The
statistics came from an online survey with a
random sample of 507 men and women in Calgary, Halifax, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, who have a
child between the ages of 8-18. The respondents are members of the Impulse Research
proprietary online panel and the survey was conducted last February. The survey
has a margin of error of  +/-3 per cent
at the 95 per cent level of confidence.

 

http://communities.canada.com/vancouversun/blogs/techsense/archive/2011/05/17/vancouver-the-cyberbullying-capital-of-canada.aspx

Schools urged to prevent online bullying videos

27 Mar

  • Schools urged to prevent online bullying videos (Source: Nine News)
  • Watch Video


    • (Source: Thinkstock)

      Bullying – Netsafe talks about internet (6:44)
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Schools are being urged to take a lead in tackling the trend in
bullying videos being shared online.

In the past week there have been two high profile cases of
fighting at schools, captured on mobile phone cameras and published
on the internet.

Australian schoolboy Casey Heynes became an international hero
for standing up to a bully, while in New Zealand an attack in
Wanganui, captured on video, left a schoolgirl unconscious and
bleeding from the head.

Lee Chisholm, from internet safety group,
Netsafe , said it is a
worrying trend.

“Children use those interactive technologies for self
publicity… they want to stand out, they want to make an impact,”
she told TV ONE’s Breakfast.

“The links and pathways that enable us to make long term
decisions are still developing in adolescents – they’re very much
living in the moment.”

She said many schools already have policies in place to tackle
bullying, and video-sharing websites have made it simple for
schools to request for clips to be taken down.

But that’s often after the event, when the videos have been
spread virally.

She would like to see schools be pro-active in their approach to
misuse of new technologies.

“It’s up to the school community to think about what’s happening
in their school and question it,” she said.

“It’s up to the board of trustees and school management to think
about it too. Schools have a lot on their plate but certainly
online education is something they need to tackle.”

She said students also have a role to play.

“The biggest thing that actually stops bullying, in recent
Australian research, is peer and bystander intervention.

“Those people who see what’s happening and don’t take part and
stand up for those who are being targeted.”

Chisholm said video-sharing sites, like YouTube, do have certain
terms and conditions and are responsible about taking clips down
that breach the code.

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http://tvnz.co.nz/technology-news/schools-urged-prevent-online-bullying-videos-4089143