Internet trolls: What to do about the scourge of the Web?
from this day any one who trolls me will be reported to the fbi
updated 5:10 AM EDT, Mon July 15, 2013
How to respond to Internet trolls?
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- "Trolling" as a term first used on Usenet boards in late 1980s, says Whitney Phillips
- Anonymous users of 4chan brought trolls to prominence in mid-2000s
- Trolling behaviors, motivations extremely difficult to taxonomize, says Phillips
- Proposed laws to curtail cyber-abuse have drawn cries of censorship from critics
Editor's note: This report contains explicit language that some readers may find offensive.
London (CNN) -- Curtis Woodhouse earns a living
punching people in the face, so it's fair to say he's one of the last
men you'd hurl insults at if you saw him on the street.
But people tend to be a
bit braver once they don the anonymity cloak the internet provides, and
the 32 year-old English boxing champ faced a flurry of ugly abuse from
trolls online after he lost his most recent bout in March.
One particular troll,
@Jimmyob88, had been harassing the boxer in tweets and in direct
messages for six months, according to Woodhouse. "He'd threatened my
children saying 'be careful where you send them to school,' he
threatened my wife. He'd written me saying he hoped I'd die in my next
fight so I could go and see my dead dad ... it just went on and on."
But after the bully
branded the boxer a "disgrace" and a "complete joke" and urged him to
retire following his fight last month, Woodhouse finally snapped and,
rather than trade blows online, he used Twitter to turn the tables on
his troll.
Woodhouse put a "Twitter bounty" out
on @Jimmyob88's head, offering anyone £1,000 for information about the
user's real identity. Within minutes he had his troll's real name -- James O'Brien -- some photos of O'Brien and his home address. Woodhouse decided to make a house call.
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"I wasn't going to beat
him up or anything," Woodhouse told CNN. "I was going to knock on his
door and say 'listen, this stops today -- I'm not going to put up with
this abuse, you have no right to abuse me and my family.'"
"I put the address into
my sat-nav and it said I was 47 miles away from my house to his house.
So that's when I put the wheels in motion, sent him a message saying 'I
know who you are, I know where you live, and I'm on my way.'"
Woodhouse hopped into his
car and headed from Hull, in northeast England, to Sheffield, updating
his followers on Twitter as he drove. O'Brien continued heckling him at
first, perhaps not believing the boxer was actually en route, but that
all stopped when Woodhouse wheeled onto his road and posted a photo of
his street sign online.
Woodhouse tweeted: "right Jimbob im here !!!!! someone tell me what number he lives at, or do I have to knock on every door".
As it turns out, O'Brien wasn't at home at the time, but he quickly apologized to Woodhouse: "@jimmyob88: @woodhousecurtis i am sorry its getting abit out of hand i am in the wrong i accept that".
Woodhouse headed home,
satisfied. "The whole world saw him for what he really was, which was a
coward and a bully, and the way I saw it, my job there was done."
Twitter antagonists like
O'Brien are a relatively new breed of online "troll" -- people who post
abusive content online with the aim of offending or provoking someone
else into a reaction -- but cyberspace bullies have been around as long
as the internet itself.
In the late 1980s,
Usenet users began using the word "troll" to describe someone who
deliberately disrupted online discussions in order to stir up
controversy, according to Whitney Phillips, a New York University
lecturer who is currently writing a book on trolling behavior.
"'Troll' was a name you
called someone else," she told CNN. "More frequently you reacted to
being 'trolled' than you identified yourself as a troll."
Phillips says it wasn't
until the mid-2000s when the predominantly anonymous users of 4chan --
the website CNN once described as "one of the seedier, darker corners of
the Internet" -- began to describe themselves as trolls.
As the freewheeling site's controversial "/b/" board rose to prominence, garnering media attention for everything from LOLcats and Rickrolling to allegations its users were exchanging child pornography,
"trolling" evolved into an unwieldy umbrella term that Phillips
believes is preventing us from considering the wide range of behaviors
the word now describes.
"You can't easily
taxonomize trolling behavior," she said. "A lot of trolling is about
mischief and harmless, silly pranks. But really extreme behavior --
attacking friends and families of kids who have died, for example --
that seems to be a behavior with a different motivation."
In April of this year Rehtaeh Parsons, a 17-year-old high school student from Nova Scotia, hanged herself
after a photo of her allegedly being gang-raped by four boys was posted
online. But the abuse continued long after Parsons died.
A Facebook memorial page
created for Parsons after her suicide was targeted by trolls, one of
whom wrote: "lol, teach your kids not to be huge p****es and they'll
take care of anyone who's bullying them." Another wrote: "She wasn't
bullied for being a rape victim, she was bullied for being a sl*t, which
she was."
The comment section on one of CNN.com's stories about Parsons
was flooded with a similar flavor of bile. Within hours of the story
being published, a user called "Cookie Monster" wrote "Thank god she got
justice" and told another commenter to stop "acting like a 12 year old
cancer patient" -- and these were some of the less grim offerings on the
page.
So what kind of person
trolls strangers online? Jerry Holkins and Mike Krahulik, creators of
the Penny Arcade webcomic, offer up an explanation known as John Gabriel's Greater Internet F**kwad Theory, consisting of the following equation: "Normal Person + Anonymity + Audience = Total F**kwad".
The math may a bit
fuzzy, but there's something to that equation. The anonymity users have
on the internet is a big factor in the "online disinhibition effect,"
which Rider University psychology professor John Suler says enables people to say things to each other online that they wouldn't say in person.
[Trolling] is a creative outlet to exercise wit, blow off steam, deal with boredom and (it) provides entertainment.
"GG," a CNN comment troll
"GG," a CNN comment troll
"Without face-to-face
presence, a potential troll is more likely to perceive others as a
'target' rather than a real human being," he told CNN.
If anonymity is one
factor, psychological and emotional issues are another, according to
Suler, who says many trolls likely have problems with depression, low
self-esteem, and anger.
"They want to inject
their own emotional turmoil into other people by luring them into
negativity. It's a way for them to feel some kind of control or power
over their own disruptive emotions, at other people's expense."
While Whitney Phillips
agrees that anonymity plays a role in someone's propensity to spew bile
down Facebook walls, Twitter pages and news website comment boards, she
says the bile was there first, just waiting to be hurled out at
unsuspecting passers-by in cyberspace.
"The problem with
blaming anonymity is that it assumes people are only horrible
anonymously. Search a racial slur plus Obama on the internet and you'll
see more people than is reasonable who are perfectly happy being
disgusting bigots under their own name."
Is it possible to
separate your online behavior from who you really are? Many trolls
reject any relation between their profiles on the Web and their real
life personas, according to Phillips, and say they are merely performing
in order torment their targets "for the lulz," or to teach people a
lesson.
"Some trolls think that
spending your time posting condolence messages on Facebook to someone
you've never met is weird, and grounds for being trolled. They think
they're teaching people a lesson, teaching people how to behave online."
Ultimately, Phillips
says, it's impossible to definitively say what makes trolls tick when
you don't have any demographic details about them. "We can't very easily
or in any kind of verifiable fashion sit a troll down and ask him what
is in his heart, and if you could he would lie. They would tell you some
bulls**t about what's in their heart."
No one Phillips
interviewed was willing to speak for publication -- her trolls are
mostly done with speaking to the media, she says -- but CNN has its own
stable of comment board trolls, a handful of whom answered questions via
email for this article. An email address is all users need in order to
post comments on CNN.com, so it is impossible to confirm their
identities or the veracity of their remarks.
"GG" declined to give
her real name but described herself as an American thirtysomething with a
finance degree who trolls CNN's comment pages in tandem with at least a
dozen other users -- "engineers, professionals, mothers, fathers and at
least one grandpa," she said.
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As far as comment trolls
go, GG's posts -- which she says number in the thousands -- are
relatively tame: Jokes about oral sex on a story about a sinkhole which
swallowed up a man in Florida in March; dreams of Anne Hathaway being
"impaled on wooden stakes and set on fire" on a story about the actress.
"We mostly deal in
humor," GG told CNN. "It's a creative outlet to exercise wit, blow off
steam, deal with boredom and (it) provides entertainment."
Another troll, "MK",
explained: "The belief that anyone truly cares about other people's
opinions on an online forum is ludicrous. It's arrogant and needs to be
checked." "RR" wrote: "I do it because it makes me giggle. Fellow trolls
make me laugh. Some of the terrible things that happen every day should
be muted with humor."
GG says her friends
don't post on stories involving children dying. "There was a group
moratorium on any posts regarding Sandy Hook ... There are certain
topics which are just not funny."
Funny or not, there is
evidence to suggest that comment trolling is preventing us from thinking
rationally about the stories we read online.
In a recent study,
University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers asked more than 1,000
people to read a blog post about nanosilver technology. Half of the
participants were exposed to civilized reader comments on the post, and
the other half were subjected to profanity-laden screeds and putdowns.
"The results were both surprising and disturbing," researchers Dominique Brossard and Dietram Scheufele wrote in the New York Times. "Uncivil comments not only polarized readers, but they often changed a participant's interpretation of the news story itself."
Scheufele told Mother Jones
that reading a story online today is like "reading the news article in
the middle of the town square, with people screaming in my ear what I
should believe about it."
So what can be done to
keep the trolls at bay? Where is the line between trolling and
harassment? While most trolling behavior isn't of a criminal nature,
many countries' harassment laws extend to cyberspace, and a handful of
bullies have been jailed recently for crossing that line in the eyes of
judges.
In October a judge handed down a 12-week prison sentence to David Woods for posting sexually explicit remarks on his Facebook page about April Jones, a five-year old girl who went missing in Wales.
British student Liam Stacey was also jailed last year for 56 days
for posting racially abusive tweets about Bolton footballer Fabrice
Muamba after the player went into cardiac arrest during a match. As
Muamba lay struggling for life on the pitch, Stacey tweeted "LOL f**k Muamba he's dead !!! #Haha" and followed it up with a handful of racist posts aimed at other users.
Did Stacey's punishment
fit the crime or was it over the top? And where should we draw the line
between free speech, censorship and privacy?
Britain's politicians
are considering new laws that would require websites to reveal the
identities of trolls who have posted defamatory content about other
people online.
In Italy prosecutors
aren't only going after cyber-bullies, they're also threatening action
against the social media sites themselves.
The January suicide of 14-year-old Carolina Picchio,
who threw herself out of her bedroom window in Novara after a group of
boys posted a video of her in the bathroom of a party, has prompted
Italian authorities to consider bringing charges against Facebook staff
for allowing the abusive content to be posted on the website, according
to media reports.
In May, bowing to pressure from activists and advertisers, Facebook announced plans to ramp up efforts to delete hate speech, particularly depictions of violence against women, on its site.
"In recent days, it has
become clear that our systems to identify and remove hate speech have
failed to work as effectively as we would like, particularly around
issues of gender-based hate," Marne Levine, a Facebook vice president in
charge of public policy, wrote in a post on the site.
Stamping out serious
abuse on sites like Facebook may be a step in the right direction -- but
any law aimed at curbing online trolling runs the risk of casting a net
so wide that it snares non-trolling behaviors as well, say critics.
"There are a number of
online behaviors that are annoying, but do you really want to illegalize
annoying behavior?" asks lecturer Whitney Phillips. "The push to
illegalize these poorly defined behaviors isn't actually addressing the
root issues of trolling."
David Aaronovitch of The
Times newspaper in London says most online abuse would go away if we
simply pulled away the cloak of anonymity that emboldens trolls.
"If you're not going to
moderate comments on your site, insist on registration and lack of
anonymity," he told CNN. "If you had to register under your own name and
comment under your own name, who's going to be a s**tbag under those
circumstances?"
CNN troll GG wouldn't,
for one. "Of course not," she told me, "Who would risk a 6 figure salary
on the chance that your employer disagrees with your opinion or
off-hours activities? No one."
At the end of the day, the best way to deal with trolls is to simply ignore them, says Aaronovitch.
"You simply have to
decide how much attention you want to give them, and grow up really," he
said. "It's about saying, 'How threatened am I really by this?' and
reserving your ire for the cases when there really is some serious
harassment going on."
Whatever you do, hopping
in your car and driving to your troll's house may not solve all of your
problems, as boxer Curtis Woodhouse found out.
"Ever since I did that
the abuse has been 10 times worse," he said with a laugh. "Now I've got
people saying, 'If I call you a crap boxer, will you come round my house
for a cup of tea?'"
CNN's Doug Gross contributed to this report.
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