Moreover, Facebook has become more persuasive when it comes to sharing information about your identity, your family, your phone number, your address, and so on. Some teenagers aren’t exactly alert to the fact that whatever they say online can be seen by more people than originally intended. And as the recently familiar saying goes, “if you’re not paying for something, you’re not the customer; you’re the product being sold”. Cyber stalking and identity theft often begins by malicious users identifying the user through identifying information provided by the user himself.
Equal in importance, the threat of being bullied online, or cyber bullying, faces teenagers daily. It’s often an extension of real life bullying that happens outside the Internet, and may occur in countless ways. For example, a Facebook “friend” may share the teen’s pictures without his or her consent, or creates a Facebook page for “Everyone hates [insert name]”. As the Internet provides unlimited means for bullies to carry out their online hate campaigns, giving them the advantage of anonymity, perpetrators know they’re hidden, they can do whatever they want to whomever they want, and some do not even recognize their actions as bullying.
Moreover, Facebook has become more persuasive when it comes to sharing information about your identity, your family, your phone number, your address, and so on. Some teenagers aren’t exactly alert to the fact that whatever they say online can be seen by more people than originally intended. And as the recently familiar saying goes, “if you’re not paying for something, you’re not the customer; you’re the product being sold”. Cyber stalking and identity theft often begins by malicious users identifying the user through identifying information provided by the user himself.Equal in importance, the threat of being bullied online, or cyber bullying, faces teenagers daily. It’s often an extension of real life bullying that happens outside the Internet, and may occur in countless ways. For example, a Facebook “friend” may share the teen’s pictures without his or her consent, or creates a Facebook page for “Everyone hates [insert name]”. As the Internet provides unlimited means for bullies to carry out their online hate campaigns, giving them the advantage of anonymity, perpetrators know they’re hidden, they can do whatever they want to whomever they want, and some do not even recognize their actions as bullying.
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