Computer mediated communication (CMC) has indeed invaded many different realms of the lives of mankind. Many facets of human activities involve CMC and it has proven itself to be extremely influential and has definitely become an essential to aid us in different ways. One powerful form of CMC that plays a big part in almost every individual’s life today is social networking sites like facebook and twitter. According to a separate report from Compete.com, Facebook has also surpassed Yahoo, as the number two most popular site (behind Google) in the U.S., with nearly 134 million unique visitors in January 2010. In fact, the Compete.com data showed that 11.6% of all time spent online in January was spent on Facebook (compared to 4.25% for Yahoo and 4.1% for Google). Another recent report from the leading technology blog Tech Crunch highlighted the expanding role social sites such as Facebook are playing in sharing widgets and applications. Incorporating data from Gigya, a company that powers widgets on more than 5,000 sites, Tech Crunch found that the distribution of shared items broke down as follows:
Facebook (44%) Twitter (29%) Yahoo (18%) MySpace (9%)
Some people, especially those from the older generation might think that these sites like facebook are merely for basic networking purposes or maybe for people to meet some new friends. Well, I do not blame them for that as it is really forgivable for them to not be very familiar with this form of CMC. But I do have to correct them in thinking that way. In fact, facebook even played a part in influencing the outcome of the 2008 presidential election in the United States of America! It was in January 2007 when Farouk Olu Aregbe, a student government coordinator at the University of Missouri, launched a Facebook group, "One Million Strong for Barack." A year later, the group had signed up half a million "friends" (in Facebook lingo) as Obama supporters.
However, as these social networking sites invade our lives in positive ways, they absolutely do have the potential to create atrociously undesirable effects as well. One of such is the rise of cyber-bullying cases. This is also one type of bullying that many parents of victims (students) do not have much knowledge of, thus underestimating the depressing effects it can cause to the victims.
To read more on this recent article, go to:
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6275UG20100309
Cyber-bullying basically consists of 8 types, namely, exclusion, outing, harassment, cyber-stalking, masquerading, flaming, pseudonym and anonymity. All of these can truly result in emotional as well as psychosocial effects on the lives of the victims. And according to psychologist Eric Erikson, whatever challenges or difficulty an individual experiences in each stage of his life would carry over as an extra difficulty in later life if it is not being solved satisfactorily. This may result in those victims not be able to present him/herself as confidently as others in certain situations he/she faces in the future. And in the worst cases, some of those victims had even committed suicide due to the inability to handle the psychological effects from the bullying cases. Some of these cases were even being discussed in the recent Oprah Winfrey show. As you can see, it may truly cause extremely tragic results if nobody actually takes the effort to look into these situations and continue having the complacent thinking that these forms of bullying through CMC can never be as deadly as physical bullying.
The Internet was built on freedom of expression. Yet, society wants someone held accountable when that freedom is abused.
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