The Causes And Effects Of Cyberbullying And Social Media

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Social media is websites and applications that permit users to create and share content or to participate in social networking. Too often people are attached to their smartphones, but no one is truly interacting with the people around them. Technology began to change very rapidly in the 20th Century. After the first super computers were created in the 1940s, scientists and engineers began to develop ways to create networks between those computers, and this would later lead to the birth of the Internet. Social media is becoming ever more current in our society and has had a huge impact on the way many people interact. In 1999, the first blogging sites became popular, creating a social media sensation that’s still popular today. The conversations …show more content…

When people are on social media it can make them think that because there not right in front you it gives them the right to say something hurtful to you. This causes bullying which in my opinion, is one of the biggest scams about social media. Almost 4 in 10 kids are cyberbullied. Cyberbullying can be anything from sending mean or threatening text messages, making a website to make fun of someone, or harassment over social media sites. Being cyberbullied can lead to depression and low self-esteem. An example of cyberbullying is this story: In December 2007, Tina Meier founded the non-profit Megan Meier Foundation. The non-profit was named in honour of Tina’s 13-year-old daughter who hanged herself in a bedroom closet in October 2006. Megan struggled with attention deficit disorder and depression in addition to issues with her weight. About five weeks before her death, a 16-year-old boy named Josh Evans asked Megan to be friends on the social networking website Myspace. The two began communicating online regularly, although they never met in person or spoke on the phone. “Megan had a lifelong struggle with weight and self-esteem,” Tina said on the Foundation website. “And now she finally had a boy who she thought really thought she was pretty.” In mid-October, Josh began saying he didn’t want to be friends anymore, and the messages became crueller on October 16, 2006, when Josh concluded by telling Megan, “The world would be …show more content…

This shorthand has become second nature and is often used when the sender is not even smiling, much less laughing, in real life. According to Robin Dunbar, an evolutionary psychologist at Oxford, “the real physical act of laughter, and not the abstract idea of something being funny, is what makes laughing feel so good. If we are so eager to replace the act that, honestly, we all love, with an artificial, typed illustration that doesn’t even bring the same joy, what else would we be, potentially subconsciously, willing to

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