Hanging around tvtropes last night, I somehow managed to stumble onto this.
http://michellephail.tumblr.com/post/1527791105
For those who can't be bothered, an (apparent) Internet celebrity rallied her followers against a rude 16-year-old fan. Said girl ended up pretty badly cyber bullied by a Twitter hoard, and had a bit of an online meltdown.
What fascinated me about the story was not so much the 'controversy' itself (which was ugly, but depressingly unsurprising), but the young girl's sense of betrayal when her online 'friends' turned on her
I have no doubt that said outpouring of emotion was slightly influenced by the girls age, and I imagine such a torrent of abuse would be extremely upsetting to anyone. However, I admit that i was bamboozled by how surprised she was that these people would turn on her. She seemingly viewed these names on a webpage, as being as trustworthy as her school friends.
The reason I was surprised was that I just don't have that feeling of 'closeness' - I simply never feel like I know people on boards well enough to be 'betrayed' by them. I may like 'Internet' friends based on what they say, but I just don't assume that posts will always represent the entirety of every person. I'm not saying that's the 'right' way to feel, and I'm sure that 99% of people are open and honest. I just personally am too wary of the 1% to be too open with myself on the net.
So my question is this: Do you trust - completely and utterly - 'friends' who you only know from communication over the Internet? Would you consider them to be as close or trustworthy, as a friend/friends you interact with face to face? Or is it the opposite, and you consider Net friends to be more honest?
http://michellephail.tumblr.com/post/1527791105
For those who can't be bothered, an (apparent) Internet celebrity rallied her followers against a rude 16-year-old fan. Said girl ended up pretty badly cyber bullied by a Twitter hoard, and had a bit of an online meltdown.
What fascinated me about the story was not so much the 'controversy' itself (which was ugly, but depressingly unsurprising), but the young girl's sense of betrayal when her online 'friends' turned on her
I have no doubt that said outpouring of emotion was slightly influenced by the girls age, and I imagine such a torrent of abuse would be extremely upsetting to anyone. However, I admit that i was bamboozled by how surprised she was that these people would turn on her. She seemingly viewed these names on a webpage, as being as trustworthy as her school friends.
The reason I was surprised was that I just don't have that feeling of 'closeness' - I simply never feel like I know people on boards well enough to be 'betrayed' by them. I may like 'Internet' friends based on what they say, but I just don't assume that posts will always represent the entirety of every person. I'm not saying that's the 'right' way to feel, and I'm sure that 99% of people are open and honest. I just personally am too wary of the 1% to be too open with myself on the net.
So my question is this: Do you trust - completely and utterly - 'friends' who you only know from communication over the Internet? Would you consider them to be as close or trustworthy, as a friend/friends you interact with face to face? Or is it the opposite, and you consider Net friends to be more honest?
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