Townsville Bulletin

Trolls out of control

The vicious cyber cycle

- ANDREW KOUBARIDIS

CYBER bullying victims are turning trolls themselves inflicting the same online abuse they endured on to others.

Psychology researcher Dr Evita March was told the issue of cyber bullying would be a “flash in the pan” when she began investigat­ing it a decade ago. Instead, she said it has gotten far worse over time, and shows no sign of slowing down.

“Across a number of studies now over a number of years, I have found that there are two personalit­y traits that are pretty reliably associated with trolling behaviours,” the Federation University researcher said.

She said the fist trait was “psychopath­y – so being callous, lacking a personal responsibi­lity for your behaviour and lacking guilt for your actions”.

“But also sadism, so enjoying causing other people’s psychologi­cal and physical harm. They have pretty reliably now emerged as strong predictors of trolling.”

She said trolling is now becoming more mainstream because it is being “normalised”.

People who had high sadism were even prepared to risk harm to themselves – if it meant hurting someone else.

Dr March features in a documentar­y Haters Online: Erin Molan Fights Back by Sky News and radio host Erin Molan which tackles the issue of cyber bullying head-on.

She is about to delve into new research she hopes will shed light on the people behind this abuse – investigat­ing a new personalit­y trait about people who thrived on “chaos”.

“And I’m going to go out on a limb and say that people who are trolling are going to be higher on the need for chaos.”

Dr March has been gathering data she hopes to publish over the next year in a further attempt to uncover why people are causing so much misery by examining the mental health of cyber bullies.

“Things like how depression, anxiety and stress … Those strains can exacerbate trolling behaviours,” she said.

A real-life case study played out during the pandemic and lockdowns when large numbers of people, under stress, went online and lashed out.

“Those reports and increase of abuse is actually is good evidence for that theory that people were frustrated and stressed unable to get out do things and see people and so they were more likely to abuse people online.”

esafety research during the pandemic showed nearly 40 per cent of Australian­s had a negative experience, from unwanted contact to deliberate­ly being provoked.

Separate research by esafety found about 80 per cent of Australian­s had a good understand­ing negative things could happen online, over half were not confident dealing with cyber bullying.

Haters Online: Erin Molan Fights Back available to subscriber­s from 22 October.

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