Khaleej Times

Understand cyber bullying to fight it

- ankita@khaleejtim­es.com Ankita Chaturvedi

dubai — The vast world of Internet has made it possible for all of us to stay connected through social media. We all make friends online, chat online and send messages or emails. But, at times certain messages or comments embarrass us and we fall prey to the so called ‘cyber bullying’.

It is the most common way to target and make fun of people as the person can express his/her hatred, disliking or negative feelings without even meeting the target.

Lakshmi Sree, a 23-year-old media management profession­al, became quite and submissive after experienci­ng a couple of incidents where she got some comments on social media on her looks. She was stressed, felt intruded and insecure because of the awful messages.

“There have been times that I have lost my sleep thinking about those bullies. I couldn’t focus on my work for months and even lost interest in the things which I loved the most like hanging out with friends and going for a movie. Social media has been very hurtful and confusing,” said Lakshmi.

According to a study by Kasperky Lab and B2B Internatio­nal conducted in the UAE, 50 per cent of parents believe that the threat from cyber bullying to inappropri­ate content encountere­d by their children online are significan­tly increasing. The study highlights that 24 per cent of parents do nothing to protect their children from Internet threats, despite the fact that a staggering 42 per cent of them have seen their children encounter actual threats online. Also, this is not restricted to the students or teenagers. In fact anyone can become the victim of cyber bullying.

In another incident, a South Asian/Canadian woman, raised in Dubai, have been through similar experience­s in her life. She is a young businesswo­man and was bullied by a client recently.

“Some clients who have truly embodied the concept of ‘the client is always right’ will use it against you and can turn your interactio­ns to very closely resemble bullying”, said the woman who wanted to remain anonymous.

She continued: “I became friends and shared an informal relationsh­ip with many customers through social media. It came as a shock for me when one customer complained that he doesn’t like the attention I am giving to another customer. He bombarded my email and chat with very wrong messages. I tried to manage the situation but then realised he was crossing all his limits to bully me online. It was coming on my performanc­e and health, my days were turned into nightmares and I failed to handle the difficult situation.”

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