Province hopes new cyberviolence prevention strategy for P.E.I. youth will help save lives
The P.E.I. government has released a strategy that aims to protect youth from cyberviolence. With it, the province hopes to address online harassment, bullying and extortion faced by younger Islanders.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-cyberviolence-prevention-strategy-youth-9.7230638?cmp=rss

The Internet Removed the Walls—and Let the Bullies In

By Cliff Potts
Editor-in-Chief, WPS News

For most of human history, cruelty had limits.

Bullies were local. Harassment required proximity. Social pressure, physical distance, and community norms acted as buffers. If someone wanted to torment you, they had to show up—at school, at work, in the neighborhood. And even then, there were consequences. Witnesses. Authority figures. The possibility of being confronted face-to-face.

The Internet dismantled those buffers.

Today, anyone can reach anyone, anywhere, at any time—inside their own home, on the device they keep by their bed. The world no longer stops at the front door. The Internet lets people into private spaces they would never be allowed to enter physically, and it does so with almost no meaningful restraint.

This is not a side effect. It is a structural outcome.

When Home Is No Longer a Refuge

Cyberbullying and online harassment are often described as “virtual” problems, as if they exist separately from real life. They do not. They are psychological invasions that occur in the most intimate spaces people have: bedrooms, living rooms, kitchens—places once associated with safety.

Unlike traditional bullying, online harassment does not end when the school day ends or the office closes. It follows people home. It waits in inboxes. It arrives through notifications at midnight. It can be anonymous, relentless, and public all at once.

The result is a form of pressure that is difficult to escape and impossible to ignore.

A Global Problem, Not a Personal One

This is not a niche issue affecting a small subset of people. It is global, widespread, and well-documented.

International surveys consistently show that between one-fifth and one-third of adolescents worldwide have experienced cyberbullying. In some countries, the numbers are significantly higher. In the United States, nearly 60% of teenagers report being cyberbullied at least once. Similar patterns appear across Europe, India, Australia, and parts of Asia.

Adults are not immune. Large-scale studies show that roughly 40% of adults have experienced some form of online harassment. Women, journalists, marginalized groups, and public-facing workers are targeted disproportionately, but no demographic is spared. Online abuse affects students, professionals, parents, retirees—ordinary people living ordinary lives.

The common denominator is access.

The Psychological Damage Is Real

The effects of sustained online harassment are not abstract.

Victims report significantly higher rates of depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, panic attacks, and stress-related physical symptoms. Among young people, cyberbullying is associated with academic decline, social withdrawal, and feelings of isolation. For adults, it can lead to job loss, reputational damage, and long-term psychological distress.

In extreme cases, it contributes to self-harm and suicide.

This must be stated carefully and responsibly: online harassment does not “cause” suicide on its own. But overwhelming evidence shows that persistent, targeted harassment significantly increases risk, especially when combined with isolation, mental health struggles, or public humiliation.

Numerous deaths—among teenagers, celebrities, and private citizens—have been directly linked to online abuse, defamation campaigns, or digital mobbing. These are not isolated tragedies. They are warning signs.

From Harassment to Crime

The escalation path is well established.

What begins as insults can become threats.
Threats become stalking.
Stalking becomes doxxing.
Doxxing becomes swatting.

Swatting—making false emergency reports to send armed police to someone’s home—has resulted in real deaths. This is the Internet translating harassment directly into physical danger, turning online hostility into lethal outcomes.

This is what happens when barriers are removed and no friction is added back in.

This Is Not Accidental

If this level of harm were truly unintended, platforms would have redesigned themselves decades ago.

They did not.

Instead, the systems that govern online interaction are optimized for engagement—measured in clicks, time-on-platform, reactions, and shares. Outrage, conflict, and hostility reliably increase all of those metrics.

That is not speculation. It is settled behavioral science.

Platforms know that:

  • Conflict spreads faster than calm.
  • Anger drives interaction.
  • Pile-ons keep people watching.
  • Harassment increases engagement.

And so hostility remains cheap, easy, and scalable.

Moderation exists, but it is reactive, uneven, and often symbolic. Reporting systems are slow. Enforcement is inconsistent. Abusers are frequently allowed to return under new accounts. Victims are told to block, mute, or “log off,” shifting responsibility away from the system that enabled the abuse.

When harm persists at scale despite decades of awareness, it stops being a side effect. It becomes a feature.

The Moral Inversion

Perhaps the most damaging part of this ecosystem is how responsibility is framed.

Victims are asked why they engaged, why they posted, why they didn’t leave. The system subtly implies that being targeted is a consequence of participation—that exposure is the price of connection.

This is a moral inversion.

No one deserves harassment for existing online. No one consents to abuse by using a communication tool that has become mandatory for modern life. And no one should be forced to choose between isolation and exposure to cruelty.

Why This Matters Now

The Internet has been around long enough that we can no longer pretend this is growing pains.

The evidence is in. The outcomes are measurable. The casualties are real.

Allowing the entire world into private spaces without safeguards has consequences. When anyone can reach anyone at any time, bad actors will exploit that access—especially when systems reward them for doing so.

If platforms truly valued safety over growth, they would introduce friction. They would slow virality. They would limit anonymity where it causes harm. They would absorb responsibility instead of deflecting it.

They have chosen not to.

Accountability Starts With Honesty

This is not about nostalgia for a pre-internet past. It is about acknowledging what has been lost in the transition.

Walls existed for a reason. Distance mattered. Privacy mattered. Social limits mattered.

The Internet removed those walls and failed to replace them with anything meaningful. In doing so, it normalized cruelty, scaled harassment, and invited people into homes where they were never welcome.

Until that is confronted honestly—without euphemism or denial—the damage will continue.

Not because people are weak.

But because the system allows it.

#cyberbullying #cyberstalking #digitalAbuse #internetCulture #MentalHealth #onlineHarassment #onlineSafety #platformAccountability #socialMediaHarm #WPSNews

Alan Cumming's new thriller asks what happens when hate moves next door

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.advocate.com/news/culture/alan-cumming-tip-toe

AI deepfakes of dozens of Canadian women in violent and sexual images shared online
Multiple women across Canada say they feel confused, violated and terrified after learning pictures of themselves were allegedly taken from their social media profiles and manipulated using artificial intelligence to generate realistic photos and videos of them engaged in violent scenes and sexual acts. The Ottawa Police Servic...
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/ai-deepfakes-charges-9.7215992?cmp=rss
Muslim group calls for investigation after online threats target Eid gathering in Quebec
A private outdoor Eid gathering in Trois-Rivières, Que., is drawing attention from Muslim advocacy groups and police after the event received a wave of hateful and threatening online comments.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/muslims-eid-trois-rivieres-prayer-threats-9.7215260?cmp=rss

Mashable: Two men were charged with federal crimes after creating explicit deepfakes of celebrities. “Federal prosecutors arrested two men in conjunction with a criminal complaint that both separately made sexually explicit AI content that was viewed by millions of users online. The content featured female politicians, musicians, singers, and private photos of women known to one of the accused. […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/05/24/mashable-two-men-were-charged-with-federal-crimes-after-creating-explicit-deepfakes-of-celebrities/
Mashable: Two men were charged with federal crimes after creating explicit deepfakes of celebrities

Mashable: Two men were charged with federal crimes after creating explicit deepfakes of celebrities. “Federal prosecutors arrested two men in conjunction with a criminal complaint that both s…

ResearchBuzz: Firehose

PsyPost: Perpetrators of AI sexual abuse often view their actions as a joke, new research shows. “26% of people who shared images and 22% of those who created them said they wanted to destroy the target’s reputation. 12% of creators and 20% of sharers reported doing it for financial gain. Most often, the perpetrators targeted current or former sexual partners. Interestingly, participants more […]

https://rbfirehose.com/2026/05/12/psypost-perpetrators-of-ai-sexual-abuse-often-view-their-actions-as-a-joke-new-research-shows/
PsyPost: Perpetrators of AI sexual abuse often view their actions as a joke, new research shows

PsyPost: Perpetrators of AI sexual abuse often view their actions as a joke, new research shows. “26% of people who shared images and 22% of those who created them said they wanted to destroy…

ResearchBuzz: Firehose

Puerto Rico Senate leader attacks trans Miss Universe beauty pageant contestant

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.advocate.com/news/culture/miss-universe-puerto-rico-transphobia

What Bluesky Got Right: No Quote-Dunking

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 8, 2026

For years, quote-tweeting was framed as a neutral feature. In practice, it became one of the most efficient harassment tools ever built into a social platform. A single post could be ripped from context, broadcast to a hostile audience, and turned into a target without the original author having any control over the outcome.

That dynamic was not accidental. It was profitable.

When Bluesky removed quote-dunking as a core mechanic, it eliminated a primary vector for pile-ons. The effect was immediate: fewer dogpiles, fewer viral humiliations, and fewer people learning the hard way that visibility can be dangerous.

Quote-Dunking Was Never About Conversation

Quote-dunking rarely functioned as dialogue. Its real purpose was amplification without consent. A post was no longer addressed to the person who wrote it; it was addressed to an audience primed to laugh, mock, or attack.

This created a structural imbalance. One user spoke. Another summoned a crowd.

On algorithm-driven platforms, that crowd was often rewarded. Engagement spiked. Conflict spread. The original author absorbed the consequences.

Removing quote-dunking did not silence criticism. It changed where criticism happened.

Context Is a Form of Protection

When responses occur in-thread or in separate posts without forced amplification, context survives. Readers can see what was actually said. Disagreements unfold at a human scale instead of being reframed for maximum outrage.

Bluesky’s design forced responses to stand on their own. If someone wanted to criticize a post, they had to do so without dragging the original author into a hostile spotlight. That requirement alone reduced abuse.

It also improved discourse.

People were more careful.
Arguments were more precise.
Performative cruelty lost efficiency.

Pile-Ons Require Infrastructure

Harassment at scale does not happen spontaneously. It requires tools that allow many people to converge quickly on a single target. Quote-dunking provided that infrastructure.

By removing it, Bluesky disrupted the mechanics of mob behavior. Pile-ons became harder to organize and easier to ignore. Abuse lost momentum before it could metastasize.

This mattered most for marginalized users, who have historically been the primary targets of public dunking. When the spotlight could not be weaponized as easily, participation felt safer.

Disagreement Did Not Disappear

Critics argued that removing quote-dunking would weaken debate. That did not happen. Disagreement remained common. What changed was tone and scale.

Arguments stayed closer to the people involved. They did not automatically escalate into spectacle. Users could disagree without turning someone else into content.

That distinction is the difference between conversation and theater.

Why Other Platforms Kept the Feature

Quote-dunking drives engagement. It produces screenshots, viral moments, and outrage cycles that algorithms love. Platforms that depend on attention extraction have little incentive to remove it.

Bluesky made a different choice. It accepted lower spectacle in exchange for lower harm.

That decision revealed something important: many of the internet’s worst behaviors are not cultural inevitabilities. They are the result of specific design choices.

Removing quote-dunking did not make Bluesky perfect.
It made abuse less scalable.

For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

This essay will be archived as part of the ongoing WPS News Monthly Brief Series available through Amazon.

References (APA)

Marwick, A., & boyd, d. (2011). To see and be seen: Celebrity practice on Twitter. Convergence, 17(2), 139–158.
Citron, D. K. (2014). Hate Crimes in Cyberspace. Harvard University Press.
Gillespie, T. (2018). Custodians of the Internet. Yale University Press.
Massanari, A. (2017). #Gamergate and the fappening: How Reddit’s algorithm, governance, and culture support toxic technocultures. New Media & Society, 19(3), 329–346.

#BlueSky #Gamergate #internetCulture #onlineHarassment #platformDesign #queerSafetyOnline #quoteTweeting #socialMediaGovernance

Unheard A Samantha Leary Short Story

When teenage Anna falls victim to relentless online bullying, her aunt Wendy discovers the unimaginable. Samantha Leary steps in, navigating grief, guilt, and the haunting aftermath in this gripping story of loss, resilience, and the human cost of cruelty.

https://wearewisethinkers.com/2026/03/27/unheard-a-samantha-leary-short-story/

Unheard A Samantha Leary Short Story

When teenage Anna falls victim to relentless online bullying, her aunt Wendy discovers the unimaginable. Samantha Leary steps in, navigating grief, guilt, and the haunting aftermath in this grippin…

We Are Wise Thinkers