Who was responsible for the social media savaging that apparently prompted the hospitalisation of Charlotte Dawson last week?
Well, according to the mainstream media, the trolls, of course. There hasn’t been this much discussion of trolls since the Lord of the Rings movies. The media thinks they know who trolls are: people without a life railing and baiting from the comfort of their parent’s basement, presumably in between mouthfuls of pizza and the odd session of Call of Duty. News Ltd — whose websites are by far the biggest location for abusive comments in the Australian media and that employs several professional op-ed trollers itself — even tried to conduct a troll hunt.
Many of us have been trolled. Some of us, myself included, have even engaged in trolling ourselves on occasion in the past. I suspect few of us who’ve been online since the mid-1990s have never baited, flamed, abused, fallen to personal mockery or otherwise in some way failed to maintain the highest standards of public discourse.
But there’s trolling and, well, trolling. Serious trolling. A couple of Crikey tipsters have suggested that the disgusting assault on Dawson was part of a wider war between the ultimate trolls, the /b/ community at the 4chan site (do not click that link if you’re at work), and 9gag, another, newer, user-driven meme-swapping site. There’s been an operation at /b/ for some time to frame 9gag for anything likely to garner media attention, such as encouraging the Aurora shootings. As US site Jezebel pointed out, much of the trolling directed at Dawson came with proud #9gag hashtags. Dawson may thus have simply been another arbitrary victim of an ongoing online war, selected merely because of her media profile; many participants may have had no idea who she actually was.
But another suggested Dawson had drawn attention to herself by retweeting abuse, prompting some of her 33,000-strong followers to hit back. And some /b/ users indeed took responsibility for the attack. “This was a great success. Vapid bitch deserved the raid,” said one on Saturday. “She retweets something she doesn’t like and her 20,000+ fans start attacking that person as a troll. Looks like its all teens and young people … She was being (so called trolled) by young people trying to fight back before /b/ showed up.” Another: “D-list celebrity retweets her nay-sayers (HURRDURRTROLLS) and publicly calls for them to take her on, saying on national TV that it doesn’t faze her and ‘rolls off like water on a ducks back’.”
From this perspective, Dawson had declared war on the, well, trolling community, and as a matter of pride /b/ had to respond, while happily implicating 9gag along the way.
A lot of us retweet abuse we get on Twitter. Sometimes we receive stuff so crazy it simply begs to be shared with a wider audience. And while lots of people retweet praise they get (one of the great crimes of Twitter, in my view), some of us prefer to retweet abuse, as an arguably more valid form of feedback. And yes, it has the result of exposing the abuser to a far wider audience, some of whom take it upon themselves to attack the abuser. Depending on your followers, you might have some who are particularly enthusiastic about attacking any perceived enemies.
How much Dawson did this deliberately is unclear. But the perception, whether right or not, that Dawson was spurring her followers, stereotyped as young teen females, into responding to trolls is important: there is little calculated to draw the wrath of a community like /b/ more than the idea of young mainstream female teens berating any part of their own community.
4chan and particularly /b/ is highly transgressive: this is a community that delights in racism, sexism, and most other kinds of bigotry, as well as inflicting gross insensitivity and offence, not because it is composed of bigots and heartless buffoons but simply for the transgression implicit in such behaviour, and the knowledge that it will get a response from targets (and generate mainstream media coverage). But it has its own boundaries and sense of transgression, and much of it is directed towards mainstream internet users, particularly young women, who are perceived as a less legitimate online presence unless they share the community’s interests.
It’s at this point that we get into online misogyny. The fact is, women receive worse abuse, far worse abuse, than men online, often it seems because they are perceived as being there illegitimately, of lacking some essential characteristic of male users (beyond a penis). In particular, they are seen as guilty of having the “wrong” lifestyle and cultural interests (Twilight, say, is automatically less legitimate than Battlestar Galactica or Breaking Bad) and of being less IT-savvy. Women are stereotyped more than men, are more likely to be perceived as being female first, then online users second, rather than simply online users with intelligent or otherwise views regardless of their gender.
None of that will change via censorship, or the removal of online anonymity, which was mooted when news of Dawson’s hospitalisation broke, or any other unworkable ideas put forwarded by various outraged commentators, politicians and policemen. For one thing, is this hostility to women confined to the internet? Obviously not. The least internet-savvy section of the community, old white men, proudly displayed their views last week, with women called “cows”, accused of “destroying the joint” and told they must submit to “male headship”.
It will only change by more women getting online and occupying the public space there, thereby demonstrating the legitimacy of their presence in the face of those who don’t want women outside a specific stereotype/fantasy there at all. That’s the broader issue around trolling and the attack on Dawson. If there’s a joint that really needs destruction, it’s the male-dominated corners of the internet.
I make no comment on Charlotte Dawson – I have no idea who she is or what she stands for. I am not a young female.
My comment is based around the issue of “employs several professional op-ed trollers itself”. While News Ltd isn’t alone, it does seem strange that the Alan Jones, Kyle Sandilands and Bill O’Reilly’s (Fox News) of the world are all well rewarded by advertisers for their contribution in reducing civility (why else would Alan Jones keep suggesting our PM be put in chaff bag at sea?) Why should the internet be any more civil than the formal broadcast network? Surely any discussion about trolls and online abuse of people has to start with the rapidly degenerating levels of public discussion? Notoriety is instant celebrity these days, apparently that is just as meaningful as the Higgs Boson discovery or landing on Mars. If you want to know where misogyny exists – try the mainstream media, it rewards and endorses this behaviour. Higher ratings sell more packets of Omo. I don’t think the internet is suddenly going to get any more civil while Alan Jones/Kyle Sandilands of the world are still on the air and instant fame is easily found by transgressing societies norms. Perhaps Tony Abbott will be blocking Podcasts from 2GB when he begins to censor the internet. I hope that Leigh Sales puts that to Tony next time.
http://www.dailylife.com.au/news-and-views/dl-opinion/how-women-are-ruining-everything-20120903-258zx.html
You’re doing the same as Charlotte did, in a way, with that last sentence. Challenging 4chan?
Charlotte though, appears to have brought a lot of the trolls onto her own head. Hard to feel sympathy there.
Twitter, Blogger, Facebook etc etc provide noticeboards for today’s Poison Pen Letter authors with a far more devastating affect than the anonymous writers of bile had in the old days because of their ability to reach a mass audience.
They are the new publishers in it’s new form, making hundreds of millions of dollars off advertising and uniquely, employing a fraction of the staff old world publishers did and in most cases, basing themselves in tax havens and paying, as Malcolm Turnbull rightly pointed out, a tiny amount of tax in Australia when Google pulled in over $50M alone in adverts last year.
They are not the ‘pen’ as their supporters would have us believe in the claim they should be devoid of responsibility-they are in charge of the noticeboard with an ability to monitor authors yet refuse to on the spurious claim of ‘free speech’ a dubious entity emanating from the USA (a country which has little free speech).
Yet we have a whole raft of journalists and tech writers telling us to ‘get over it’,get with the programme and so on.
The SMH’s Richard Akland, a normally sensible legal writer declares libel laws are somehow a spent force because it’s so much easier these days to libel and get a way with it.
Mr Keane himself has in the past questioned why a gi-normous entity like Twitter should be compelled to censor it’s tweets- that’s Twitter another tax haven based corporation employing a tiny staff with a huge monetary turnover and profit.
I’ve read heaps of writer and journalists over the past few days who have penned a raft of stories about how they too have been flamed or trolled yet not one, not one bloody one of them has taken it a step further- what if it was your 87 year old mother Bernard (as my then 83 year old Aunt was when the campaign began against her on the net) who was on the receiving end of a vicious campaign.
That’s a lady who had never seen a computer in her life but received endless reports from her nieces and nephews (many who are police and one a journalist and who feel completely helpless) and then reports from their children who think she must be told the truth and all are perplexed by this vicious campaign and no-one can do a bloody thing about it and have to read they must “adapt” to this new world or read absolute rubbish as in this article from a usually sensible writer that it will only change if “more women get online”
Bernard Keane-in this particular matter you haven’t got a clue what you are writing about.
“many participants may have had no idea who she actually was.”
Wow! You know Charlotte would probably think that line more offensive than anything that was tweeted at her.
How many australian houses have basements? Just curious 🙂
Thanks for outlining some bits of the internet that I never would have come across. At least I now know what “9gag” is – one of their funny pictures is currently my background picture.