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Society
Cyberbullying
Cyberbullying on social networks spawning form of
self-harm
Charities warn of vulnerable youngsters encountering pernicious abuse online but
unable to cease using sites
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Tributes laid outside the Leicestershire home of Hannah Smith, who killed herself after being bullied online.
Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA
Some vulnerable children on social networks plagued by cyberbullying are using the sites as a
form of self-harm, charities warned on Tuesday, after a 14-year-old girl killed herself after being
bullied online.
Calls for the website ask.fm to be closed down have intensified, after it was revealed that 14-
year-old Hannah Smith, who lived in Lutterworth, Leicestershire, took her life on Friday after
being cyberbullied on the question-and-answer site.
The ask.fm site allows users to send messages without identifying themselves. Anonymous
messengers taunted Hannah about her weight, and the death of an uncle, and urged her to hurt
herself.
At least five teenagers have killed themselves in the past year after experiencing abuse on the
site. In a statement ask.fm said Hannah's death was a "true tragedy" and it would help police. It
encouraged reporting of bullying.
Charities warned that some children are unable to stop using such sites even if they know they
are going to be bullied.
Scott Freeman, founder of The Cybersmile Foundation, said: "It's very easy to get carried away
in this circle of online self-abuse when you're alone in your room. [Children] check it, and keep
checking, and it evolves into a kind of self-harm.
"We've seen instances where people have actually lined themselves up for abuse, posting a
question like "do you think I'm pretty?" knowing that they'll get torn apart. What we're dealing with
now is a completely new concept. It's the hate that's resonating through all of our social
mediacoming through to our youth."
He added that the site had created problems before, but that these were becoming acute
because of its growing popularity.
"I saw a tweet that said: 'ask.fm: because our parents are on Facebook.' That's what teenagers
want, kind of their own world that parents don't know about, that parents aren't in," he said.
The site, based in Latvia, has exploded in popularity since its launch in 2010, growing from 8
million users last year to 65 million in 2013 and adding around 300,000 new users around the
globe each day. It is aimed at teenagers and users are required to state they are over 13.
Jeremy Todd, chief executive of the charity Family Lives, called for the site to be shut down and
said more parents were contacting the charity to complain about it. "We know these sites
engender paranoia and destroy trust between friends, it is a very, very, pernicious form of
bullying," he said.
Hannah's father, Dave Smith, told the Leicester Mercury that sites such as ask.fm were making
money "out of people's misery and it is wrong".
He said: "I would appeal to David Cameron as a prime minister and a father to look at this to
make sure these sites are properly regulated so bullying of vulnerable people like my daughter
cannot take place. I don't want other parents to go through what I am going through."
Another teenager, 16-year-old Jessica Laney, was found dead at her home in Florida in
December after being bombarded with abusive messages online.
Last autumn two Irish schoolgirls Ciara Pugsley, 15, from Leitrim, and Erin Gallagher, 13, from
Donegal took their own lives, and in April, Josh Unsworth, 15, from Lancashire, killed himself
after suffering months of abusive online messages.
Emma-Jane Cross, from the campaign group BeatBullying, said thousands of young people were
facing a daily barrage of online abuse, death threats and harassment. One in three young people
was the victim of cyberbullying, and one in 13 encountered persistent abuse online.
"We cannot stand by while innocent children lose their lives," she said. "Adults need to set an
example for young people and we all have a responsibility to tackle this type of behaviour and
keep our children safe."
Ask.fm said the company had contacted Leicestershire police and would co-operate with their
investigation into the circumstances of the suicide.
"Hannah Smith's death is a true tragedy. We would like to convey our deepest condolences to
her family and friends," it said. "Ask.fm actively encourages our users and their parents to report
any incidences of bullying, either by using the in-site reporting button, or via our contact page.
"All reports are read by our team of moderators to ensure that genuine concerns are heard and
acted upon immediately, and we always remove content reported to us that violates our terms of
service."
The company has been accused of ignoring fears.
Freeman said: "There are people on ask.fm who are relentlessly destroying children, but then
there are really nice children who are disgusted by ask.fm, but who go on to watch.
"It's this kind of voyeuristic thing we're dealing with something completely new. That's what
really upsets the victims when they come to us, that kind of public humiliation. They can't switch
it off."
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/aug/06/cyberbullying-social-networks-self-harm

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