cyberbullying

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Cyberbullying has sadly become an everyday thing for many teens all across the world.
Just recently, a cyberbullying incident involving three girls resulted in one girl commiting suicide. The victim, Rebecca, started dating a boy back in 2012. Another girl did not like this so she began to harass and bully her telling her that she should “drink bleach and die” (Newcomb). The bullying did not stop there, it only escalated from online verbal harassment to physical confrontations at school. On top of that, the girl allegedly bullied any of Rebecca’s friends and turned one of her closer friends against her. During this school year (2013-2014), Rebecca tried to start fresh by going to a new school only to find that the bullying would continue. Find no other way out, Rebecca Sedwick jumped from the top of a silo tower on Sept. 9.
This is a truly sad story but it something that occurs all too often around the world. Right about now, you may be asking yourself what is the true definition of cyberbullying? Cyber bullying is cyberbullying is the use of technology to harass, threaten, embarrass, or target another person. Online threats, rude texts, and mean tweets, posts, or messages all count. So does posting personal information or videos designed to hurt or embarrass someone else. Cyberbullying also includes photos, messages, or pages that don't get taken down, even after the person has been asked to do so. In other words, it's anything that gets posted online and is deliberately intended to hurt the person (TeensHeatlh).
The general misconception is that only teens and children are bullied but unbelievable as may sound, adults (mainly teachers) are bullied online also. StopBullying.gov, a government run site, says that typical victims of bullying are children who “are perceived as different from their peers such as being overweight or underweight, wearing glasses or

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