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Hasn't even got the decency to acknowledge that he's simply copied and pasted a Graudina article from 6 years ago. Probably wants people to think there is some degree of intelligence there.
and this is why it should be harder to open an acount for these people and have to register properly
So, certain, dare i say, professional people - Grown-ups who like to discuss shares and hep others do not have to keep reporting them and be disrupted by the rubbish they spout.
and be more accountable for your comments
What do you call someone that starts an account 5days ago just to ramp and insult because someone said facts?
That third one is really scathing. Studies actually show these people are irrelevant in the real world. Hey trolls go out and...
1. Get a job / start a business.
2. Get somewhere to call home. Your mum's spare room doesn't count.
3. Find a partner. There's lots of single people out there. Yes, even for someone like you!
4. Try and find success. It doesn't have to be monetary rewards. E.g. start a charity.
5. Have a shower and start all of the above now.
GO GO GO!!!
Third, trolling is a status-enhancing activity: by attracting readers’ attention, upsetting people, sparking heated debates, and even gaining approval from others, trolls can feel important, perhaps much more than they are in their real lives. Thus trolling is yet another internet activity that promotes narcissistic motives, since trolls may be expected to be far less successful in attracting people’s attention in the physical world. The only effective antidote to their tactics is to ignore them, but even then trolls won’t suffer a public humiliation because nobody knows who they are. This is what makes trolling so ubiquitous – it requires no skills other than the ability to be obnoxious.
Second, trolling – like other forms of computer-mediated communication – unleashes people’s impulses by providing anonymity and temporary identity loss. This phenomenon, called deindividuation, is well known to psychologists and has been found to emerge in several areas of interpersonal relations, such as gaming, role-playing and crowd behaviours, particularly hooliganism. Thus even when we are not naturally sadistic, trolling may bring out the worst side in us, by lifting the moral constrains and social etiquette that regulates our behaviour in normal situations, and by fuelling dissent and triggering abrasive reactions.
First, trolls are more likely to display noxious personality characteristics, that is, traits that impair one’s ability to build relations and function in a civilised or pro-social way. In a comprehensive examination of their psychological profile, trolls were found to be more Machiavellian (impulsive and charming manipulators), psychopathic (cold, fearless and antisocial), and especially sadist than the overall population. Trolls enjoy harming and intimidating others, so much so that the authors of this study concluded that trolls are “prototypical everyday sadists”, and that trolling should be regarded as online sadism. This is in line with the view of trolling as a form of cyberbullying.