Thursday, 7 May 2015

Case Studies On Cyber Bullying


The New Kid at School

The Situation
Henry was a shy sixth-grader who recently arrived at school from out of state. One day as he was browsing a social media site he came across a page about the school with pictures of students, including one of him labeled “The Fat Nerd.” Upset, he posted a reply expressing his dismay.
The postings became nastier, and soon some students were making loud comments in the lunchroom and on the playground. A teacher overhead some of the names, and asked Henry what was going on. He described the social media page and the Cyber Bullying.

What Worked
The school, which had trained its teachers and had a zero-tolerance policy on bullying, responded quickly. They identified the ringleaders, and with the help of their parents, had the creator of the unauthorized school page take it down from the social media site. School officials hosted sessions for parents and students about Cyber Bullying and how to prevent it.

What Didn’t Work
Henry had to endure many weeks of feeling humiliated and hurt before anyone realized what was going on. His parents didn’t even know because Henry was too embarrassed to tell them. It will take the still-shy teen a long time to regain his confidence.


Another Case Study

MUMBAI: Two cases of cyber bullying, where profiles of two young women on social networking sites were replaced with obscene material, ended in acquittal after the prosecution failed to produce evidence.

In both the cases, the court said the prosecution failed to submit electronic evidence. In one of the cases, the investigating officer was not available for examination in the court.

In the first case, in September 2006, a Thane resident prepared a fake profile of a college student, posted obscene comments about her and also provided her telephone number. Following this, the student started receiving vulgar messages and calls. On her complaint, the police registered a case, identified the cyber cafe from where the accused had posted the obscene material and arrested him. The accused had used his personal computer for the activity.

The court said, "There is no direct or circumstantial evidence on record to connect the accused with the alleged profile.'' The prosecution could not secure the presence of the investigating officer and other witnesses, the court added. Electronic records include data stored either on harddiskor computer memo, online photographs, sound recordings, data on email and website content, SMS and MMS.

In the second case, in September last year, a prospective groom posted pictures of the woman consuming liquor and smoking a cigarette on a social networking site, after their marriage was called off. The victim was from Nagpur.

Her second marriage proposal was also cancelled after the sister of the second prospective groom received the same pictures on email. The victim's father lodged a complaint, and had the youth accused as responsible for the incident arrested. In this case, too, cops failed to produce electronic records. Besides, the father of the victim was not keen on pursuing the case since his daughter was married by the time the court made its decision in the case.


Advocate Prashant Mali, cyber law and cyber security expert whose firm represented the accused in both cases said, "There lies a lacuna in gathering, storing and producing electronic records in the court of law by police authorities. Now, the police department is producing IP address and call data records as the only electronic evidence. But here lies a huge loophole; hence police should combine old ways of investigating with new ways, to make a water tight case.''

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