Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Blog Prompt: What do to do about cyberbullying?

As I mentioned in connection with our discussion of dana boyd's It's Complicated, the media is full of stories about cyberbullying and its sometimes tragic effects. One story that grabbed the public's attention was the case of Amanda Todd, a 15-year old Canadian who committed suicide after being harassed and bullied online (and in person). Stories like Todd's have caused schools to adopt "zero tolerance" policies towards online bullying. Yet danah boyd argues that such policies do more harm than good.
Approaching bullying from a punishment-oriented perspective, as many schools do-- and are increasingly legally required to do-- rarely helps with bullying situations. Often...school and parent involvement worsens the situation because the adults involved do not understand the details. If young people believe that adults will overreact or won't understand the complexities of the interpersonal dynamics, they aren't particularly interested in conveying the challenges they're facing. 
Some state legislatures have, recently, doubled down on a punishment-oreinted approach to cyberbullying, passing laws that  criminalize online bullying. See, for instance, the recent law adopted by Michigan.

What do you think should be done to address the issue of online bullying? Is immediate, strict punishment the solution? Should Illinois adopt a law like the one that recently went into effect in Michigan?  Or does such punishment only add to the "drama"? Write a blog post discussing this messy problem and possible solutions to it.

Sunday, April 07, 2019

Blog Prompt #2: Is Google Evil?



On Thursday, we began discussing the central role that Google plays in people's online lives. We use the company's search engine to find information for homework assignments, to check our spelling, to check our symptoms when we're feeling sick, to find directions while we're on road trips and to research and apply for jobs. We use their video sharing service YouTube to fritter away hours watching videos of cats on skateboards and mash-ups of our favorite TV shows. Some of us use Google Docs to write our papers, Google Sheets to maintain budgets and Google Calendar to organize our lives. And, whether we know it or not, Google-- or, rather, parent company Alphabet--  serves up many of the online ads we're exposed to on sites like the New York Times, CNN.com and TMZ.com. This raises a series of questions: Does Google have too much power over our lives? Are we addicted to Google? And, if so, does the Googlization of our lives  endanger our privacy or our independence in important ways (as some critics suggest)? The company's original motto was "Don't be evil" (and was changed to "Do the right thing" when it reorganized as Alphabet in October 2015). But does Google/Alphabet really always do the right thing?   Write a blog post-- on Blogger, another Google property-- reflecting on these questions. I look forward to reading your thoughts on the subject....