Tackling Internet abuse in Great Britain: Towards a framework for classifying severities of ‘flame trolling’

May 8, 2012

Abstract

While trolling has existed as a term since the 1990s and as a reality even earlier there has been an exponential increase in the prevalence of the abusive kind – ‘flame  trolling’. Mistakenly the media calls these flame trollers,  ‘trolls’, when in fact there are more often than not ‘Snerts’  and ‘E-Vengers’. The justice system in Great Britain has taken  a sporadic approach to dealing with flame trolling, and the  wide range of legislation that has existed since the 1980s has  no strategic method to assign its usage on the basis of the  nature of the flame trolling as its use often depends on the  whim of different police forces. This paper hopes to change this. After a brief presentation of the background of Internet  trolling in Great Britain and in general a new framework is presented. This allows prosecutors to easily classify flame  trolling based on the facts of the case and pick the appropriate level based on the severity.

Citation

J. Bishop (2012). Tackling Internet abuse in Great Britain: Towards a framework for classifying severities of ‘flame trolling’. In Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Security and Management (SAM’12), 16-19 July 2012, USA.

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Tackling Internet abuse in Great Britain: Towards a framework for classifying severities of ‘flame trolling’

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