This … this one was a bit hard to wrap my head around. Even after brad explained the general concept to me, it was still a bit tricky. Basically, the idea was to observe someone who isn’t quite themselves online, i.e. virtual reality, or at least not the self they claim to be (or more accurately, we experience them as) in day-to-day ‘actual’ reality. Now, numerous studies have been done on the subject, and revealed a startling trend. Most people online will actually say and do things they would never be caught doing in actual reality. The rules of morality are somehow more flexible online. Due to anonymity (or as I like to think of it, The Invisible Man Effect), people don’t feel as strictly bound by a generally agreed upon code of conduct (i.e. common courtesy). They also don’t feel as empathetic towards others due to the dehumanizing nature of the internet. We have no face, no vocal inflection, no pheromones to communicate with. Only pure thought, in two-dimensional words.
Take Brad, for instance. Brad and I actually met online, and we have since become good friends. Brad, however, is a dick online (and to varying degrees in real life, but I digress), to the point I almost didn’t actually go to hang out with him that first night we were chatting. I did, and wound up really enjoying our interactions, and saw other sides to him. His online persona is a mere fraction of his real-life one, and one he rarely comes close to emulating during face-to-face interactions. Where he would tell someone online to fuck off, he would perhaps try and make peace or come to some understanding face to face. And to varying degrees, this is something we all do.
I find I can be more assertive and domineering online, whereas away from the computer I generally give way or make more generous concessions. On sites (forums and such) where one uses an avatar as their “face,” it’s like wearing a mask. Even on social media such as facebook, MySpace, etc. where (presumably) one uses their own images as identifiers, there’s less pressure of “is this person gonna like me,” “Will they think that comment was funny,” “Did I remember to brush my teeth?” Because even if they don’t, or you weren’t, or you didn’t, it’s not ‘real,’ so it ultimately doesn’t matter.
Unfortunately, it is real, and it does matter. Words, even online words, can hurt deeply, and result in some very serious ‘real life’ consequences.
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