7.4. Responding to trolls?#
One of the traditional pieces of advice for dealing with trolls is “Don’t feed the trolls,” which means that if you don’t respond to trolls, they will get bored and stop trolling. We can see this advice as well in the trolling community’s own “Rules of the Internet” [g31]:
Do not argue with trolls - it means that they win
But the essayist Film Crit Hulk argues against this in Don’t feed the trolls, and other hideous lies [g32]. That piece argues that the “don’t feed the trolls” strategy doesn’t stop trolls from harassing:
Ask anyone who has dealt with persistent harassment online, especially women: [trolls stopping because they are ignored] is not usually what happens. Instead, the harasser keeps pushing and pushing to get the reaction they want with even more tenacity and intensity. It’s the same pattern on display in the litany of abusers and stalkers, both online and off, who escalate to more dangerous and threatening behavior when they feel like they are being ignored.
Film Crit Hulk goes on to say that the “don’t feed the trolls” advice puts the burden on victims of abuse to stop being abused, giving all the power to trolls. Instead, Film Crit Hulk suggests giving power to the victims and using “skilled moderation and the willingness to kick people off platforms for violating rules about abuse”
7.4.1. Reflection questions#
Have you witnessed different responses to trolling? What happened in those cases?
What do you think is the best way to deal with trolling?