Hate Crimes in Cyberspace

Hate Crimes in Cyberspace

by Danielle Keats Citron
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 22/09/2014

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Most Internet users are familiar with trolling—aggressive, foul-mouthed posts designed to elicit angry responses in a site’s comments. Less familiar but far more serious is the way some use networked technologies to target real people, subjecting them, by name and address, to vicious, often terrifying, online abuse. In an in-depth investigation of a problem that is too often trivialized by lawmakers and the media, Danielle Keats Citron exposes the startling extent of personal cyber-attacks and proposes practical, lawful ways to prevent and punish online harassment. A refutation of those who claim that these attacks are legal, or at least impossible to stop, Hate Crimes in Cyberspace reveals the serious emotional, professional, and financial harms incurred by victims.


Persistent online attacks disproportionately target women and frequently include detailed fantasies of rape as well as reputation-ruining lies and sexually explicit photographs. And if dealing with a single attacker’s “revenge porn” were not enough, harassing posts that make their way onto social media sites often feed on one another, turning lone instigators into cyber-mobs.


Hate Crimes in Cyberspace rejects the view of the Internet as an anarchic Wild West, where those who venture online must be thick-skinned enough to endure all manner of verbal assault in the name of free speech protection, no matter how distasteful or abusive. Cyber-harassment is a matter of civil rights law, Citron contends, and legal precedents as well as social norms of decency and civility must be leveraged to stop it.

ISBN:
9780674744653
9780674744653
Category:
Legal aspects of IT
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
22-09-2014
Language:
English
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
Danielle Keats Citron

Danielle Citron is the inaugural Jefferson Scholars Foundation Schenck Distinguished Professor in Law at the University of Virginia School of Law (UVA), where she teaches and writes about information privacy, free expression, and civil rights.

She has garnered awards nationally and internationally and was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2019 based on her work on cyber stalking and sexual privacy. In 2015, Prospect magazine named Professor Citron one of the "Top 50 World Thinkers". Her book Hate Crimes in Cyberspace was named one of the "20 Best Moments for Women in 2014" by Cosmopolitan magazine. She has published more than 40 law review articles, and has written for major media outlets such as the New York Times, the Guardian and Wired.

Professor Citron is a member of Facebook's Non-Consensual Intimate Imagery Task Force and an advisor since 2011, and a member of Twitter's Trust and Safety Task Force and an adviser to the company since 2009. She has also advised Kamala Harris and the UK government, and on campaigns internationally on privacy, free expression and civil rights.

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