Thank you for this. I appreciate the effort you took in creating this guideline.
If I may, I’d also add 3 points:
(1) Facebook allows users to become Digital Creators. When I looked into it, a Digital Creator is an electronic provocateur, looking to get a very high number of engagements even if they’re low quality engagements.
(2) All social media trolls, I’ve noticed, provide screen shots of their evidence instead of links. For example, they’d screen shot a portion of a Wikipedia article that contains links. Except you can’t click on a “picture of a link.”
(3) Trolls will use memes exclusively that support their point. The problem is that when they’re attributed to a “celebrity”, they’re taken out of context and these memes can be used by opposing points of view.
Thank you for this. I appreciate the effort you took in creating this guideline.
If I may, I’d also add 3 points:
(1) Facebook allows users to become Digital Creators. When I looked into it, a Digital Creator is an electronic provocateur, looking to get a very high number of engagements even if they’re low quality engagements.
(2) All social media trolls, I’ve noticed, provide screen shots of their evidence instead of links. For example, they’d screen shot a portion of a Wikipedia article that contains links. Except you can’t click on a “picture of a link.”
(3) Trolls will use memes exclusively that support their point. The problem is that when they’re attributed to a “celebrity”, they’re taken out of context and these memes can be used by opposing points of view.
Thanks for the additional info. Facebook itself is part of the problem if anyone were to ask me. :-)
I can certainly understand your frustration.