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Bullying in social networks

Girl, kill yourself.
Why are you still alive?
You are so ugly.
Rebecca Sedwick,
an eleven-year-old girl from Florida,
received those mean, hurtful,
tormenting and embarrassing messages on her social media.
They would ultimately lead her
to jump off of her town's water tower
to her death.
In the fall of 2013,
I would come home from school to read that story.
I was stunned, shocked,
and I was heart-broken.
How could a girl younger than myself
be pushed to take her own life?
That's when I knew I had to do something
to stop this from ever happening again.
But the pain and the misery that Rebecca endured
had already happened.
The damage was done.
My name is Trisha Prabhu,
I'm fourteen years old,
and I'm from the great city of Naperville,
in Illionois, in the United States.
I'm passionate to stop cyberbullying
at the source, before the damage is done.
I'm a big dreamer, and I believe that everyone
should have the right to dream, persist in their dream,
and see that become a reality.
So, when I read Rebecca's story,
I immediately wondered,
"Were there any others like her out there,
that were suffering as well?"
I'd soon learn that she was one of a countless many.
Megan Meier died three weeks before her fourteenth birthday.
She hung herself in her bedroom closet
where her mother would find her
when coming up to get her for dinner.
She'd received messages like,
The world would be a better place without you,
on her Myspace account.
The damage was done,
and Megan suffered the consequences.
Tyler Clementi was an eighteen-year-old student
at Rutgers University.
He was just getting used to college life
and his new gay identity.
One day, his roommate and a friend
decided to use a webcam and a laptop
to stream some of Tyler's most intimate moments with his boyfriend
all over social media.
The damage was done.
Humiliated, Tyler took his life,
jumping off of the George Washington bridge.
I wish more than anything
that I could rewrite those stories.
I wish I could make every perpetrator
rethink what they did.
But what if I could do that?
What if I could stop the damage before it was done?
Would Megan, Tyler and Rebecca still be alive today?
Cyberbullying is a huge problem.
52% of adolescents in the United States alone
have been cyberbullied.
And 38% of them
suffered suicidal tendencies.
Let's look at it from a global perspective.
A quarter of the world's population are adolescents.
We're talking 1.8 billion teens.
Imagine that in the social media revolution;
how more and more of them are getting on social media,
and more and more of them are being cyberbullied.
So, why do you get cyberbullied?
Look, I might be biased, but I'm pretty sure
that kids are not mean devils that run around with cruel intentions.
I don't know about you, but that's what I think.
And what about adults? Are they nice or mean on social media?
Now, when it comes to adults, I wasn't really sure.
So, I had to do some research to figure that out.
So, that year, for my science experiment at school,
I decided to look at how age affected the willingness
to post offensive messages on social media sites.
What did I find?
This younger age group, ages twelve to eighteen,
was 40% more willing to post an offensive message
than an older age group.
OK. The number didn't surprise me.
But why?
Why was that younger age group
so much more willing to post an offensive message?
I started to do a lot of research,
and, one day, I came across an article,
and it had one sentence that would forever change
my view on this problem.
They said, "The adolescent brain
is likened to a car with no breaks."
High speed. No pausing.
No thinking. No considering.
We just act. So why is it like that?
Our brains are kind of weird.
They develop from the back to the front,
which means that our front part of the brain
is not fully developed until age 25.
Why is that a problem?
Well, prefrontal cortex
controls decision-making skills,
rash, impulsive decisions,
spur-of-the-moment feelings.
So, that's why adolescents don't think before they act.
They just go ahead and do something,
whether it's downing fifteen Red Bulls on a dare,
skipping an English final,
doing something crazy.
We don't really think before we do it.
Well, then I was venting about this to a friend.
I was like, "Gosh, you know, this is horrible."
And she said, "You know, Trisha, I really admire your passion,
but you've been talking about this for the last 15 minutes,
as if you had just discovered it.
It's a huge problem, but social media sites
are already doing stuff to stop this."
And I went, "Oh, yeah. You're right."
But I'd soon find that what social media sites are doing
is really nothing.
Their mechanism is a "stop, block, tell" method.
You stop what you're doing, through the victim,
you block the cyberbully
and you immediately go tell a parent or guardian.
It sounds pretty reasonable.
But here's what actually happens:
adolescents, we're kind of afraid to tell people
that we're being cyberbullied.
Research shows that nine out of ten times
victims don't tell anyone that they're being cyberbullied.
What's more, why are we putting the burden
on the victim to block the cyberbully?
Why aren't we changing the behavior in the actual cyberbully?
And it angered me.
There wasn't a single effective way to stop cyberbullying,
and it was a silent pandemic
that was affecting so many people around the world.
That's when I had an idea.
I know from my research that adolescents don't think
before they do things, right?
So, what if they didn't think before they type?
What if I gave them a chance
to think about what they were doing?
If an adolescent tried to post an offensive message on social media,
if I went, "Whoa! Hold on.
You're about to post an offensive message to someone.
That can really hurt them.
Are you sure you want to post this message?",
would they still be as willing to do it?
I had no idea, but I was ready to find out.
So that year, using my science and technology skills,
I created two software systems.
And basically, they were able to compare
whether an alert that prompted adolescents
to think about what they were doing
actually decreased their willingness to post offensive messages.
So, for four to six weeks, I basically lived at my local library.
All the kids were always giving me weird looks,
but, you know, in the end, it was totally worth it.
I was able to get 1,500 valid trials of data.
And what did I find?
93% of the time when adolescents receive an alert that says,
Whoa! You're about to post an offensive message,
they changed their mind.
I was able to decrease the willingness to post offensive messages
from 71.4% to 4.6%.
(Cheers) (Applause)
Think about that.
My research proved that rethink before you type,
rethink before you post,
rethink before the damage is done
is an effective long-term method to stop cyberbullying,
at the source, before the damage is done.
So Rethink has become insanely popular -- I'm glad to say.
Just a few weeks ago, I was at the Google Science Fair
for my research. I'm a global finalist.
And I also currently --
(Applause)
Thank you.
(Applause)
And I also currently hold a United States provisional patent for this idea.
So now, my main goal
is getting this out there as a product,
and stopping cyberbullying.
I'm currently working tirelessly
to create a Chrome extension browser
and a mobile add-on for mobile platforms.
That way, Rethink can go global
and stop cyberbullying before the damage is done.
Steve Jobs once said,
"Simple can be harder than complex.
Original, much harder than derived.
But when you get there, it's worth it,
because you can move mountains."
He is so right.
Rethink has proven that, in those few seconds,
when you decide whether or not you're going to hit "post",
those few seconds mean so much in the future.
So, whether you're about to post an offensive message
about the fat girl that sits ahead of you in your class,
or your annoying boss,
that can mean the fat girl's life,
or your job.
So, I encourage all of you:
rethink before the damage is done.
Very rarely in this connected world
do we remember, we need to slow down,
pause, think about what we're doing.
We're posting a message
and that has significance.
So, choose to rethink.
Rethink before you type,
before the damage is done.
Thank you.
(Cheers) (Applause)

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