Out of curiosity guys, do you think that something said about you on the Internet cannot possibly affect you in real life, whether or not you spend any time on the Internet whatsoever?
Stuff happening on the internet can and does frequently spill into offline parts of people's lives.
I think that what Chris Hall did to Olivia Melville, posting her profile and calling out/shaming her was a big example of this. It drew in people Melville knew in real life and she apparently got strangers calling her phone over it and maybe worse. I consider his action very disrespectful and uncalled for if put in the best possible. Unfortunately this happens all the time (there are public forums dedicated to shaming people for their dating site activity, like 95+% of the time the accounts belong to men) and I would consider legislation against it - especially legislation that results in criminal prosecution of the individuals doing it - to be problematic. Not least of all because it involves disseminating already public information.
Then we have the thing with Zane Alchin, Pamola Newton, and other Facebook commentators who were trading blows on Melville's feed. Here Alchin made the comment "I would rape you if you were more attractive" to Newton in response to her disdain over a rape joke and demand that he not make another. Here I would say that no, none of these comments had any effect on anyone's personal lives or sense of safety and wellbeing. And I sympathize with Newton a lot less than I do Melville, because she saw Alchin was making comments directed towards no individual in particular and engaged and reprimanded him, then reported him to the police when he went full bore to offend and outrage her.
It's unfortunate that the media reporting on this is very muddled, with a lot of conflation over what comments were made to who and in what context. The general idea, and what people seem to be interpreting based on comments, is that Alchin went on Melville's feed and left a string of threatening statements directed at her, saying that he planned to rape Melville. If that were what actually happened I'd have a very different outlook.
Last edited: