Tag: internet

  • Ngee Ann Poly Makes Police Report Over Blog Targeting Students

    Ngee Ann Poly Makes Police Report Over Blog Targeting Students

    Some girls from Ngee Ann Polytechnic (NP) who had posted on social media photos of themselves dressed in shorts, yoga pants, bikinis and dresses were horrified when they discovered that those images were reposted with lewd captions on micro-blogging platform Tumblr.

    Thirteen girls were affected. When NP found out about the blog, it lodged a police report.

    The blog, which targeted female students from NP, surfaced on May 10. The New Paper spoke to six victims, who confirmed they were from NP.

    A final-year student, 19, who found out about her reposted photos through a friend, told TNP: “The text that accompanied the posts disgusted me.

    “I am aware of how dangerous the Internet can be, but it is not a valid reason for sexual harassment under any circumstances.”

    She has since made all of her social media platforms private and deleted photos that could be considered mildly sexual.

    Another 19-year-old victim, who graduated earlier this year, said it is unnerving to know that NP was targeted.

    A 20-year-old final-year student who was also a victim said she e-mailed the user and asked him to take the photos down but to no avail.

    “We posted those pictures for fun, for our friends to see, not for some perverts to use our pictures and make offensive remarks about us.”

    Criminal lawyer Ravinderpal Singh of Kalco Law told TNP that such an act could be a crime. He said: “It is a breach of the Harassment Act and Section 509 of the Penal Code for the offence of insulting a woman’s modesty.” An NP spokesman told TNP that the school has lodged a police report.

    TNP contacted the person behind the blog on Tuesday but did not receive a reply. Yesterday, the blog was taken down.

    Chairman of the Media Literacy Council, Mr Lock Wai Han, said: “When posting on a website or account that is public, we should be aware that what we do and share is accessible to anyone, and avoid posting photos or other information that may be misused.”

    Clinical psychologist Carol Balhetchet said: “The culprit has a fetish and is victimising (the girls), and (the blog) encourages other people to follow in his footsteps.”

    The victims TNP spoke to said how they dress does not translate into them inviting such comments.

    One of them said: “Some of the girls on the page did not even dress in a revealing way. This clearly shows that it does not matter what we post, but what the viewer chooses to do with it.”

     

    Source: http://www.tnp.sg/

  • Walid J. Abdullah: Do We Live For Social Media?

    Walid J. Abdullah: Do We Live For Social Media?

    How strange is the modern human.

    When we have spouses, we keep talking about them or go out of our way to post stuff that demonstrate how happy we are, to people we barely know.

    When we have children, we keep bombarding our social media pages with their pictures. Without caring about how those without children, in spite of trying, would feel.

    When we are pregnant, we tell the entire world. Without knowing what the outcome of the pregnancy would be. Without bothering whether those who are not pregnant would feel a tinge of sadness.

    When it is mother’s day, we write long and beautiful poems about our mothers on social media, but do not even say ‘I love you’ directly to them.

    When we attend funerals, we busy ourselves with taking ‘solemn’ pictures, and with thinking about what caption the photos should be accompanied with. Without even bothering to respect the deceased, or say a prayer or two for him/her.

    When we do a good deed, we rush to advertise it to the world. While somehow convincing ourselves that we are not showing off, but rather, portraying an example for others to follow. And then we find no irony at all in perennially checking how many ‘likes’ our post garnered.

    When we praise ourselves in public, we paradoxically always precede it with ‘All praises to God’, when in fact, we proceed to praise ourselves.

    How strange is the modern human, indeed.

    Has social media changed us? Or has it merely given us an opportunity to express our true selves?

    Do we live for social media?

     

    Source: Walid J. Abdullah

  • 8 Sebab Wanita Mudah Kena Pancing Dengan ‘Love Scam’ Di Internet

    8 Sebab Wanita Mudah Kena Pancing Dengan ‘Love Scam’ Di Internet

    1. Angau

    Angau dengan ‘mat saleh’ dan ‘pak Arab’ menjadi antara faktor utama wanita-wanita di negara ini tertipu dan mudah diperdaya oleh sindiket Love Scam yang didalangi oleh warga Afrika.

    Difahamkan, mangsa-mangsa wanita ditipu kerana mereka terlalu teruja apabila berkenalan dengan lelaki warga asing khususnya yang berasal dari England dan tanah Arab.

    2. Terlampau terbuka

    Menurut sumber, kebanyakan mangsa itu bersikap ‘terbuka’ di laman sosial Facebook apabila seorang lelaki warga asing mahu berkenalan dan tidak menolak untuk terus berkomunikasi dengan pihak terbabit.

    3. Teruja

    2

    “Sudah menjadi lumrah dalam masyarakat kita hari ini yang teruja apabila berkenalan dengan warga asing terutamanya yang digelar ‘mat saleh’ dan perkara itulah sebenarnya yang terjadi kepada kebanyakan mangsa-mangsa wanita.

    “Mereka teruja apabila seorang dari luar negara yang be­kerja di Malaysia mahu ber­kawan dengan mereka dan akan melayan lelaki itu dengan bersungguh-sungguh.

    Lebih-lebih lagi jika lelaki itu mempunyai rupa paras yang elok.

    “Akibatnya, mereka jatuh cinta dan angau sehingga tidak berfikir panjang serta sanggup mengikuti segala kehendak lelaki itu. Ketika inilah lelaki yang ‘direka’ sindiket itu akan memainkan peranan dan sedaya upaya menipu mangsa,” ujar sumber.

     

    4. Kesunyian

    2

    Sumber itu turut memberitahu, wanita yang kesepian, mahu mencari pasangan hidup dan diabaikan keluarga adalah antara majoriti mangsa yang ditipu oleh sindiket Love Scam ini.

    “Mangsa yang terjebak dalam kes ini kebanyakannya terdiri daripada mereka yang tidak mempunyai pasangan hidup, ditinggalkan suami seperti ibu tunggal dan wanita berstatus andartu.

    5. Keinginan dari kecil

    Teori psikologi juga mendapati, golongan ini sebenarnya mudah terbawa-bawa dengan keinginan semasa kecil. Sebagai contoh, mereka tidak dapat sesuatu ketika waktu kanak-kanak dan apabila sudah dewasa keinginan ini tanpa disedari akan keluar dan berazam untuk mendapatkannya.

    “Misalnya, sejak dari kecil dia tidak mendapat kesenangan, sudah tentu di waktu besar dia akan cuba melakukan sesuatu untuk mendapatkan kemewahan, iaitu keinginan yang dipendam selama ini walau dengan apa cara sekalipun.

    “Itu sebab apabila ada yang menjanjikan sesuatu, mereka akan alpa,” ujar sumber.

    6. Janji manis

    Akibat daripada mudah terpedaya dengan kata-kata atau mahukan sesuatu kemewahan yang di luar batasan, wanita terpengaruh dengan janji-janji yang ditabur.

    Golongan lelaki berkenaan sebenarnya tidak mempunyai apa-apa kekayaan pun, sebaliknya hanya mempunyai ‘kepakaran’ dan ‘berkemahiran tinggi’ dalam menggunakan ayat-ayat menggoda.

    7. Tidak mengambil tahu isu semasa

    2

    Laporan juga menyebut mengenai kebanyakan yang menjadi mangsa sindiket penipuan ini adalah terdiri daripada golongan wanita profesional.

    Selain mereka memang dikejar kerana mempunyai aset, ada dalam kalangan golongan ini yang mungkin hanya tahu mengenai soal kerja sahaja tetapi tidak mengendahkan apa yang terjadi di sekeliling mereka atas dasar kurang pengalaman dan pengetahuan dalam hal berkenaan.

    8. Tidak ramai kawan

    2

    “Selalunya orang yang begini terdiri daripada mereka yang tidak mempunyai ramai kawan dan kurang berkomunikasi.

    “Sebab itu dinasihatkan, kalau boleh kita perlu mempunyai ramai kawan, agar tidak terjebak dan terpedaya dengan sebarang unsur negatif. Lagi satu, sekiranya ada yang cuba menawarkan bantuan cinta kepada anda di Internet, jangan sesekali cuba mendekati diri, elakkan apa yang perlu.

    “Kalau mahu dapatkan cinta, biarlah orang yang kita sayang itu benar-benar bertakhta di jiwa nyata dan bukannya di alam maya,” jelas sumber.

    “Wanita yang terlalu memilih pasangan hidup juga turut dikesan berada dalam senarai mangsa yang ditipu warga Afrika.

    “Kebanyakan mereka suka melayari laman Facebook untuk berkenalan dengan individu-individu yang dilihat berpotensi untuk menjadi pasangan,” ujarnya.

    Artikel diatas telah disusun semula dari: Says.com

     

    Source: http://www.harianblogger.com

  • Vulnerable Youths Are Easy Prey For Terrorism Propaganda

    Vulnerable Youths Are Easy Prey For Terrorism Propaganda

    They may be bored, looking for excitement, or simply think that radicalism is an adventure.

    Those were some of the reasons terrorism experts cited as to why vulnerable young people can be influenced by terrorist propaganda online.

    On Wednesday, the Ministry of Home Affairs revealed that an unnamed 17-year-old youth was arrested earlier this month under the Internal Security Act (ISA) for further investigations into the extent of his radicalisation.

    Another youth, M Arifil Azim Putra Norja’i, 19, has been detained since April under the ISA for terrorism-related activities.

    The trend of ISIS targeting young people is a global phenomenon that is likely to persist, said Professor Rohan Gunaratna, who heads the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research.

    He pointed to three “terrorist indicators”: a sudden change of behaviour, isolation from the community and family, and hatred towards other religious communities.

    “As long as Singaporeans remain alert and vigilant (to these indicators), it will be very difficult for a successful terrorist attack to take place,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • The Singaporean In The Digital Ether: An Evolving Identity

    The Singaporean In The Digital Ether: An Evolving Identity

    In this “Wild Wild West” as the Internet has been called, individuals and communities band together to speak out on policies, raise petitions for causes they believe in and aid hapless tourists.

    On the flip side, lynch mobs and vigilantes thrive in this space, and bad behaviour often ends up amplified.

    Without a doubt, like many around the world, Singaporeans are turning to the Internet to spark positive change in their society, as recent incidents have shown. Observers and netizens say this is an online manifestation of a change in Singapore society — with people less afraid of expressing their views — but several also point to the Internet’s role in helping to catalyse this vocality.

    But with the good, comes the bad and the ugly. As many observers have pointed out, the Internet has brought out the best and worst in Singaporeans. The hope is that, over time, as more Singaporeans become comfortable with the medium and speak out against trolls — there are some signs of this, experts and bloggers point out — behaviour online will veer towards healthier norms.

    To Dr Terence Chong, a sociologist and senior fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), Singaporeans do not behave worse online than offline. “But because the Internet allows for split-second reactions, the most poorly thought out sentiments and responses are captured for all to see,” he said.

    “The instantaneousness, publicness and permanency of the internet tend to accentuate bad behaviour.”

    However, Dr Chong pointed out that there is also a “natural tendency towards equilibrium” online because the Internet is a public sphere. “The worst of Singaporeans is often countered and checked by more moderate and fair-minded Singaporeans,” he said.

    Blogger Lee Kin Mun, famously known as mrbrown, agreed: “Maybe not everyone, but enough people will say ‘okay, I think you shouldn’t be going after the guy’s kids’… While (the Internet) is open to mobs, it’s also open to collective, moral outrage … there’s space for all of that.”

              

    THE GOOD

    Late last year, a Vietnamese tourist fell victim to a rogue trader at Sim Lim Square, prompting netizens to spring into action — Some sought to punish the shop owner, others aided the tourist. Eventually, the Government and consumer watchdog stepped in, with the former now looking at how to bolster legislation to better protect consumers.

    Months earlier, an outcry broke out over the National Library Board’s (NLB) removal of three controversial children’s titles containing homosexual references. There was an outpouring of views on social media, petitions were made online, a reading event was held, and local writers also pulled out of NLB events.

    Eventually, Communications and Information Minister Yaccob Ibrahim instructed the NLB to place two of the titles in the adult section. On Wednesday, a 19-member independent committee to review titles for the NLB was unveiled.

    That people are being vocal is proof of a greater sense of self-efficacy – an emerging aspect of Singapore identity especially among the digital natives, said Professor Ang Peng Hwa, from the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

    “The online people can connect … they feel like they can make some difference,” he said. In comparison, people of his generation – the baby boomers – “don’t feel so self-efficacious”, in part because many things were done by the Government previously and also because “you (didn’t) have the resources, you (didn’t) know where to go, how to do it”.

    Adding that the Internet “has become a vital tool for mobilisation and organisation”, Dr Chong said: “People are more able than ever before to spread news, garner support and organise themselves whether in the form of reading sessions like the recent ‘penguingate’ saga or through petitions… The ease with which we are able to organise ourselves will normalise dissent, advocacy or contention.”

    Dr Carol Soon, a research fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies, said social media grants different voices “an accessible outlet”.  “Minority groups can now contest dominant discourse with greater ease,” said Dr Soon, whose areas of research include digital engagement and how new media can be used to cause political and social change.

    Mr Belmont Lay, founding editor of Mothership.sg noted that social media has allowed coffee shop chatter to seep into the open. “The move vocal people get, perceived or real, the more vocal they will be. It feeds unto itself,” he said.

    Blogger Mr Lee added: “The fact that you have more ubiquitous access to the Internet now has helped catalyse the attitude. “We didn’t have a medium in the past … Now everybody is allowed to have a voice, for better or for worse.”

    THE BAD

    There are times, however, that the Singaporean seems more intolerant, insensitive in cyberspace than they may be offline.

    Hate speech and harsh anti-foreigner sentiment is abundant online. In January, former president S R Nathan raised concerns about rising discontent in Singapore, with some of this dissatisfaction amplified by social media. “Reasoned political discourse and intelligent, constructive criticism are rare in this online world,” Mr Nathan had said.

    On another occasion, a Miss Singapore Universe 2013 finalist caused a minor ruckus online last year when she mocked a food stall helper for wearing a shirt with a hole in it on Facebook.

    Following instances such as when Briton Anton Casey had been flamed for his derogatory comments about the public transport system and former National Trades Union Congress employee Amy Cheong condemned online for posting racist comments, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong last year cautioned Singaporeans against having a lynch mob mentality.

    Mr Lee had said: “Yes, somebody has done something wrong, repudiate it, condemn it, but do not lower ourselves to that same level to behave in a way which really makes us all so ashamed of ourselves to become abusive, hateful mobs, especially online and anonymously.”

    Most recently, teenager Amos Yee became the target of outrage when he made disparaging remarks in a YouTube video about the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew and of Christianity. He has since been charged for his comments.

    Mr Choo Zhengxi, lawyer and co-founder of socio-political site The Online Citizen, highlighted how the “anonymising power (of the Internet) has emboldened people to say things online that they may not say offline”.

    And this could be very threatening, he noted. “It has the potential to unleash vigilante justice on individuals who might not necessarily deserve it,” he said.

     

              

    …AND THE ANONYMOUS

    A survey last year by market research firm GlobalWebIndex, which profiles the Internet population across 32 countries and covers 90 per cent of the world’s Internet audience, found that 55 per cent of Internet users in Singapore prefer to be anonymous online, slightly higher than the global average of 52 per cent.

    Data from the first quarter of this year showed that this figure rose to 59 per cent in Singapore, while the global average remained the same.

    Mr Choo cautioned of the “chilling effect” anonymity could have on free speech if people “act with impunity”. He hopes for more Singaporeans to grow comfortable with putting their names to their critiques. “Once things go viral, it’s difficult to rectify the damage that can be done, which can be disproportionate to the wrong being committed,” he said.

    Given that the online environment can be harsh, perhaps, the Singaporean in cyberspace – an active participant at the least – is one who has developed a thicker skin. Mr Lee felt that those who want to give an opinion must be “prepared to defend it”.

    “If you don’t have a thick enough skin to deal with it, maybe just stay out of the kitchen – don’t participate, be a lurker,” he quipped.

    He added that there are many options in cyberspace, and there is no need to engage others in a space that is “negative and toxic”. Drawing parallels with situations in the physical world, he said: “People will gather where they think their views are heard. Not everyone will be comfortable in a robust environment.”

    In time to come, however, even the quieter Singaporean may find his or her voice in cyberspace. “The issue of the silent majority will become less and less pronounced,” Dr Soon said. This will come as healthier norms develop online, and people speak up against trolls or those who are “very acerbic or abusive in their comments”.

    “We’re seeing more incidents where people stand up in cyberspace to condemn certain behaviours and speech. So as more and more people find the gumption and conviction to do so, we will see healthier online norms,” Dr Soon added, citing for example those who stand up against xenophobic speech.

    “(This) is part of a changing society where people are more educated, people are more civic minded. They feel that by voicing their opinions… they may be doing their part as citizens.”

     

              

     

    Singaporeans Online

    Source: www.todayonline.com