Cyber bullying can involve online harassment, threats, impersonation, stalking, humiliation campaigns, distribution of private images, and coordinated digital attacks through social media, messaging platforms, or gaming applications. The emotional and psychological harm caused by cyber bullying can be severe, particularly among children and teenagers.
In some situations, cyber bullying may violate criminal laws involving harassment, extortion, stalking, threats, or exploitation. Civil claims may also arise against individuals, institutions, or organizations that failed to respond appropriately to known misconduct.
Digital evidence often becomes critically important. Screenshots, metadata, IP information, deleted communications, social media records, and device forensics may help identify anonymous users or establish patterns of conduct.
Parents should take threats seriously, preserve evidence immediately, notify schools where appropriate, and report dangerous conduct to law enforcement when necessary.
Online conduct can create very real consequences in the physical world, and early intervention often matters.