Did you guys see the Wall Street Journal article yesterday, Why We Are So Rude Online?

Data is rude irl. Come on Data, enjoy that Candy Corn Oreo!

I was expecting the article to be all about the perceived anonymity of online presences, but it actually only briefly touched on that, and mostly covered Facebook.

According to soon-to-be-published research from professors at Columbia University and the University of Pittsburgh, browsing Facebook lowers our self control.

So apparently, when we present an “enhanced” version of ourselves on Facebook, and get a lot of “likes,” it boosts our self-esteem, which then lowers our self-control. So in order to protect our online image, we may be more likely to lash out (and be rude) online.

Also, according to the article:

  • “People who spent more time online and who had a high percentage of close ties in their network were more likely to engage in binge eating and to have a greater body mass index, as well as to have more credit-card debt and a lower credit score.”
  • “”They found people who spent more time on Facebook were more likely to give up on difficult tasks more quickly” (giving up on an IQ test).

So Facebook is making us RUDE and FAT and POOR and STUPID.

Hmm.

I did find it interesting, in the last part of the article, where a person interviewed said he purposefully tries to start fights on his Facebook wall, and will even go out of his way and message friends to join in on the fight… all for his entertainment. That is messed up. I think (I hope), most people are not doing it purposefully, and it’s just the fact that you do not see someone’s reaction when you post:

We’re less inhibited online because we don’t have to see the reaction of the person we’re addressing, says Sherry Turkle, psychologist and Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor of the social studies of science and technology. Because it’s harder to see and focus on what we have in common, we tend to dehumanize each other, she says.

Personally, I have said a few things in blog comments and then gone back and thought “Geesh, that really could come off the wrong way.” I have even typed out comments… only to delete them, because I don’t know how people will read in to something I wrote. Teasing someone (or trying to be funny) online is hard, especially if your sense of humor is kind of weird (like mine is).

Why do you think people are rude online? Have you had any rude encounters online?