Raffaella
bon vivant
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2014
- Messages
- 944
You never seen MEAAAAN motherfuckers who are just mean as fuck, angry, bitter?
Would you call them trolls?
You never seen MEAAAAN motherfuckers who are just mean as fuck, angry, bitter?
I take quite a lot of personal interest in this due to my burning hatred of internet (and irl) trolls and desire to purge the world of them.
Would you call them trolls?
I know what you mean. I have a dark side to myself too. When I get really pissed, I can have dark destructive fantasies. But, that is only a small part of me. I don't seriously endeavor to go after people who really piss me off. I know that it does not lead anywhere good. There are always going to be assholes who behave like assholes. You're going to be forever pissed off trying to ostracize ALL OF THEM, because they're like bacteria, they're everywhere and they just multiply.
Don't waste your talent, your intelligence, your emotions, and your precious time on this. Don't feed this part of yourself. It takes time and energy away from all the good things that you're doing.
Uh, yeah. If they're intentionally trying to stir up a fuss and piss people off.
I think my perception of trolls is very different to yours. I stop considering people trolls when they become very personal and make it there mission to abuse people or repeat the same hate speech over and over again. However if all they're doing is being hostile, inciting anger and being disruptive to a conversation then they are trolls and easy to ignore (therefore essentially harmless regardless of what they say).
I actually see a troll as someone that creates discord, discomfort and upset around them, regardless if that is what they are trying to do or not. Essentially, intent does't matter; if their actions result in the response and result one would get from a classic troll as defined in the study, then they are indeed a troll. A good example: Ann Coulter. Widely regarded as a troll. There is debate over whether or not she actually means what she says. Does her authenticity change anything? In my opinion, no. Still a troll no matter how it's sliced.
I think that it starts to become a semantics argument, and maybe different types if trolls need to be fleshed out to break up the groups on how they are considered.
There exists already a wide variety of words to describe annoying people. You can use all of these to label the people that irritate you in social situations. Trolling, on the other hand, is defined as intentional annoyance. It makes all the difference. To use the word 'troll' to describe people who 'create discord, discomfort and upset around them regardless of whether that is what they are trying to do or not' is to misuse the word.I actually see a troll as someone that creates discord, discomfort and upset around them, regardless if that is what they are trying to do or not. Essentially, intent does't matter; if their actions result in the response and result one would get from a classic troll as defined in the study, then they are indeed a troll.
Based on what you quoted in the topic post, it seems that the study has a narrow definition of troll, in comparison to the broad, cultural definition that is attached to the word. In their usage of the word, I don't find their conclusions surprising. However, I think many would consider many forms of 'trolling' to not be sadistic.
Trolling is a tool. It can be used for many different reasons to many different ends. Yes, Machiavellianism.
We can't have a good story without villains.
troll is someone who purposely wreaks havoc. I find a lot of people misuse the term to describe someone they don't like or simply find annoying, or even don't understand.
some how you've made it passive aggressiveYes, if we find someone we don't like there is no rule which says we can't say, I don't like you.
I don't like you is not an insult. I can be a brave expression of an honest feeling.
And saying I don't like you is not passive aggressive.
And if I don't like you today, it doesn't mean I won't like you tomorrow.
some how you've made it passive aggressive
I like to troll, joke around, pretend to have an opinion I don't and have fun keeping up the act.
My problem is when trolling turns into bullying. If your trolling is actually being hurtful, please refrain...
I honestly don't understand why people enjoy doing this. It just seems like toying with people for personal enjoyment at the sake of others. I certainly don't take well to it and when I learn someone does this frequently I very often stop speaking to them (this includes IRL). If I can't know if they believe what they are saying or not, why would I even bother listening to them? It's manipulative for purely selfish reasons.