"Oh you a cheater", "Hacks", "I know where you live", etc. To me, my direct response was just to ignore the guy and keep winning but when he coulden't constantly be quiet for the next match to begin I then rapidly put on my microphone and started cursing and threatening him right back. I was nervous at first doing this thinking "What would happen if this guy really does know where I live?" but then my fear dissapered when I remebered that he dosen't know who I am. Even if he does live 3 inches near me this guy still dosen't know who really I am! This giving me the idea to create this tough guy persona on the internet because at the end of the day, nobody knows who I really am! In an online post written by Carson Reider in the nrmedia.biz website titled "Why Do We Act Differently Online?" it talks about human behavior and how do we act differently online than how do we normally act in person. "Online we can be ourselves, express only what we want about ourselves, pretend to be someone else (catfishing, anyone?), or remain anonymous. It's the lack of face-to-face cues that "has a curious impact on how people present their identity in cyberspace," according to John Suler's The Psychology of Cyberspace." This quote alone
"Oh you a cheater", "Hacks", "I know where you live", etc. To me, my direct response was just to ignore the guy and keep winning but when he coulden't constantly be quiet for the next match to begin I then rapidly put on my microphone and started cursing and threatening him right back. I was nervous at first doing this thinking "What would happen if this guy really does know where I live?" but then my fear dissapered when I remebered that he dosen't know who I am. Even if he does live 3 inches near me this guy still dosen't know who really I am! This giving me the idea to create this tough guy persona on the internet because at the end of the day, nobody knows who I really am! In an online post written by Carson Reider in the nrmedia.biz website titled "Why Do We Act Differently Online?" it talks about human behavior and how do we act differently online than how do we normally act in person. "Online we can be ourselves, express only what we want about ourselves, pretend to be someone else (catfishing, anyone?), or remain anonymous. It's the lack of face-to-face cues that "has a curious impact on how people present their identity in cyberspace," according to John Suler's The Psychology of Cyberspace." This quote alone