Jenny,
Yes I suppose my logic does mean that if two students are bullying each other after they leave school (who attended the same school), then that's the responcibility of the school. It's not really feasable for them to do anything, and in any case that's a story for another day. What is certain is that when it concerns two students online who currently go to school then it's the schools responcibility to do something about it. In addition, it's more than feasable for the school to act on it. You're a fool - stop creating false dilemmas.
I'm naively assuming that telling a teacher is going to make it worse? Rubbish. If a hardass teacher comes down on the bully for something that happened outside of school then that will make it damn clear that it ought not continue. If that fails then expel the student. What do you advocate, letting it continue? Christ you're retarded. I struggle to respond to the stuff you post because it's completely counter intuitive. The domain of the internet is off limits to schools for some reason! Let bullying continue! Teach students that they cannot contact authorities whose job it is to protect them!
You can't tell the difference between playful insults and bullying on the internet? Allow me to help: If it's continued, unprovoked, excessively nasty and unwanted then it's bullying. If I posted a video of people from your class all calling you an ugly bitch, that would be bullying. If I was your friend and posted a message on your wall saying "u ugly bitch looool" that would probably not be bullying. It might warrant monitoring. Heaven forbid we use our precious resources for that!!!
My position: Bullying causes significant harm to victims. Online bullying is just as harmful. Teachers can identify it and stop it. They should do so.
It's a completely reasonable position
You're just ignoring what I post and repeating yourself more emphatically.
It will not work because you cannot control the internet.
If I wanted to create a webpage to bully you, all I have to do is upload it through a proxy server and host it overseas.
No one can prove I made the content, nor can I be made to take it down.
This can be done with great ease, in fact a certain BOS member has created a blog hosted in the US which has made a complete mockery of Australia's defamation laws.
Attempting to control what is posted on the internet is an exercise in futility. It is cruel to give the victim the false impression that it can be controlled. It is far better to be realistic about the problem and give the victim real support to deal with their problems rather than feeding this obsessive desire to punish someone.
Also, you make it sound like everyone is a total aspie who cannot discern the difference between a joke and continued, hurtful harassment.
You and Neb are both assuming that the person claiming to be the victim is always actually a victim. The reality is that when schools or the legal system are dishing out punishments, spiteful people make spurious allegations. Here's an example of such a situation I provided which you both ignored (modified slightly):
*What if two people had a friendship where Miss A jokingly called Miss B a slut and a whore and this was accepted by both as a joke, but then they stopped being friends. Miss B could use the records of the use of the words slut and whore online to cause problems for Miss A at school. It would appear to be repeated bullying to a teacher who would only see the records of these apparent insults saying Miss B was a slut. If Miss A protested she was only joking, this would sound like to the teacher like the oldest excuse in the book.
Would you concede that its reasonably possible that the school could unfairly punish one of the people in this situation?
EDIT: Come to think of it, proxies are not even needed. Unless the school has access to forensic computer equipment and the right to get personal information from your ISP it can't prove a god damned thing. Anything posted on the internet is plausibly deniable, and students will quickly figure this out. For instance, a school doesn't even have the resources to determine who owns an email address. Pretty much the only circumstances a school could do anything is if videos are posted where the bully's face is visible.