The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore.
Online shaming is a phenomenon where citizens engage in social policing by shaming transgressions via the Internet. With the widespread use of communication technologies, this form of peer surveillance could potentially serve as a form of social control. Incorporating literature from criminology, ps...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-149432019-12-10T11:23:09Z The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. Chua, Jia Ping. Liew, Angeline Meiyan. Wong, Keng Hui. Yeo, Pei Jue. Skoric, Marko Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media Online shaming is a phenomenon where citizens engage in social policing by shaming transgressions via the Internet. With the widespread use of communication technologies, this form of peer surveillance could potentially serve as a form of social control. Incorporating literature from criminology, psychology and sociology, this three-part exploratory study aims to give an account of why people engage in online shaming (Study 1); who is likely to be deterred and who is likely to contribute content in relation to personality traits, adherence to Asian values and social responsibility (Study 2); and whether it works (Study 3). The in-depth interviews revealed that people engage in online shaming mainly to raise awareness about the lack of civicmindedness in society. Through a survey, it was found that people who are more socially responsible would be more likely to be deterred and also more likely to contribute to online shaming. There was a negative relationship between adherence to Asian values and social responsibility. The field experiment showed that the threat of online shaming did not deter people from deviant behaviours. The implications of the findings are discussed. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2009-01-29T04:21:22Z 2009-03-06T05:26:02Z 2009-01-29T04:21:22Z 2009-03-06T05:26:02Z 2008 2008 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14943 en Nanyang Technological University 66 p. ; includes appendices application/pdf application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media Chua, Jia Ping. Liew, Angeline Meiyan. Wong, Keng Hui. Yeo, Pei Jue. The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
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Online shaming is a phenomenon where citizens engage in social policing by shaming transgressions via the Internet. With the widespread use of communication technologies, this form of peer surveillance could potentially serve as a form of social control. Incorporating literature from criminology, psychology and sociology, this three-part exploratory study aims to give an account of why people engage in online shaming (Study 1); who is likely to be deterred and who is likely to contribute content in relation to personality traits, adherence to Asian values and social responsibility (Study 2); and whether it works (Study 3). The in-depth interviews revealed that people engage in online shaming mainly to raise awareness about the lack of civicmindedness in society. Through a survey, it was found that people who are more socially responsible would be more likely to be deterred and also more likely to contribute to online shaming. There was a negative relationship between adherence to Asian values and social responsibility. The field experiment showed that the threat of online shaming did not deter people from deviant behaviours. The implications of the findings are discussed. |
author2 |
Skoric, Marko |
author_facet |
Skoric, Marko Chua, Jia Ping. Liew, Angeline Meiyan. Wong, Keng Hui. Yeo, Pei Jue. |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Chua, Jia Ping. Liew, Angeline Meiyan. Wong, Keng Hui. Yeo, Pei Jue. |
author_sort |
Chua, Jia Ping. |
title |
The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
title_short |
The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
title_full |
The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
title_fullStr |
The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The digital scarlet letter : online shaming in Singapore. |
title_sort |
digital scarlet letter : online shaming in singapore. |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14943 |
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1681037317175771136 |