In some cases, cyberbullying actually can be considered a form of harassment. Intimidation or meanness that focus on your gender, sexual orientation, race or religion would be considered harassment. No matter if the bullying is done in person or via the Web, this type of nastiness qualifies as discrimination and is actually illegal in many states today. This means that law enforcement can get involved in extreme cases of cyberbullying, and bullies can face prosecution.
On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 09:51 Boris Borealis <kotborea...@awooo.ru> wrote: Show quoted text Cyberbullying has unique aspects that differentiate it from other types of bullying: - Persistent: Digital devices allow people to communicate all the time, 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. It can be hard for children and teens who are being bullied to get any relief. - Permanent: Most information that is stated online is both public and permanent unless specific action is taking to remove it. Having negative online items about oneself can lead to negative effects including difficulty getting work, getting into college and getting scholarships. - Hard to see: Teachers and parents may be unaware of much of the bullying that occurs online because it cannot be seen or heard. On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 09:51 Boris Borealis <kotborea...@awooo.ru> wrote: Show quoted text Many states have enacted laws outlawing cyberstalking and cyber harassment. Also, many states are now enacting laws that explicitly outlaw cyberbullying. At least 44 states have some laws on cyberbullying. On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 09:51 Boris Borealis <kotborea...@awooo.ru> wrote: Show quoted text Different Types of Cyberbullying There are many types of cyberbullying that can eventually lead to criminal charges in the worst cases. If you or someone you know engages in these types of behaviors, a criminal charge is possible: - Harassment: The bully sends malicious and offensive messages to a person and does so many times. This is a form of cyberstalking in the worst cases, and involves constant threatening and rude messages. It can eventually lead to physical harassment. - Flaming: This activity is similar to harassment. The difference is that it is a fight that occurs online that is done via email, texts and chat. It is a form of public, online bullying that can lead to very serious outcomes with harsh language and images shared about a particular person. - Exclusion: This is the act of singling out a person and leaving him or her out of an online group or site. The group will then harass the person that has been left out of the group. - Outing: When a bully shares a person’s personal and private information, including images and video in some cases. A person has been ‘outed’ if that person’s information is widely available online. - Masquerading: This is where the bully creates a false identity to harass a person on an anonymous basis. The cyberbully may also impersonate another person so to send that person nasty messages in the other person’s name. - Fraping: When a person logs onto the victim’s social media accounts and pretends to be that person. This is a very serious offense that some may think is entertaining but it can ruin another person’s reputation. Google generally will not forget anything that has been posted even if it is deleted so this is a very serious form of cyberbullying. - Trolling: This is the intentional act of getting a response online by using insults and bad language on social forums and social media sites. It is common for the troll to put down the victim and try to make the person angry and respond in kind. Note that some forms of cyberbullying also can be sexual harassment. Conduct does not need to be specifically sexual to be harassment, though. It may include the demeaning of a person because of his or her gender or sexual identity. For instance, sexual harassment may include the harassment of a person because girls are not ‘supposed’ to take engineering classes or be good in math. Or, girls should not play a specific sport. Another example is where a cell phone is used to abuse a person by saying she is a ‘whore,’ or sending out negative photographs of the student in a sexual manner. It also is common for the abuser to make an actual videotape of abuse that occurred in person, and then post that on social media for others to see. This leads to a high level of humiliation in the victim and has led to self harm in the worst instances. On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 09:51 Boris Borealis <kotborea...@awooo.ru> wrote: Show quoted text Do you realize how cracked you sound? Assuming that you were even saw each of those fat manchildren, do you think that they would stoop so low to help you? They probably smell your stench from 10 km away. Oh and " Boris "? Did you know Stealth is friends with President Putin, President Trump, and Premier Li Keqiang? You people really do not know how much trouble you are now in. -Stephanie Internarional Legal Counsel _______________________________________________ Show quoted text 1) Evidence is filed with law enforcement, and the Courts. 2) Yes Saint encourage people to cyberstalking. Conspiracy to commit cyberstalking. 3) Evidence of Cyberbullying / Harassment / and Cyberstalking are provided in these emails. From these lists. The archives are full of additional evidence. 4) Use of a what you think is anonymous email clients /- VPN, is not so anonymous when protonmail / proton vpn is a client of my clients. 5) Saint? By 4encouraging others to Cyberstalk me as Stealths Counsel? You have committed cyberstalking, and now have proven conspiracy to cyberstalk. A 20 year federal felony offense. These are very serious charges being brought against you. I suggest before ever saying another thing you consult with your Attorneys. Unless you like spending 5-10 yrs in a federal, or international prison. End of Communications upon penalty of law. -Stephanie International Legal Counsel Show quoted text For the persons engaging in criminal conduct on these lists. You are the reason vALVE is losing their hosting. You are going to prison. And you are civilly going to be working to pay damages for the rest of your lives. Now you can say oh no they don't do that. Or this won't happen. That's a manifestation of the psychosis that is causing you to engage in these criminal behaviors. XOGNITIVE BRHAVIORAL DISTORTIONS. And to the Orstralian on this list that is constantly privately messaging me, and Stealth. Sit tight. Your government was just contacted as well. You have also committed sexual harassment at this point. By not referring to the proper gender identifier, HER. And keep stating to cyberstalk by trying to research info you cannot access. Yeah google Stephanie d'Arc. There are more than one Stephanie d'Arcs, but my info is not on public platforms. You cannot access swiss records, nor French records. Au Revoir Quote Cyberbullying is using technology to threaten, harass, embarrass or target another person. Some of the most common types of cyberbullying include: - Threats on online social media - Rude texts - Mean or negative tweets - Posting personal information and/or videos that are intended to hurt and embarrass someone In some cases, cyberbullying actually can be considered a form of harassment. Intimidation or meanness that focus on your gender, sexual orientation, race or religion would be considered harassment. No matter if the bullying is done in person or via the Web, this type of nastiness qualifies as discrimination and is actually illegal in many states today. This means that law enforcement can get involved in extreme cases of cyberbullying, and bullies can face prosecution. Cyberbullying has unique aspects that differentiate it from other types of bullying: - Persistent: Digital devices allow people to communicate all the time, 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. It can be hard for children and teens who are being bullied to get any relief. - Permanent: Most information that is stated online is both public and permanent unless specific action is taking to remove it. Having negative online items about oneself can lead to negative effects including difficulty getting work, getting into college and getting scholarships. - Hard to see: Teachers and parents may be unaware of much of the bullying that occurs online because it cannot be seen or heard. In some cases, federal stalking charges <http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/25/us/rebecca-sedwick-bullying-suicide-case/> can be brought against offenders. Many states have enacted laws outlawing cyberstalking and cyber harassment. Also, many states are now enacting laws that explicitly outlaw cyberbullying. At least 44 states have some laws on cyberbullying. Different Types of Cyberbullying There are many types of cyberbullying that can eventually lead to criminal charges in the worst cases. If you or someone you know engages in these types of behaviors, a criminal charge is possible: - Harassment: The bully sends malicious and offensive messages to a person and does so many times. This is a form of cyberstalking in the worst cases, and involves constant threatening and rude messages. It can eventually lead to physical harassment. - Flaming: This activity is similar to harassment. The difference is that it is a fight that occurs online that is done via email, texts and chat. It is a form of public, online bullying that can lead to very serious outcomes with harsh language and images shared about a particular person. - Exclusion: This is the act of singling out a person and leaving him or her out of an online group or site. The group will then harass the person that has been left out of the group. - Outing: When a bully shares a person’s personal and private information, including images and video in some cases. A person has been ‘outed’ if that person’s information is widely available online. - Masquerading: This is where the bully creates a false identity to harass a person on an anonymous basis. The cyberbully may also impersonate another person so to send that person nasty messages in the other person’s name. - Fraping: When a person logs onto the victim’s social media accounts and pretends to be that person. This is a very serious offense that some may think is entertaining but it can ruin another person’s reputation. Google generally will not forget anything that has been posted even if it is deleted so this is a very serious form of cyberbullying. - Trolling: This is the intentional act of getting a response online by using insults and bad language on social forums and social media sites. It is common for the troll to put down the victim and try to make the person angry and respond in kind. Note that some forms of cyberbullying also can be sexual harassment. Conduct does not need to be specifically sexual to be harassment, though. It may include the demeaning of a person because of his or her gender or sexual identity. For instance, sexual harassment may include the harassment of a person because girls are not ‘supposed’ to take engineering classes or be good in math. Or, girls should not play a specific sport. Another example is where a cell phone is used to abuse a person by saying she is a ‘whore,’ or sending out negative photographs of the student in a sexual manner. It also is common for the abuser to make an actual videotape of abuse that occurred in person, and then post that on social media for others to see. This leads to a high level of humiliation in the victim and has led to self harm in the worst instances. End of Communicarions upon penalty of law. - Stephanie d'Arc On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 16:20 Melvyn Depeyrot <melvyn.depey...@gmail.com> wrote: > Can u even talk properly anymore? Is your brain so rotten that speech is > beyond you? Please, go outside. Anyways, time for another point-by-point > breakdown > > > 1) Evidence is filed with law enforcement, and the Courts. > And promptly thrown out. tbh you're probably already banned from there. > > > 2) Yes Saint encourage people to cyberstalking. Conspiracy to commit > cyberstalking. > English please? > > > 3) Evidence of Cyberbullying / Harassment / and Cyberstalking are > provided in these emails. From these lists. The archives are full of > additional evidence. > There's more evidence incriminating you (on both of your accounts) than > there is for anyone in this list. Refuting delusions is not a crime. > Threatening legal ramifications is. > > > 4) Use of a what you think is anonymous email clients /- VPN, is not so > anonymous when protonmail / proton vpn is a client of my clients. > If you claim to know who the are from protonmail, then why don't you prove > it? Also, bashing trolls does not require anonymity. > > > 5) Saint? By 4encouraging others to Cyberstalk me as Stealths Counsel? > You have committed cyberstalking, and now have proven conspiracy to > cyberstalk. A 20 year federal felony offense. > You just said that you were trying to find who everyone using protonmail > was. Sounds a lot worse than Saint simply responding to emails. By the way, > do you even know what stalking means? Please, use a dictionary. Also, you > fail to consider that not everyone lives in the US (as you claim not to do, > despite saying that's the court's location). > > > These are very serious charges being brought against you. I suggest > before ever saying another thing you consult with your Attorneys. > Brought where? You provide no proof of anything at all, ever. > > > Unless you like spending 5-10 yrs in a federal, or international prison. > "International Prision". Please think about those words for a bit. > > > End of Communications upon penalty of law. > Citation pls. > > > -Stephanie > > International Legal Counsel > OMG guys stealth can spell now!! > On Nov 16 2020, at 1:12 pm, Stephanie d'Arc <lady.stephanie.d...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > 1) Evidence is filed with law enforcement, and the Courts. > > 2) Yes Saint encourage people to cyberstalking. Conspiracy to commit > cyberstalking. > > 3) Evidence of Cyberbullying / Harassment / and Cyberstalking are provided > in these emails. From these lists. The archives are full of additional > evidence. > > 4) Use of a what you think is anonymous email clients /- VPN, is not so > anonymous when protonmail / proton vpn is a client of my clients. > > 5) Saint? By 4encouraging others to Cyberstalk me as Stealths Counsel? You > have committed cyberstalking, and now have proven conspiracy to cyberstalk. > A 20 year federal felony offense. > > These are very serious charges being brought against you. I suggest before > ever saying another thing you consult with your Attorneys. > > Unless you like spending 5-10 yrs in a federal, or international prison. > > End of Communications upon penalty of law. > > -Stephanie > International Legal Counsel > > On Mon, Nov 16, 2020, 16:05 Saint K. <sai...@specialattack.net> wrote: > > Just google his name, Steaphanie d’Arc, it will tell you enough 😉 > > > > *From:* hlds@list.valvesoftware.com <hlds@list.valvesoftware.com> *On > Behalf Of *Melvyn Depeyrot > *Sent:* 16 November 2020 22:01 > *To:* hlds@list.valvesoftware.com > *Subject:* [hlds] Re: ;) > > > Also wanted to share on hlds, instead of hlds_linux > > > ---------- Forwarded Message --------- > > > From: Melvyn Depeyrot <melvyn.depey...@gmail.com> > Subject: Re: [hlds_linux] Re: ;) > Date: Nov 16 2020, at 8:24 am > To: hlds_li...@list.valvesoftware.com > > > Man's trying to silence me on personal email. Weird phonetic alphabet > subject, vague threats, and everthing u'd expect. This guy seems like a > full blown edgy teenager tbh, and with a power complex at that. have a read: > https://files.catbox.moe/rqvu4s.pdf > _______________________________________________ > To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, > please visit: > https://list.valvesoftware.com/ > _______________________________________________ > To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, > please visit: > https://list.valvesoftware.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, > please visit: > https://list.valvesoftware.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, > please visit: > https://list.valvesoftware.com/ > _______________________________________________ To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, please visit: https://list.valvesoftware.com/