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The anonymity and ubiquity of online platforms make it too easy for people to lash out at others without thinking about what impact it might have on them. Because cyberbullies can't witness the effect of their words, they use less restraint than they would in face-to-face situations. After all, you don't see the blood from a broken nose or black eye from a fist fight. There is no mess to clean up, which makes the violence less real. Except to the victims.
In response to the social outrage, there's talk of a "Sulli's Law" that's being readied to be introduced in the National Assembly in early December to coincide with the 49th day commemoration of Sulli's death. While the exact language isn't available, the bill already carries high expectations to serve as a panacea to the many ills attributed to the prevalence of cyberbullying and its malevolent effects on those bullied.
The New Alternative Party (my translation), which is a recent offshoot of National Assembly representatives who have left the majority Democratic Party of Korea, pronounced that (my translation) "Sulli's death is nothing less than social murder. The press competed in clickbait marketing by taking advantage of the daily life of a young person, and the portal sites let it go on without doing anything. The countless cyberbullies, under the guise of the freedom of the press, trampled on Sulli's human dignity. Now it's time to establish a societal solution to such inhumane culture in line with Korea's reputation as an internet superpower."
While no one disagrees with a law that could cut down on baseless and dehumanizing cyberbullying, especially against young people, it's all about the execution. Can you really craft a law with enforcement mechanisms practical enough to change people's behavior?
Back in 2007 when there was a dawning understanding that cyberbullying was becoming a problem, the National Assembly passed a law that mandated that people's real identities be validated through their social registration numbers and actual names used in any posting or other online activities. The driving rationale behind the law was that online anonymity afforded a lack of transparency and accountability that gave rise to irresponsible behavior by the netizens.
Talking about unintended consequences, the law had very little impact on people's online behavior except for vastly increased cyberattacks on portal sites or telecommunication companies that were now storing people's sensitive personally identifiable information (SPII) that included social registration numbers; there was a particularly high-profile breach that affected up to 70 percent of Korean citizens. In 2012, the Constitutional Court declared the main parts of the law unconstitutional, giving it a quick death.
Debates surrounding Sulli's Law involve reinstituting the "real name" mandate, which seems unlikely since it's already been determined to be unconstitutional. Further, any law that creates legally enforceable criteria for proper speech online will necessarily face the slippery slope question: what speech is disallowed and who gets to decide? Protection has been the excuse of many racketeering schemes historically, including all the tyrannies of the world. The line between free speech and censorship is notoriously thin, and a democratic society must always choose on the side of free speech, even offensive speech.
But if there's no legislative silver bullet for human behavior, where does that leave Sulli? How about targeting the technology platforms that enable such behavior? Why not pass a law aimed at the underlying logic of the clickbait marketplace, a logic that's focused and amplified by the monopolies of the giant portal sites that determine which articles get how many eyeballs and subsequent advertising dollars? Unless the underlying incentive structure is changed, you can't expect behaviors to change. Just look at the frenzied competition to cover Sulli's death in the most lurid way possible while at the same time decrying its tragedy.
The same incentive translates into the comments section of portal sites, driving people to post comments for shock value, intentionally creating a clickbait marketplace even among the commenters. This is great for the ego of the posters who revel in the virtual recognition of making it to the top of the comments heap, but it drives ever-more-edgy language to get attention.
In the U.S. in 1890, the Sherman Antitrust Act came about due to the public outcry over monopolies fixing prices. Perhaps in Korea in 2019, Sulli's Law could be the antitrust law for the digital age, breaking up the monopolies that portal sites enjoy on price-fixing people's ability to access news and information.
Jason Lim (jasonlim@msn.com) is a Washington, D.C.-based expert on innovation, leadership and organizational culture.