Thank you for the opportunity.
Honestly, I referenced it as a popularity contest. I feel that's the best way to picture it.
When somebody feels attacked online, the way they get that recognition and get a post taken down or content removed is really by just texting all their friends and telling them to report it so that Facebook or whatever platform takes it seriously. I think that's part of the....
As you were saying, it's not only a burden, but it's not uniform in the way that people who face those kinds of online hate messages.... Not everybody is uniformly receptive to helping to take those messages away. It's really how many friends you know, and it's almost telling people that you have to share and you have to pity yourself more and more. It turns into this cycle of everybody trying to gain sympathy for what's happened to them in order to feel that something is going to happen. I feel that's not good in and of itself. That's more a symptom of the problem of it not being recognized in the first place.