Self-promotion and online shaming during COVID-19: A toxic combination
Author | Rajat Kumar, Behera |
Author | Bala, Pradip Kumar |
Author | Rana, Nripendra P. |
Author | Kayal, Ghadeer |
Available date | 2024-07-25T11:37:12Z |
Publication Date | 2022-11 |
Publication Name | International Journal of Information Management Data Insights |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jjimei.2022.100117 |
Citation | Behera, R. K., Bala, P. K., Rana, N. P., & Kayal, G. (2022). Self-promotion and online shaming during COVID-19: A toxic combination. International Journal of Information Management Data Insights, 2(2), 100117. |
Abstract | A public shaming frenzy has spread through social media (SM) following the instigation of lockdown policies as a way to counter the spread of COVID-19. On SM, individuals shun the idea of self-promotion and shame others who do not follow the COVID-19 guidelines. When it comes to the crime of not taking a pandemic seriously, perhaps the ultimate penalty is online shaming. The study proposes the black swan theory from the human-computer interaction lens and examines the toxic combination of online shaming and self-promotion in SM to discern whether pointing the finger of blame is a productive way of changing rule-breaking behaviour. A quantitative methodology is applied to survey data, acquired from 375 respondents. The findings reveal that the adverse effect of online shaming results in self-destructive behaviour. Change in behaviour of individuals shamed online is higher for females over males and is higher for adults over middle-aged and older-aged. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | Online shaming COVID-19 Black swan theory Social media Self-promotion |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 2 |
Volume Number | 2 |
Open Access user License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
ESSN | 2667-0968 |
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COVID-19 Research [835 items ]
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Management & Marketing [731 items ]