4.6 Article

Identifying risky Internet use: Associating negative online experience with specific online behaviours

Journal

NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 1232-1252

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1461444818815442

Keywords

Cybercrime; fraud; Internet use; online gambling; online gaming; online pornography; online shopping; risk taking; victimisation

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DE1060100459]

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Experiencing negative outcomes online is increasingly common, with more people active online and the continued presence of aggressive online behaviours. This study sought to uncover the underlying factor structure of negative online consequences. It investigated how experiencing negative outcomes is associated with engaging in specific online activities. Australian adult Internet users (N=1773, mean age=42.5years, 54.8% female) completed an online survey. An underlying factor structure was identified with subgroups of negative outcomes identified relating to hacking/identity theft, abuse/harassment, non-targeted scams and targeted scams. Victimisation was associated with engagement with online pornography and forums; use of multiple discussion forums, dating, and gaming sites; and expenditure on gaming, dating and pornography sites. Results suggest that overall Internet involvement does not predict victimisation, but specific activities are linked to certain harms. This research creates a framework to inform policy and practice to minimise online victimisation and guide ongoing research.

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