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Stop Cyberbullying Day 2026: Why online harassment can affect anyone

Alina BÎZGĂ

June 19, 2026

Stop Cyberbullying Day 2026: Why online harassment can affect anyone

Cyberbullying is often portrayed as a problem that mainly affects children and teenagers. While young people are particularly vulnerable, online harassment can affect literally anyone with an internet connection.

This Stop Cyberbullying Day, observed annually in June, serves as a reminder that creating a safer internet is everyone's responsibility.

Key takeaways

  • Cyberbullying affects people of all ages, not just children and teens.
  • 59% of the world's population uses the internet, while 51% are active social media users.
  • According to The Cybersmile Foundation, 60% of internet users have experienced bullying, abuse, or harassment online.
  • Online harassment can harm mental health, relationships, education, careers, and reputations.
  • Parents, educators, employers, and online communities all play a role in creating safer online spaces.
  • Open communication, privacy awareness, and reporting abusive behavior can help reduce the impact of cyberbullying.

A growing problem in an increasingly connected world

The internet has transformed how we communicate, learn, work, and build relationships. But greater connectivity also means heightened exposure to negative online behavior. Whether it's a student being targeted in a group chat, a content creator facing waves of abusive comments, an employee being harassed on professional networks, or an older adult attacked in online communities, cyberbullying has become a challenge that crosses generations.

According to The Cybersmile Foundation:

  • 59% of the world's population now uses the internet
  • 51% of the world's population are active social media users
  • 60% of internet users have been exposed to bullying, abuse, or harassment online

These figures show that cyberbullying can happen almost anywhere people interact online.

Social media platforms, messaging apps, gaming communities, forums, workplace collaboration tools, and even review websites can become environments where harassment occurs.

Children and teens are still among the most vulnerable

For younger users, online interactions are deeply connected to friendships, social status, and self-esteem.

Cyberbullying among children and teenagers can take many forms:

  • Exclusion from group chats
  • Spreading rumors online
  • Sharing embarrassing photos or videos
  • Sending threatening or abusive messages
  • Harassment during online gaming
  • Creating fake profiles to impersonate victims

And now, a brief story:

During a recent visit to a school, I spoke with students about online safety, scams, social media, and cybersecurity. Many confidently told me they knew how to "handle themselves online" and could spot risks when they appeared.

But as our conversations deepened, a different picture emerged.

Some students openly described situations that many adults would recognize as cyberbullying. They talked about classmates being excluded from group chats, being left out of social circles on social media, and being targeted in online games. Several mentioned class WhatsApp groups where smaller cliques form and certain students are deliberately excluded from conversations and activities.

As the discussion continued, some students began asking more specific questions:

"Is it wrong if someone posts a picture of another person online without their permission?"

"What if the photo isn't very flattering?"

"What about posting mean comments online or in chat groups?"

As these questions were raised, I couldn't help but notice students exchanging glances and looking at one another across the room. The examples felt less hypothetical and more like situations they had witnessed, experienced, or perhaps even participated in themselves.

Unlike traditional bullying, online harassment can follow children home and continue long after the school day ends.

Parents should watch for warning signs—sudden mood changes, anxiety around devices, withdrawal from friends, declining academic performance, or reluctance to participate in activities they once enjoyed.

Open conversations remain one of the most effective ways to help children navigate online challenges.

Parents can also benefit from digital safety tools that help protect the entire household. Solutions such as Bitdefender Family Plan provide security and parental controls that can help parents manage screen time, monitor online activity, and create safer online experiences for children while encouraging healthy digital habits.

The technology changes. The harm doesn't.

When people think about cyberbullying, they often imagine a problem that mainly affects kids. In reality, the same harmful behaviors appear across all age groups.

Excluding someone from a group conversation. Posting embarrassing photos without permission. Spreading rumors. Leaving cruel comments. Creating fake profiles. Publicly shaming someone for entertainment or social status.

These behaviors can occur in a school WhatsApp group, a university forum, a workplace messaging platform, a gaming community, or a neighborhood Facebook group.

The technology may change, but the underlying goal is often the same: to embarrass, isolate, intimidate, or humiliate another person.

Today's digital tools can make these behaviors even more damaging. AI-generated images, deepfakes, manipulated screenshots, anonymous accounts, and coordinated harassment campaigns allow harmful content to spread faster and reach larger audiences than ever.

The very technology that helps people connect, create, and communicate can also be weaponized against them.

Children may face exclusion from class group chats. Young adults may be targeted on social media or dating platforms. Professionals might encounter harassment on workplace communication channels or professional networks. Older adults may experience abuse in online communities or social media groups.

The circumstances can differ, but the emotional impact is often similar. Feelings of embarrassment, anxiety, isolation, and loss of confidence can affect anyone, regardless of age.

What anyone can do to help:

Creating a safer internet requires collective effort.

Think before you post

Words shared online can have lasting consequences. Taking a moment before posting can prevent unnecessary harm.

Support victims

A simple message of support can make a serious difference to someone experiencing harassment.

Report abusive behavior

Most major platforms provide tools for reporting harassment, impersonation, threats, and abusive content.

Protect your privacy

Limiting the amount of personal information available online can reduce opportunities for harassment and targeting.

Encourage open conversations

Whether you're a parent, friend, teacher, or colleague, creating an environment where people feel comfortable discussing online experiences can help victims seek support sooner.

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Author


Alina BÎZGĂ

Alina is a history buff passionate about cybersecurity and anything sci-fi, advocating Bitdefender technologies and solutions. She spends most of her time between her two feline friends and traveling.

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