What is a troll?
A troll is a malicious person who tries to sow the seeds of discord, either in order to entertain themselves, or to cause some damage. Usually under the cover of
anonymity, the troll poses as an innocent person and tries to create chaos and elicit negative reactions without making themselves look like the guilty party.
Trolls differ from
flamers and
griefers, as the latter two are upfront about their nefarious acts, whereas the troll makes use of stealth and sneakiness.
Why is a troll called a troll?
Even though trolls tend to be depicted as
norse mythology trolls or
Tolkien's trolls, they have nothing to do with either of them.
The actual etymological origin of trolls is the
fishing method called trolling. Like a fishing boat dropping their bait and hooks in the water and waiting for a bite, the troll drops seemingly innocent
trollbait in conversations and waits for people to react to them.
How do I get rid of a troll ?
A
trollface, the most common representation of trolls in internet
loreThe only way to make trolls disappear is to identify them, then
ban them on sight. Engaging with them only plays into their hand, giving them opportunities to pretend to be innocent and creating unnecessary
drama in the process.
This is why trolls proliferate on
social networks: the low amount of
moderation lets them push people's limits without a heavy risk of getting banned.
If you find yourself stuck around a troll without the ability to avoid or ban them, remember the saying "
don't feed the troll": do your best to ignore them completely, and encourage others to do so as well.
As trolls feed on their success, they tend to eventually give up if they fail to provoke a response. This makes them even more dangerous on social networks, as the high amount of users means they are likely to always get reactions from someone, making them impossible to ignore, and allowing them to keep derailing conversations forever.
Sources & Links
Academic study on trolls and how people perceive them, showing a disconnect between the definition of a troll and what people tend to call a troll, suggesting that the definition of a troll could eventually be widened to include any form of harrassment.
Academic study on political trolls and
its preprint version, showing that people who troll political conversations on the
Internet tend to also be assholes in their
real lives. The study reaches the conclusion that new forms of communication tend to give those trolls more visibility, amplifying their ability to annoy and derail conversations, and in the process driving some people away from political conversations as a whole.