I don't know when it started, no matter what views you express on social networks, someone will come and comment a few words. If your position is slightly biased, people with opposite views will quickly arrive on the battlefield and start to "tear" you.
Online violence is more common:
Even if it is a small transparent with only single-digit attention, as long as you publish a comment about a hot star, many people who do not know will come to comment;
If a big V posts inappropriate remarks, someone will immediately line up to "greet the whole family";
If you happen to say something in a celebrity's Weibo comment that shouldn't be said, the "black fans" will chase after your social account, dig in depth phone number list in ten years, and hang up your past gaffes.
Trolls and gangsters have unconsciously become a major problem for us to use social networks, not only on Weibo, but also on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram
, and any social products that can be reposted and commented on by strangers.
However, to the eyes of early Internet users, the Internet of two decades ago did not appear to be so.
The early forums, such as Xici Hutong, under the banyan tree, and some college BBS, gathered a large number of talented people.