For decades, bullying was dismissed by educators and parents as a "rite of passage" or an inevitable part of childhood development. However, the tragic events at Columbine High School in 1999 and the subsequent rise of cyberbullying forced a paradigm shift. In this landscape, Bullying.org emerged as a foundational digital resource. Often cited in early academic literature on internet safety, the organization served as a blueprint for how non-profits could leverage "new" media—specifically the World Wide Web—to foster community and education.
The "new" launch is just Phase One. According to internal roadmaps leaked (and confirmed) by the CEO, Phase Two (scheduled for August 2026) will include: bully4uorg new
One of the oldest problems in cyberbullying is the "he said, she said" nature of screenshots, which can be easily doctored or deleted. The bully4uorg new platform introduces the Digital Evidence Vault. For decades, bullying was dismissed by educators and
Users can now link their social media accounts (Instagram, Snapchat, X/Twitter, and TikTok initially) through a secure, read-only API. The DEV automatically captures and hashes (time-stamps and encrypts) abusive comments, DMs, and posts the moment a user flags them. Often cited in early academic literature on internet