Dont feed the troll

Don’t feed the troll who gets fat as a badger

There are a number of benefits you can get when you establish yourself as an authority on the web: respect, trustworthiness, business success, user traffic, links to your content. However, not everything is absolutely positive.
If you have a blog, forum or membership site, you should not allow others to walk around doing whatever they want. You must make yourself respected and for that you can create a code of conduct or a comment policy, which is always a good idea.
Even if the troll finds a way to go over that policy, don’t be afraid to put a stop to bad behavior. After all, you are the owner of your site and you get to decide who does and doesn’t use the services you manage.
This is the acronym for “Do not feed the troll”. And the food of these beings is mainly attention. Never give them the pleasure of receiving it. Delete their comments as soon as you identify them and if they are persistent, block the user so they can no longer post them.

[villains] guidance videos for loquenderos no

Sometimes completely ignoring a troll can backfire, and you may be asked to respond to it to take stock of the situation. That’s because even if you successfully ignore it, your fans or friends won’t, and the troll may eventually come back to haunt you.
There’s no point in trying to engage a troll in logics. As mentioned, they are just looking for attention and will go to any lengths to get it. Reasoning with them will only lead to a waste of your time (and not theirs). Don’t become a part of the chaos.
Internet trolls love attention. Their comments are usually made to strike an emotional chord until they strike a response. By constantly responding to their posts, you are feeding the troll. You are giving them what they want, attention.

Trolls: don’t lose the rhythm!

Although the term originally referred only to the practice itself and not to the person, a later metonymic shift has caused it to be applied to people who engage in such practices as well. Its most likely etymological origin evokes the idea of “taking the bait” or “taking the bait a lot more” (trolling is a type of fishing in English).[5] The term’s most likely etymological origin evokes the idea of “taking the bait” or “taking the bait a lot more.”[5
From the coincidence with the word coming from Old Norse, which designates the mythological monster, the meaning of provocateur has been amalgamated with that of the mythological being, especially in a pejorative sense.
The first colloquial use of the word trolling outside the realm of the Internet to describe deliberate actions carried out in order to provoke a reaction can be found in the military: around 1972, the use of trolling by U.S. Navy pilots to describe MIG fighters in Vietnam is documented.[8] In the Thai language, the word trolling is used to describe a deliberate action carried out to provoke a reaction.
In the Thai language, the term krian (เกรียน) has been adopted to describe Internet trolls. The term literally refers to a very short haircut worn by most school boys in Thailand, thus comparing Internet trolls to naughty school boys.[14] The term top krian (ตบเกรียน), or “slapping a hairy head” refers to the act of posting intelligent replies to refute and deem Internet trolls’ posts as silly.

Lazy town | the troll baby

Under the name of troll is included an amalgam of subjects with various motivations. We call troll to the person who launches provocative messages with the intention of generating debate or annoying. Also people who “have come to talk about their book” and do not care what the topic of the news they are commenting on is. They are going to talk about whatever they want (usually self-promoting their product or website).
There are trolls who hate a social media profile or website and comment ad nauseam on every mistake they make. But there are also network experts who call people trolls who are making legitimate criticisms of your work and company because they annoy them.
Thinking about writing about the subject, I contacted a social editor at a video game website whom I personally consider a troll tamer during office hours. Can you think of anyone more accustomed to trolling than a person who writes and moderates teenage gamers.
I was surprised that someone so used to the troll world was a strong advocate of ignoring them “because they feed back and get big as soon as you give them some attention, but it is true that you also have to distinguish whether it is a regular troll or a newcomer to the forum.