‘Metastasizing Disrespect’: How Social Media Is Fueling Gun Violence

Experts say Abdul Vicks, 25, who was fatally shot in broad daylight after digging up his rival’s grave and then posting the video on social media, is part of a trend of using social media to escalate street brawls (pictured Credit: X – DomIsLive NEWS).

This article was originally published on Word in black.

Overview:

Powerful algorithms, combined with a shortage of content moderators, create an atmosphere where anything goes, where threats and violent videos often go unnoticed.

A household name in Philadelphia’s vibrant hip-hop scene, rapper YBC Dul had a following many musicians would envy. He had over 30,000 monthly listeners on Spotify, and his YouTube and Instagram videos had racked up over a million views.

But some of those messages showed Dul’s heroic deeds as an alleged leader of a criminal gang — videos he shot himself and posted on social media. In February, police say, he recorded his most brazen act: digging up the grave of a slain gang rival and then taunting the dead man’s crew by posting the video online.

A few days later, Young Bag Chaser Dul – real name Abdul Vicks, 25 years old – was gunned down in the middle of the day on a busy street in the city centre.

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