Internet phobia

Internet phobia is an anxiety disorder characterized by symptoms of anxiousness where the person perceives the Internet environment to be unsafe with no easy way to hide from it. The term internet phobia is derived from the combination of Internet meaning internetwork and the Greek -φοβία, -phobia, meaning "fear". It is different from cyber phobia; cyber phobia is associated with fear of new technologies, while Internet phobia is more or less on social theme.
Specific anxiety-raising situations can include using a computer or mobile phone, reading email, accessing the web, Facebook or other social media, but also being in open spaces, public transit, shopping malls, or simply being outside the home due to the risk of being photographed or otherwise Internet-logged in these situations.
It is suggested that Internet phobia may affect about 1.7% of adults. Women are affected about twice as often as men. Unlike other phobias the condition is more prevalent in later adulthood and is also common in old age. Specifically, it is more easily found among government officials and celebrities, with some of them being afraid of the leak of their privacy and consequent influences on their daily life, some being afraid of the reveal of their corruption, and so on. The symptoms occur nearly every time specific anxiety-raising situations are encountered and repeat themselves for a period of more than six months. Those affected will go to great lengths to avoid these situations. More and more films and TV programs these days are involved in this problem. For instance, the third episode of the third series of British science fiction anthology series Black Mirror "Shut up and Dance", shows how the hackers threat a teenage boy and finally force him to commit bizarre and criminal acts after recording his masturbation through an anti-malware. Today this kind of black technology is realizable. This is the most important external factor that makes Internet phobia more and more widespread.
Internet phobia has yet to be classified in the DSM-5 alongside specific phobia and social phobia. Other conditions that can produce similar symptoms include separation anxiety, agoraphobia, posttraumatic stress disorder, and major depressive disorder. Those affected are at higher risk of depression and substance use disorder. That is a significant transformation in one's life.
Internet phobia comes from the Internet, and will in turn affect the Internet. People with Internet phobia are repulsive to use network and finally, that will definitely cause a decrease in the number of Internet users and lead to a worldwide debate. Although reflection of the Internet and its rapid development is necessary in some way, the probable coming international discussion is the last thing we would like to see. This kind of rethink, especially caused by such trivial stuff as an uncommon mental disease only holds back the development of the Internet. The truth is, every coin has two sides. It is always better to find ways to deal with Internet phobia rather than blame the Internet.
Precaution and treatment
Internet phobia is both preventable and curable. The most important preventive action tends to be surfing the Internet more actively and treating those social medias as a valuable tool to make friends. In addition, improving the capability of rational judgement and evaluation can be also helpful. For the officers, one suggestion is always have clean hands. CBT results in phobia resolution for about half of people.
 
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