The main items you need to know:
- Don’t respond to and don’t forward cyberbullying messages.
- Keep evidence of cyberbullying. Record the dates, times, and descriptions of instances when cyberbullying has occurred. Save and print screenshots, emails, and text messages. Use this evidence to report cyberbullying to web and cell phone service providers as well as your teachers and parents and the police.
- Block the person who is cyberbullying.
Things you also need to report
If any of the above happens to you or a friend, tell an adult you trust and report it to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children's Cyber-Tipline at cybertipline.com.
- Anyone you don't know who asks you for personal information, photos, or videos.
- Inappropriate or obscene material from people or companies you don't know.
- Misleading URLs on the Internet that point you to sites containing harmful or inappropriate materials rather than what you were looking for.
- Anyone who sends you photos or videos containing obscene content of individuals 18 and younger (the possession, manufacturing, or distributing of child pornography is illegal)
- Anyone who asks you to meet in person for sexual activities (no one should be making sexual invitations to you online – and it’s an especially serious crime for adults to do it).
If any of the above happens to you or a friend, tell an adult you trust and report it to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children's Cyber-Tipline at cybertipline.com.
http://www.nsteens.org/WhatToReport