The five most serious violations from Slynchuk’s list are bullying and trolling, sharing passwords/addresses/photos of others, collecting information about children, using unofficial streaming or torrent services at scale, and faking your identity online. Bullying and trolling can seriously damage a person’s mental health, reputation, and sense of safety, and in extreme cases contribute to self-harm. Sharing someone else’s personal data or photos without consent is dangerous because it exposes them to harassment, stalking, identity theft, and long-term privacy loss. Collecting information about children is especially serious since minors cannot fully protect themselves, and this kind of data can be used by predators or criminals. The large-scale use of unofficial streaming and torrent services isn’t just about “free movies”; it can result in significant financial losses for creators and companies, and can also spread malware to numerous users. Finally, faking your identity online can be the starting point for scams, fraud, and social engineering attacks that harm both individuals and organizations, making it a core risk in cybersecurity.