Tattle Life
Tattle Life has been named in 2 documented digital harm incidents, including 1 fatality and 2 involving minors. The most common harm domain is Self-Harm & Suicide, followed by Addiction & Mental Health.
Documented Incidents
216-year-old girl dies by suicide after years of online bullying on Tattle Life platform
Sophie-May Dickson, a social media influencer, faced backlash after sharing videos from her 16-year-old daughter Princess's funeral in February 2024. Princess died by suicide after years of online bullying, particularly on the gossip site Tattle Life, where she was targeted for her appearance from the age of 14. The abuse initially focused on Sophie-May but shifted to Princess after Sophie-May deleted some of her social media accounts. At the funeral, trolls left cruel comments on Sophie-May's Instagram post, accusing her of seeking attention. Sophie-May responded by explaining that sharing the moment was personal and not for views, and that she hired photographers to capture the event due to the emotional intensity. Tattle Life, described as a "troll's paradise," allowed anonymous users to post offensive remarks about Princess even after her death. Princess's suicide and the ongoing online abuse have highlighted the severe impact of cyberbullying on vulnerable teenagers.
Woman subjected to escalating online abuse and doxxing on Tattle Life over three years
A woman named Dani Kumrou was subjected to online abuse on the gossip site Tattle Life in 2022 after she joined the platform. Trolls targeted her appearance, calling her fat and ugly, and later escalated the abuse by attacking her daughter, husband, and even revealing her home address. The abuse occurred over a three-year period and intensified when the trolls realized she was reading their messages. The abusers used fake profiles and screenshots of her online content to spread false and harmful information. The situation worsened when Tattle Life users publicly posted her address after she listed her home for sale.