Technology-Facilitated Stalking

Featured SPARC Resources

This month, Voices Unhidden™ is highlighting resources from the Stalking Prevention, Awareness, and Resource Center (SPARC) focused on how technology can be used to monitor, contact, intimidate, isolate, and control victims.

These resources are especially important because they reinforce what Voices Unhidden™ teaches through the Puzzle Effect™: digital harm is often misunderstood when incidents are viewed one at a time. The real danger becomes clearer when repeated behaviors, boundary violations, monitoring, unwanted contact, and intimidation are viewed as part of a larger pattern.

SPARC’s materials help explain how technology-facilitated stalking can appear through social media monitoring, repeated messages, location tracking, digital surveillance, and other tactics that may be minimized until the full pattern is recognized.

External resource feature. These materials are provided by SPARC and are shared for education, awareness, and community learning.

How We Help

If you are experiencing ongoing monitoring, unwanted contact, or behavior that feels targeted or persistent, you are not expected to figure it out alone.

Resources can help explain what is happening — but understanding how those patterns apply to your specific situation can feel overwhelming.

Voices Unhidden™ provides access to trained, certified response specialists who work directly with individuals to identify patterns, organize documentation, and guide next steps.

Using our REACT Framework™, we help move beyond recognition into structured response — so you are not just collecting information, but understanding what to do with it.

Digital Harm Insights
Research and educational content exploring the psychological effects of technology-facilitated harassment, monitoring, fixation, and digital harm.
Psychological Impact
Sustained harassment and digital monitoring can have significant psychological effects, even when contact is indirect, anonymous, or intermittent.

Use of Research and Government Sources

The materials referenced on this page come from publicly available government research publications, academic studies, and official justice-system resources.

These sources are included to help readers understand how patterns of cyberstalking, digital monitoring, and technology-facilitated harassment are analyzed within criminology, victim advocacy research, and the U.S. justice system.

Providing these references allows readers to review the original research directly and better understand the broader policy and legal context surrounding modern online abuse.