We should always look at core research that gives the figures for both genders. If the case is being made that one gender has it worse for any specific thing, then that's a specific claim that needs to be backed up by doing the same research for both genders, and showing a clear difference. Also, what is not told to you is as telling as what is told to you:
http://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ735111When gender was considered, significant differences were identified in terms of bullying and cyberbullying. Males were more likely to be bullies and cyberbullies than their female counterparts. In addition, female cyberbully victims were more likely to inform adults than their male counterparts.
Note, that they say more bullies are male, but they do not make any claim whatsoever on the gender of victims. So we can pretty much assume 50% or more of victims are male, or they would have highlighted this in the summary, instead of the next bit where they tell you that females victims are more likely to report being bullied than male victims. Note, this almost sounds like they're trying to imply there are more female victims
per se, but they haven't
said that at all. It actually says that for people who are already cyberbullying victims, female victims are more likely to tell someone about it, rather than keep it to themselves.
Also, they make no mention of which gender bullied which other gender. If the norm was males bullying females online, well that would definitely have made it into the summary for the report. So was can assume it's mostly people bullying their own gender, and that that majority of male students bullying people was other male students.
So from what we are told, and what they don't tell us, we can assume that in the study under consideration, female victims were not a majority, but they are more likely to report it when it happens to themselves.