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Teens at Risk
on Web Sites, Experts Say
Feb 19, 11:20 PM (ET)
By MATT APUZZO
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - On MySpace.com, teenagers
can find kindred spirits who share their love of sports, their passion
for photography or their crush on a Hollywood star. They can also find
out where their online friends live, where they attend school, even what
they look like.
And so can adults.
Parents, school administrators and police are
increasingly worried that teens are finding trouble online at sites like
MySpace, the leader of the social-networking sites that encourage users
to build larger and larger circles of friends.
Police in Middletown, Conn., are investigating
recent reports that as many as seven local girls were sexually assaulted
by men in their 20s who contacted them through MySpace pretending to be
teenagers.
One girl allowed a man into her room while her
parents were home, police said, underscoring just how in the dark
parents often are about one of the most popular Web activities for teens
today.
There are other reports like these scattered around
the country, prompting some parents and schools to equate the likes of
MySpace with the Internet's red-light district, even as many experts
believe that the worries are greater than the actual dangers.
Joseph Dooley is among those who has heard it all
before. A retired FBI agent who supervised the agency's first undercover
Internet task force in New England, Dooley remembers when America Online
chat rooms were the rage. Teens posted detailed profiles of themselves
and chatted with any of AOL's subscribers.
Chat rooms soon gave way to services like MySpace,
but Dooley said the rules haven't changed and parents need to become
more engaged.
"Let the kids know, on the Internet, you don't know
who you're talking to," Dooley said. "Parents aren't the friends of
their kids. Parents needs to know and observe what their kids are
doing."
That can be daunting for working parents. Keeping
tabs on the kids used to mean knowing where they went after school, not
whom they talked to in their bedrooms.
So when they hear of a new fad among teens, their
instinct is to worry.
And the horror stories are indeed terrifying.
Last month, for example, 14-year-old Judy Cajuste
was found strangled and naked in a Newark, N.J., garbage bin. Police
seized a computer from her bedroom after friends said she told them of a
man in his 20s she met on MySpace. The death remains unsolved.
Beyond the threat of abduction, bullies who once
made the rounds on playgrounds are using Web logs and home pages to
spread rumors and lies faster than the schoolyard grapevine ever could.
MySpace profiles have been used to threaten
classmates and in at least one case, to mock a school principal.
Many schools have responded by restricting
Internet access from school computers. One private school in Newark,
N.J., ordered students to remove all personal blogs from the Internet,
even if accessed from home, to protect them from online predators.
Some parents, like Ululani Stauffacher of Eureka,
Calif., forbid their children from using MySpace. Stauffacher said her
17-year-old daughter ran off for two days with a 19-year-old man she met
online.
"I was going crazy," Stauffacher said. "I was just
hearing things about MySpace and incidents of girls missing and some
don't get returned to their families. All that I was thinking about was
that my daughter was going to be another statistic."
The concerns aren't limited to MySpace, but the
News Corp. (NWSA) unit gets the attention because of its sheer size - 54
million users, a quarter of them registered as teens.
MySpace forbids minors 13 and under from joining
and provides special protections for those 14 and 15 - only those on
their friends' list can view their profiles. Nonetheless, kids lie when
they sign up, and many of their profiles carry photos of themselves in
suggestive poses, along with personal information against the site's
recommendations.
"They're licking their lips and arching their back
for the camera because they can, and they have no idea of the
consequences," said Parry Aftab, an Internet safety expert.
But Aftab said most MySpace users aren't getting
themselves in trouble.
Experts say that banning children from using
social-networking sites is akin to forbidding them from going to the
mall or the movie theater for fear they'll be abducted.
"I wish I could hover over my children 24-7, but
the best I can do is teach them that there are ways to keep themselves
safe," said Steve Jones, a communications professor who studies new
media at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
In a statement, MySpace said it has developed
safety tips for parents and children and devotes scores of employees to
monitoring the site around the clock. The site also has ways for users
to report inappropriate behavior. The company says it removes
inappropriate images and closes accounts that violate its rules.
Chris DeWolfe, MySpace's chief executive,
encourages parents to talk to their kids about Internet safety, but
Aftab said many parents ignore advice until it is too late.
Connecticut Chief State's Attorney Christopher
Morano, who has strictly limited the information his 10- and 12-year-old
children put on the Internet, said he was surprised to learn that they
had been contacted by strangers they believed were pedophiles. His kids
ignored it, Morano said, but parents need to closely monitor Internet
activity.
"You wouldn't leave your kid on the side of the
highway without supervision," Morano said. "You shouldn't put them on
the Internet highway without the same type of supervision."
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Associated Press reporter Louise Chu in San
Francisco contributed to this report.
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