Posts Tagged ‘monitoring internet activity’

MySpace removes Nebraska sex offenders

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Round of applause to MySpace for doing some good. During the first half of 2008, the website reportedly deleted 146 profiles belonging to approximately 112 registered Nebraska sex offenders. Nebraska provided MySpace with a list of names of registered sex offenders, a practice that many (if not all) states participate in.

Anyway, it’s obvious that while this is good news, MySpace was only able to delete the profiles of the stupid sex offenders – the ones that use real names or other true identifiers in their profiles. Imagine all the RSOs that don’t use any real identifiers. Imagine all the would-be predators that have yet to be caught in the Cornhusker state.

Obviously this is where parental control and monitoring programs like PC Pandora come in. With full knowledge of everything your child does online will keep them safe and you sane. You’ll be able to know whom they are talking to and where they are going with the monitoring capabilities of PC Pandora. There’s no reason not to know. Removing 112 individuals is great… but think of how many more there are. And that’s just in Nebraska…

MySpace removes Nebraska sex offenders
By North Platte Bulletin Staff

Attorney General Jon Bruning announced recently that social networking site MySpace deleted 146 profiles belonging to approximately 112 registered Nebraska sex offenders. The company removed the profiles during the first half of 2008.

MySpace gathers sex offender registry lists from states, compares those lists to users on its site and deletes offenders’ profiles.

This is the second time MySpace removed the profiles of Nebraska sex offenders from its site. The company deleted 247 profiles in 2007 after a working group of attorneys general from 52 states and territories, including Nebraska, sent a letter to the company demanding it turn over information about sex offenders. The working group encourages social networking sites to help protect children from threats such as sexual predators and inappropriate content.

“This is part of our on going efforts to help protect children on the Internet,” said Bruning. “Keeping sex offenders off social sites is a critical step to keeping our kids safe online.”

A bill making it illegal for registered sex offenders to use social networking sites will be part of the Attorney General’s legislative package for next year.

Internet safety has been and continues to be a top priority for Bruning. Over the last five years, the Attorney General’s Office has:

  • Reached an agreement with Facebook, which restricted users from changing their ages and aggressively removes inappropriate content and groups from the site.
  • Reached an agreement with MySpace that enhances online safety by developing age/identity verification software.
  • Reached an agreement with Yahoo! that shut down 70,000 chat rooms frequented by sexual predators.
  • Worked with the legislature to create the offense of Online Enticement.
  • Worked with the legislature to pass cyberstalking legislation. LB 142 made it a felony for an adult to send sexually explicit material to a child under 16.
  • Increased penalties for the possession of child pornography: one to 20 years for the first offense; one to 50 years for each subsequent offense.
  • Hosted Websafe, an Internet safety conference for local law enforcement and prosecutors, educational administrators, community officials and victim advocacy groups.
  • Launched www.safekids.ne.gov, an Internet safety Web site.

California Vs. Cyberbullying

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Big news on the west coast this week, as legislators are close to passing a law that would see students suspended (at the very least) or expelled (at the very worst) if they are caught bullying through text messages or the Internet.

A lot of people agree that legislation like this is needed, but it’ll be hard to near impossible to control what kids do on their cell phones and on the internet.

Here’s my retort: That may be true, but I challenge any student to stand up during an assembly or go over the loudspeaker during morning announcements and say “Hey everyone, Kenny sucks d*cks and is a flaming a**hole,” and not get in trouble. If you can’t do it in person, why are kids allowed to do it through electronic means with no repercussions?

You may not be able to control what kids are going to do, but if someone is being bullied and is maliciously hurt, they should have the backing of the law and the school on their side to get the offender in trouble. As of now there is no legal means to do so and cases are handled ad-hoc by individual administrations.

The bottom line is that, yes, I am aware kids have always picked on each other since the dawn of time, and will continue to do so. Hell, even I was pushed around on the schoolyard. But the Internet has afforded kids the opportunity to make the offense 100x worse, reaching 100x as many people and doing so from the confines of their bedroom and in some cases with total anonymity. This isn’t your dad’s schoolyard fight. This situation is out of hand and needs to be delt with.

To those that say this is drastic and over zealous, to you I say: well, maybe you should have controlled your kids and told them how to behave in a society and respect one another. The kids have brought them upon themselves, and now, if we adults have to step in and tell them how to act and threaten with punishment – so be it.

Cyberbullying is yet another reason why parents need parental control and monitoring software programs like PC Pandora on their home machines. You need to know if your child is a victim so you can help them beat the problem… and, now, you really need to know if your child is an instigator - or they will face severe punishment… not to mention it’s just WRONG!

There are two good stories on the issue with video clips. Please visit the sites and watch; I have pasted headlines and the first few paragraphs of each here…

State bill outlaws ‘cyber-bullying’
By Jovana Lara, KABC 7

SUN VALLEY, Calif. (KABC) — California lawmakers are close to passing a bill aimed at protecting students from “cyber-bullying.”

Gossip is an age-old problem at middle schools and high schools everywhere. But with the popularity of electronic devices like cell phones and computers and pagers, some believe that gossip has grown potentially harmful, even dangerous. Now a local lawmaker is proposing a new law that would make it illegal to “cyber-bullly.”

Cell phones, pagers, BlackBerry devices and computers all make the task of communicating so much faster and easier. However, that same technology in the wrong hands can be destructive.

“To the point where kids just start doing drugs or just kill themselves,” said student Edward Esparza. “That’s it. It just gets out of hand sometimes.”

Santa Maria educators and students react to cyberbullying legislation
By Melissa Mecija, KSBY 6

In a bill aimed at stopping “cyberbullying,” California State Assemblyman Ted Lieu from Torrance proposed legislation that would suspend or expel students if they are caught bullying through text messages or the Internet.

Some educators in Santa Maria said legislation like this is needed. But whether or not they can control students’ cell phones or the Internet is another story.

Cablevision Blocks Child Porn Sites

Friday, August 8th, 2008

As much as I loathe Cablevision’s IO digital cable service (worst I have ever had out of 4 different ones), I have to give them props for joining the fight and following suit of several other major ISPs in the country against child pornography Web sites.

Good news and good job!!

(p.s. Parental control and monitoring software like PC Pandora can be used by parents to make sure their kids are not a victim to this despicable crime)

Cablevision joins ISPs blocking child porn sites
By Danny Teigman, Newsday

Cablevision Systems Corp., Long Island’s largest Internet service provider, yesterday became the latest provider to voluntarily block child pornography Web sites and their images.

The decision was part of an agreement reached with state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who since his 2006 election has made the elimination of Internet child pornography a key issue.

“We’re doing what I set out to do,” said Cuomo, speaking at a news conference at the Hempstead Public Library. “I laid out my priorities.”

Bethpage-based Cablevision - which owns Newsday and has 2.4 million high-speed-Internet customers - joins Comcast, AT&T, Verizon, AOL, Sprint and Time Warner Cable in blocking access.

Cablevision representatives did not attend the meeting, but the company said in a statement that it has employed “long-standing efforts to promote Internet safety and appropriate behavior online.”

“Child pornography has no place on the Internet, or in our society,” said Lisa Rosenblum, Cablevision’s senior vice president of government affairs and education.

Cablevision will also block newsgroups, which are public discussion boards that allow potential predators to send links to child porn and child sex trafficking Web sites. Jim Maiella, a spokesman for Cablevision, said that a new sub link to report child pornography has been added to the Web site within the overall child abuse reporting category.

The agreement, Cuomo said, will work in concert with legal strategies of the past, where law enforcement attempted to track individuals downloading or uploading illegal imagery. Now, Internet service providers will “turn off the faucet” of Internet porn by preventing the imagery from reaching the Internet in the first place.

Although the agreement is voluntary, Cuomo said that if companies do not comply with his office’s requests, criminal and civil litigation will be pursued.

At least one educator said the agreement will help her better self-monitor seemingly innocuous Web sites that automatically link to illegal sites.

“It’s a great start,” said Sheila Hankin, a third-grade teacher in Westbury. “We have filters, we have firewalls, but that doesn’t always work.”

Monitoring Computer Activity: A Personal Safeguard

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

PC Pandora stresses the importance of monitoring computer activity on your home machine for multiple reasons, including child online safety and personal protection. Parental control and monitoring software can help keep your machine safe and secure in more ways than one…

New York, NY (PRWEB) August 7, 2008 — Today, PC security is an issue that touches almost every aspect of everyday life. Just as it is essential to safeguard kids from potential Internet dangers, it’s also essential to keep your PC safe from virus attacks, hackers, and perhaps even more importantly, those everyday mistakes and bugs that can result in the frustration of lost hours of work or irreplaceable family memories.

Parental control software is the best answer for parents looking to keep their kids safe online. But PC monitoring software can also perform a valuable function in any home - even one without kids - by keeping an exact record of everything you do on your PC.

“If you have children, having a visual record of everything your child does will help you to make sure they are not communicating with someone they shouldn’t be, or falling victim to — or acting as — a cyberbully,” explains James Leasure, Co-Founder of Pandora Corp., makers of PC Pandora monitoring software and Pandora Recovery file recovery software. “But for parents and adults in general, having a visual record of all the activity on your computer is not such a bad idea.”

For workers that spend a significant amount of time working at home, or professionals that travel frequently, monitoring software can be a lifesaver if an important document or presentation is lost, deleted or becomes corrupted and unable to be opened outside of the office environment.

Even for personal business such as online banking and bill paying, having that extra record of everything can be a relief when unexpected situations arise, such as online payments failing to go through, or worse yet, if users become victims of hacked accounts or other forms of identity theft.

Monitoring software would effectively let you go back in time on your machine and replay everything that happened,” says Leasure. “If that means getting confirmation numbers you forgot to write down or safely finding a website that corrupted your machine, everything will be there.”

Having parental control/monitoring software can also be helpful if your machine sees usage by various third parties, including extended family in town for the weekend or your child’s friends. Programs like PC Pandora will enable you to track any harmful changes that may have been made to your system.

Leasure says, “There is lot that others can do to your PC, on purpose or by accident, that can have an effect on its performance — and on your safety. If the wrong files get deleted, you can have a seriously corrupted system. Even worse, if the wrong setting is changed or the wrong files deleted, you could find yourself locked out of your own bank account or even have your private passwords and personal information opened up to anyone that cares to look. If you have a record of everything that happened, you can isolate the problem and have a better shot at rectifying it.”

There is also the case of illegal activity being performed on a family PC. Whether it’s downloading pirated music and movies, or even inappropriate and illegal photos of minors, the computer’s owner is the one who will answer to authorities. Monitoring software like PC Pandora gives owners a full visual and documented recording of everything that happens on the machine. They’ll be able to fix problems quickly, and hold anyone using the computer in an inappropriate manner accountable for their activity.

PC Pandora is parental control software that monitors and records all user activity. PC Pandora acts as a DVR for your PC by taking sequential snapshots of all activity on screen. The snapshots then allow the machine’s administrators to see everything that happened on the computer, telling you who did what and when. Further details of user activity, such as instant messenger chats, emails sent and received, websites visited, keystrokes logged, peer-2-peer files shared and downloaded, programs accessed and more, can be seen in text-based files. It also utilizes Internet filters and program blocks to disallow access to content you don’t want others to see on your machine.

Security to your home PC is essential in today’s networked and connected world. Having the ability to know everything that happens on your machine can play a vital role in fixing system errors and putting a stop to illegal activity. Monitoring software like PC Pandora 5.0 and free data recovery programs like Pandora Recovery are imperative security measures. A free 2-hour trial of PC Pandora is available at www.pcpandora.com.

About PC Pandora: Pandora Corporation was formed with one goal - to help our customers monitor, control and protect their families and themselves online. First released in mid 2005, PC Pandora has been constantly upgraded to industry-leading specifications and has received accolades from users, reviewers and even school districts and law enforcement agencies, who use the program to help in the day-to-day supervision of the children and citizens they are charged with protecting. The company website devotes space to helping parents with 18 Tips to Safe Surfing and Pandora’s Blog, where current news in the world of online safety is discussed regularly. PC Pandora has vaulted into a leadership position by boasting a combination of features that unparalleled in the monitoring industry. In February 2008, Version 5.0 was released, again widening the spectrum of coverage and protection offered by the program. In addition, through the company’s SAFE SCHOOLS program, schools and school districts can receive up to $100,000 worth of software to aid in protecting their students and their PCs. PC Pandora is also now available through the Pandora Corp. store at Amazon.com.

Reporters and Producers: Looking to cover this topic? We are your technology solution and experts. Software is available for review and testing. Staff members are always available for interviews. Let us help you show your audience how easy it can be to keep their kids safe online.

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Wacky Internet Predator Wednesday Part 12

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

SO, here’s another round-up of sickos who got caught using the Internet to try and lure young kids for sex. These are all prime examples of why it is so important to be aware of what your kids are doing online, where they are going and who they are talking to. You can use parental control and monitoring software like our PC Pandora to keep YOUR kids safe!

Here’s a summary of the stories below:

  • A 31-year-old man from Massachusettes contacted a real 13-year old girl and eventually started asking for sex. The girl, thankfully, told her parents, who got he cops involved, who took over the girl’s account and arrested the man…
  • A 64-year-old man in Pennsylvania posed as a 26-year-old in a chat room and approached what he thought was a 13-year-old girl for sex, after sending him nude pictures of himself. The young girl was really an undercover officer…
  • A 22-year-old Kansas man was sentenced 3 years probation – as opposed to 5 years in prison – after soliciting what he thought was a 14-year-old girl for sex. The judge ordered probation because there was no “real “ victim and the man changed his mind and tried to leave before committing any crime – and before he knew police were closing in. So, while this may seem fair in a court of law, how does it seem to parents?
  • Two Pennsylvania men, ages 28 and 37, were arrested as a result of an online sting operation. The two men both had numerous conversations with what they thought was a 14-year-old girl. They also sent nude photos, and one of them even sent a video of himself masturbating.

Here are the full stories and their links…

(more…)

Rhode Island vs. Cyberbullying

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Posting this story because it is the state where I grew up. It’s from the end of June, but after a recent search, I don’t believe there is an update as of yet.

In Rhode Island, a pair of bills are on the books that would dish out stiffer penalties – even jail time – to those who use any form of electronic communication (e-mails, text messages, IM, etc) to intimidate fellow students. In many ways, this would elevate the punishment of electronic bullying to the same discipline code as more traditional means of bullying, including verbal and physical acts of harassment.

The second bill would outlaw “cyberharassment,” defined as using a computer or electronic device to harass someone.

This is excellent and I am glad to see states taking the issue seriously. All the asinine left-wingers that give liberals a bad name are against laws like these citing that they restrict freedom of speech. Last time I checked, freedom of speech does not include slander or personal threats – which is what cyberbullying and cyberharassment are. Get a clue people.

And of course, when you are checking on your kids to make sure that they aren’t a victim – or worse, a bully who could face serious penalties if caught – use parental control and monitoring software like PC Pandora to obtain the information you need to keep your kids safe online…

R.I. bills target cyberbullying, “cyberharassment”

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Anyone who resorts to bullying or harassment using e-mails, text messages or other electronic means could face stiffer penalties and even jail time under a pair of bills approved by state lawmakers.

One of the bills would subject students who uses any form of electronic communication to intimidate fellow students to the same discipline code as more traditional means of bullying, including verbal and physical acts of harassment.

A second bill would outlaw “cyberharassment,” defined as using a computer or electronic device to harass someone.

The bills’ sponsors-state Sen. John Tassoni Jr. and state Rep. Joseph McNamara-say the rules have changed from the old days of school yard bullies shaking down classmates for lunch money.

They say cyberbullying-defined as textual, verbal or graphic harassment transmitted by computer, cell phone, telephone or other electronic devices-is on the rise.

Under the bill, repeated violations that threaten the physical or emotional well-being of any student would be grounds for filing a complaint with the Family Court to have the student engaged in the alleged bullying deemed delinquent.

The problem of cyberbullying is getting increased attention nationwide.

Last month, Facebook, the world’s second-largest social networking Web site, announced it was adding more than 40 new safeguards to protect young users from sexual predators and cyberbullies in an agreement with attorneys general from several states.

And last week in Los Angeles, a Missouri woman pleaded not guilty in federal court to charges in an Internet hoax blamed for a 13-year-old girl’s suicide.

Investigators say 49-year-old Lori Drew helped create a MySpace account that appeared to belong to a 16-year-old boy who did not exist and used the fake account to send cruel messages to a 13-year-old neighbor Megan Meier, including one stating the world would be better off without her. Megan hanged herself in 2006.

A second bill would make “cyberharassment,” a crime.

A first offense would be treated as a misdemeanor and subject to a $500 fine. Second and subsequent offenses would be treated as felonies with fines up to $6,000 or two years in prison.

Both bills now heading to Gov. Don Carcieri’s desk.

MyFreaks

Monday, August 4th, 2008

I thought this website was great and want to help them get the word out about their existence. Basically, if you are on MySpace and have received a creepy message on MySpace from someone you don’t know, email it to these guys and they will post it for all to marvel at…

MyFreaks: Messages from creepy-ass dudes on MySpace

Obviously you know what I am going to say. Parent control and monitoring software like our PC Pandora can help parents see these messages when their children don’t tell them about it. Just another way that PC Pandora can help keep your kids safe from potential threats and dangers on the web…

Stopping Online Fight Videos

Friday, August 1st, 2008

A story was posted on ABC.com about the effects of online fight videos, a new phenomenon that is hurting our kids, and the battle to stop them. It’s part of the cyberbullying umbrella and a reflection of our own society. And it’s another reason parents need to me monitoring the Internet activity of their kids with monitoring software like PC Pandora. If your child is a victim and not telling you, you need to intervene. If your child is the instigator and you have no idea – it could warrant serious repercussions and you need to stop it.

Check out the article and check out PC Pandora version 5

Efforts to Rein in Online Fight Videos
Pressure Builds on Social-Networking Web Sites to Block Homemade Fight Vi
deos
By STACY TEICHER KHADAROO

The images played out in shocking detail this spring: a group of Florida teens beating a girl and videotaping it to allegedly post online at YouTube and MySpace. Some of them face felony charges and the possibility of life in prison.

The hundreds of thousands of fight videos online, running the gamut from fake fights to bullying to gang warfare, have parents, educators, and lawmakers around the world grasping for solutions. They want popular social-networking websites to do more to block or remove such content. Some places in the US and abroad are even criminalizing “cyberbullying” and the recording and posting of violent acts.

The ensuing debates raise age-old issues of free speech versus safety. Those on the safety side say the matter is urgent because the videos seem to inspire copycat acts. They also raise concerns that the broadcasting of such fights intensifies the humiliating effects of bullying.

“A lot of kids are looking for attention; they’re looking for a way to measure their own popularity, and they measure it now on page views,” says Parry Aftab, executive director of WiredSafety, an online safety group in Fort Lee, N.J. “The faster we can get any of the networks to take down [such content], the less likely it is that kids are going to keep doing it, because they do it for the fame factor.”

But judging which videos should be removed can be difficult, because it’s hard to know what’s really going on. In some cases, kids are merely faking the kind of violence that TV or Hollywood serves up all the time.

Even if restricted on popular social-networking sites, kids’ fight videos will probably continue going up on other sites or perhaps shift offshore, says Danah Boyd, a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. The broader issue is “what it means & to glorify violence in the way we do across all sectors of society,” she says. “The Internet mirrors back to us what we’ve instilled as cultural values, and when we look at that mirror, we don’t like what we see.”

Pedro Nava, a Democrat in the California Assembly, first tuned into the dangers of social-networking sites when Missouri teen Megan Meier committed suicide after being cyberbullied in 2006. But the breaking point came when he discovered gangs in his own state using website videos to mark people for murder, including a young man in Salinas who was killed this year.

“There should be more responsibility on the part of the networking sites to police themselves,” Mr. Nava says. He recently introduced a resolution that urges websites with user-generated content to “immediately remove actively violent and criminal content & [and] proactively enforce their terms of use.”

Nava also wants the sites to find ways to screen out inappropriate content before it is posted. He hopes the resolution will prompt a discussion, including how to take into account First Amendment issues. He has since been invited to visit the offices of YouTube (part of Google) and MySpace (part of Fox), and he hopes to work with various companies to find a solution.

Users flagging content A spokesperson for Google said in an e-mail that content on YouTube showing someone being hurt or humiliated is subject to removal. “Users flag content that they feel is inappropriate. Once flagged, content is reviewed by our staff and usually removed from the system within minutes if it violates our Community Guidelines,” the spokesperson wrote.

Relying on users to flag material is the only practical approach for websites with large volumes of content, says Ms. Aftab, who also serves on the Internet Safety Technical Task Force, a national group of businesses, academics, and nonprofits. It is based at the Berkman Center and was formed in February as part of an agreement between MySpace and 50 state attorneys general to develop online safety solutions.

WiredSafety has trained thousands of volunteers to patrol social-networking sites to flag problematic youth videos. Plugging in a term such as “school fights,” for instance, brings up more than 40,000 links on YouTube, and each one needs to be examined to determine the nature of the content.

“Kids think it’s cool to have a place to put their own personal things online,” says Maggie, a member of Teenangels, a group started by WiredSafety for peer education. Many students don’t think about the consequences of what they post, adds Maggie, who asked that her last name not be used because of a Teenangels policy to protect its members. “To them, it’s just pixels & and a lot of them don’t realize how permanent it is.”

Her Teenangels chapter in New Rochelle, N.Y., developed an anticyberbullying “Megan Pledge” named after the Missouri girl. Signers agree, among other things, not to pass on cruel content or use interactive technologies as a weapon. More than 230,000 have endorsed it online through myYearbook.com. “It’s really important that kids become part of the solution,” Aftab says.

Law enforcement officers have used Internet videos as evidence in criminal cases. But they would prefer that witnesses share material directly with them. And they’re starting to get new tools to deter certain types of Internet posts. Missouri passed a law in June expanding the crimes of harassment and stalking to include electronic communications. It became the 18th state to create a law addressing cyberbullying.

Perhaps the most explicit crackdown has been in France, which last year criminalized the filming and online posting of violent acts for anyone who is not a journalist. Violators face fines and up to five years in prison. In Britain, a 15-year-old girl was sentenced to two years of detention for aiding and abetting manslaughter after she videotaped a lethal attack, the Daily Mail reported.

‘Electronic aggression’ Researchers are turning their attention to the ways people use technology to victimize, but so far little is known about “electronic aggression,” a term advocated by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta.

Various studies have found that 9 percent to 34 percent of youths are victims of electronic aggression and that 4 percent to 21 percent are perpetrators, the CDC reports. One study found a 50 percent increase in youth victims of online harassment between 2000 and 2005. Such findings were compiled in a CDC report last year.

Technology prompts such questions as, “Do we need to think about bullying in a different way when it happens electronically?” says Marci Feldman Hertz, a CDC health scientist and co-author of the report. Bullying usually entails repeated acts with harmful intent, she says, but if one act is posted online, does the ripple effect of viewership constitute repetition?

Aftab’s experience leads her to think that early research understates the problem. When she explained cyberbullying to middle-schoolers last year, about 85 percent of the 45,000 she polled said they’d experienced it.

Banning kids from social networks in libraries - unconstitutional or smart?

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

A USA Today article – and its subject matter – is sparking a bit of heated debate. Basically, Congress is considering a bill that would bar children who use computers in public libraries from accessing Facebook and other social networking websites without parental permission.

Of course, all the nuts are coming out of the woodwork to cry about freedoms being squashed. They are somehow trying to link this to the destruction of the 1st amendment.

I am just as liberal as the next guy, and I am very modernistic and forward-thinking - I am not a conservative at all… but what the hell is wrong with you people?

The ONLY people this bill refers to is children under 18 who want to use a library computer to go on MySpace (or Facebook, etc.).

Does it interfere with privacy and free speech? Um, what type of privacy do you expect to have at a public terminal in a public place?

One genius says: “If people in a community do not feel confident that their privacy will be protected, they cannot use the library as it was intended, for intellectual pursuit, it will intimidate them.”

Intellectual pursuit”? It’s a social networking site… there is absolutely ZERO intellectual anything happening over there.

Secondly, you are all missing the point. The bill is meant to prevent kids from disobeying their parents – or acting behind their parents back – accessing social network sites, and using the unsupervised access to potentially engage in risky behavior, i.e. meeting with strangers, waging a cyberbullying campaign, etc.

And, hey – uh… did any of you read this? It actually says “parents permission.” This law is telling kids that they have to obey their parents. Maybe that will make a few heads of this current self-absorbed young generation. And, if a parent is fine with their kid on MySpace, all they have to do is write a freaking note so that the little internet fiend can give it to the librarian and then he can plug the LAN line into his veins and glue his face to someone else’s Space.

There is nothing wrong with this bill you freaks. Pick your battles. You want to stop something? stop the federal aid going to private financial organizations that were ignorant and irresponsible and deliberately trying to screw people when it all blew up in their faces.

Geez freaking Louise.

Here’s the article… Read the comments. OH yeah, if parents used PC Pandora at home they could keep their kids and their social networking habits in check.

Bill would ban kids from Facebook, MySpace in libraries
By Ledyard King Gannett News Service

WASHINGTON — Congress is considering a bill that would bar children who use computers in public libraries from accessing Facebook and other social networking websites without parental permission.

Rep. Mark Steven Kirk, the Illinois Republican who sponsored the measure, says the proposal would keep sexual predators from contacting minors who are using a library computer.

But the American Library Association says Kirk’s bill is yet another attempt by the federal government to interfere with library users’ privacy and free speech.

“If people in a community do not feel confident that their privacy will be protected, they cannot use the library as it was intended, for intellectual pursuit,” said Emily Sheketoff, who heads the association’s Washington office. “It will intimidate them.”

It’s the latest in a series of battles the association has been fighting with Congress over the past decade. Some highlights:

  • In 2000, lawmakers required libraries receiving federally discounted Internet service to install devices to filter out obscene material. Libraries sued, but the Supreme Court upheld the law.
  • A year later, following the 2001 terrorist attacks, Congress passed the USA Patriot Act, giving federal authorities more power to track the books and videos library patrons borrow and the websites they visit.

Despite objections from the American Library Association, the act was renewed in 2006 without significant changes, other than a requirement that authorities take extra steps in justifying their need for the records.

Supporters of the law note that two of the 2001 hijackers bought their plane tickets using a public computer at a New Jersey college library and that other members of the plot surfed the Internet using a computer at a public library in Delray Beach, Fla.

Earlier this year, a federal magistrate judge in Atlanta ruled the FBI did not violate the privacy of a Pakistani national in 2006 by logging onto the same computer the Pakistani has used and looking up which websites he had visited. Agents said the man was part of a terrorism plot.

  • In 2007, the American Library Association helped persuade Congress to reopen several Environmental Protection Agency libraries the Bush administration had closed. The closures “created a serious obstacle to the public’s ability to gather information about key environmental issues,” according to the association.
  • Kirk’s bill, the Deleting Online Predators Act, died in 2006 but gained new life this year.

Kirk says that as more children flock to social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, “we’ve seen a corresponding increase of online sexual predators” targeting those children.

But library officials say the legislation — while tackling a legitimate problem — takes the wrong approach in trying to keep kids safe from online predators.

Rather than outlawing certain sites, the American Library Association supports preparing kids and parents to deal with online threats at the library, home or anywhere else.

Wacky Internet Predator Wednesday - #11

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

I skipped last week’s weekly round-up of Internet predators due to an abnormal/busy schedule. So this week, we make up for it with 13 new faces to welcome to the world of wacky Internet predators! Here’s a synopsis; full articles are below.

  • 5 registered sex offenders are picked up in Texas for logging on to MySpace
  • 2 western PA men turn the webcams on themselves and talk sex with someone who they think is a 13-yearl-old girl
  • 19-year-old male in Arizona is stopped on routine traffic stop and has 15- and 16-year old girl in the car – both of whom he met on MySpace. Note: the girls were there on their own accord! Your little princesses are no angels. If they are on MySpace - be aware!!
  • 48-year-old Tennessee man arrested for soliciting “12-year-old girl” online for sex
  • 22-year-old man from Kentucky showed up at an area Wal-mart, expecting to meet a 15-year-old girl, instead, he was met by officers
  • A 22-year-old trooper with the Colorado State Patrol tried to convince what he thought was a 14-year-old girl on the Internet to have a sexual relationship with him; a 52-year-old TSA official was arrested for the same thing
  • A 22-year-old man from Nevada was jailed on charges of child sex abuse and child pornography - He met his alleged victims through MySpace.com

Obviously I don’t have to remind you, parents, that these guys are real and do exist. They are out there – but you have help. PC Pandora monitoring software can help you keep your kids safe online and away from pervos like these… (more…)