SAFTEY
        FOR
        CHILDREN ON THE
        INTERNET


          

        Over the past few years,with the growing interest, use and dependency on computers there are more children on the Internet. With this "tool" now readily available to children through their homes and schools more and more children are also being left alone to investigate them Internet on their own. This leaves them wide open to the perils of people that are Stalking the "net" looking for these children, seeking them out and then taking advantage of their innocence. Cyberspace poses a particular threat to children because they often sign on to the Internet unsupervised and can enter chatrooms, where computer users hold typewritten conversations. Although there is no way to know how many children are contacted by pedophiles or are exposed to pornography through the Internet, law-enforcement officials say it is a growing problem. By using the Internet, pedophiles can remain anonymous and hidden from view,making it easier to seduce children and set up meetings. Internet-savvy children can also easily access online pornography. "Individuals who seek children to sexually exploit and victimize them are also a mouse click away," said Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., who worked with the Justice Department to draft the bill. "Cyberpredators often cruise the Internet in search of lonely, curious or trusting young people. Sex offenders who prey on children no longer need to hang out in parks or malls or schoolyards. On June 12th, 1998 the House on approved a bill to crack down on pedophiles that use the Internet to entice children sexually, making prosecutions easier and toughening prison sentences. This legislation would prohibit "contacting" a minor through an online service, like the Internet or engaging in sexual activity and would establish a three-year minimum sentence for using a computer to do so. Under current federal law, prosecutors must prove that a pedophile persuaded or forced a child into a sexual act, a situation that has made it difficult to convict offenders. The bill would also make it a federal crime to knowingly transfer obscene materials to a minor over the Internet. To stop sexual and commercial predators who seek out children online, a " the Safe Playground Law,"which would make it a federal crime for an adult to impersonate a child online in any site declared a Safe Playground. Adults on children's sites would be required to identify themselves as adults. This means. "If you impersonate a child, you intend to defraud a child and we won't deal with that. What happens between consenting adults is one thing, but children require special circumstances, and it's incumbent upon adults to behave accordingly." The problem, to date, is intractable. On one hand, how do online services create a safe place for children to meet and play together while at the same time protecting them from pedophiles and unscrupulous marketers who often pose as children? On the other, how can we keep children away from pornographic adult sites, which are accessible at the click of a mouse? Today's solutions to the pornography problem, at least, are not working very well. For example, "filtering" programs like Cybersitter, Net Nanny and Cyberpatrol are supposed to block access to a constantly updated list of "adult" World Wide Web sites. But an article in Consumer Reports noted that all were relatively easy to circumvent.Even if blocking programs worked, they do not begin to address the problem of how to keep adults from asking their identities in online settings like chat rooms, where children can be lured unwittingly into sexual conversations or even meetings, or coerced into commercial transactions. Thomas Morgan, a longtime online executive and the president of Nvolve Inc., a company that develops online communities, has devised a solution he calls the Safe Playgrounds Initiative. He has been discussing it privately for several months with various organizations, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group, and the Children's Advertising Review Unit of the Better Business Bureau. Morgan is now going public with the initiative, which he developed after deciding to build an online community for children and realizing that all the security measures were too complex or constricting. For example, America Online's "Kids Only" site displays many warnings and safety tips, but its "pager" system, which allows children to summon a monitor if they feel threatened online, is hopelessly backed up. Many users report waiting half an hour or longer for a monitor to respond. And to protect its young users and its reputation as a family company, the popular Disney Web site allows children to communicate only inside its Disney Blast area, which not only requires registration but asks parents to specify with whom their children are allowed to communicate. "Parents can drop the restriction if they want, " said Jake Winebaum, president of Disney Online. "But if they do, we educate them about the consequences of their decision." Morgan is hoping to change the rules of engagement, and thus the consequences as well. "We wanted children to be able to go to places on the Web where they can feel safe to explore and play," Morgan said. "We also wanted something that doesn't require every consumer to be a Web genius -- something simple, clean and easily applied." The result was Safe Playgrounds, which Morgan is now asking industry executives and politicians to support. Its tenets are:To develop a "kid's browser" that includes an unbreakable bit of software code that Morgan is calling a G-bit, for general audience. This identifies the user as someone who is either under 18 years old or does not want to see adult material. Web publishers then rate and code their own sites, and anyone who shows up at an adult site with this G-bit will be denied access. To stop sexual and commercial predators who seek out children online, by means of what Morgan calls the Safe Playground Law, which would make it a federal crime for an adult to impersonate a child online in any site declared a Safe Playground. Adults on children's sites would be required to identify themselves as adults. To develop Safe Playground qualification criteria, including trained monitors in chat rooms to keep an eye peeled for predators; a guarantee that no child's full name, physical address or personal e-mail address will ever be revealed; an agreement to inform parents when sites are collecting data about youngsters, and an agreement to display only clearly identified, age-appropriate, noncoercive advertising messages. "The Safe Playground criteria are very closely in sync and may even surpass what we're trying to get the industry to do," said Elizabeth La Scoutx, vice president of the Council of Better Business Bureaus and the director of its Children's Advertising Review Unit. Beleaguered executives like Disney's Winebaum predict that enacting an Initiative like Safe Playgrounds will be difficult, but he is also adamant that an industrywide, mandatory solution is "the only way to solve the problem on the scale that's required." Lori Fena, the chairman of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, agreed. "No one wants to pay to babyproof++ the Net, but everybody is willing to support creating child-safe areas like playgrounds in the real world," she said. "This initiative is the most sane thing I've seen yet -- socially, legally and economically. If the goal is to go after predatory behavior by adults,then let's go for it." Until such time that the Internet CAN be patrolled and made safe for children it is the responsibility of the parent to make sure that the child is kept safe while on line. Guidelines should be set up between the parent and the child. When (s)he is allowed to use the computer, where they are allowed to go, whom they are allowed to speak to and most importantly that at no time should they ever give out any personal information about themselves. If someone does ask them something that they feel uncomfortable about they should get a parent or adult at ONCE and report this information. Also, if you are the parent of a child on the Internet, it is important to know the children are being educated to use computers, while you the parents are being left behind. Join the child, learn the basics and know more about the use and misuse of this industry that is growing and will be one of the most important to everyone's lives in the coming millennium.




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