Are Predators Waiting, Watching, and Engaging on Your Child's Social Networking Sites?
MySpace and other social networking sites offer thriving communities where young people engage in countless hours of banal chatter and photo sharing. Not coincidentally, these social networking sites also have become hangouts for child predators, child pornographers, and other cybercriminals.
To stay one step ahead of authorities, these cybercriminals use tricks to conceal their identities online. One of the most common is lying about their ages, claiming to be younger than they are. And to hide their IP addresses and locations, predators and other cybercriminals often piggyback on Wi-Fi connections or use proxy servers. They use decentralized peer-to-peer networks to prevent material from being tracked to a specific server. They also use encryption to allow them to keep online chats private from those policing the Web. When law enforcement, ISPs, and others take down the websites of these pedophiles, predators, and cybercriminals, it's not long before they're back up, hosted by a different service.
Skillful with their cell phones, instant messaging accounts, and with access to personal computers at home and school, young people are easy targets for sexual predators. Too many of them are ready and willing to share personal information online without a thought to how it might be misused by others. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children reports that one in five kids online has been solicited or enticed. Reports of child pornography on the center's CyberTipline have increased six of the last seven years.
Business and technology professionals may think of online child safety as a family issue, but it's a workplace issue, too. Social networks aren't just a teen phenomenon. A recent survey by Web filtering company, Websense, found that 8% of respondents visit social networking sites while at work. Companies can use Web filters to limit access to the sites, though Websense says its customers don't seem overly concerned. Whiling away company time on social networks is a productivity issue; luring children for sex is a criminal one.
There's little evidence that sexual predators are trolling from workplace personal computers, but it's been known to happen. In 2003, a Cincinnati-area police chief admitted to soliciting sex from someone he thought was a 15-year-old, using his work computer. And a deputy press secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, arrested in March
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Spam is a scourge nearly as old as the Internet. In fact, the first spam was sent many years before the term was even used.
by Paul Marriss
So far today I have won several million dollars on different national lotteries, got a string of "hot girls" all begging
by Jae Baeli
How Spammers Really Make Money
Whenever my email box fills up, I have to wonder: what are these spammers thinking? Do they
by ARC IDEA CO
What is Spam?
Have you ever encounter numerous mails starts flooding your mail box that advertise things that you do not
The scourge of the electronic world
Anyone who is connected to the Internet has likely encountered spam. And if you've seen
View All Articles on:
Spam explained
Add your voice
Know something about Spam explained?
We want to hear your view.
Write now!
Featured Partner
The Life in the Bible Institute's mission is to educate the general public about the value and importance of reading ...more
hide