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#1 Myspace.com Sued

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 12:56 pm
by Rukia
Oh my god...
NEW YORK — MySpace.com, the top online teen hangout, said on Tuesday it will bolster protection for minors amid a flurry of complaints about sexual predators prowling the site and a lawsuit filed on Monday by a teenage girl charging it with negligent security practices.

By next week, members over 18 years old would have to know the e-mail or first and last name of any 14- to 15-year-old member whom they want to contact, the company said.

Any of MySpace's more than 85 million members would also be able to choose to hide their online profiles from strangers and only make them viewable to pre-approved friends, the company said.

"We're going to build a foundation of safety and security so that social networking is a safe place and a well-lit community," Hemanshu Nigam, chief security officer of News Corp. (NWS) unit Fox Interactive Media, told Reuters.

A 14-year-old girl from Austin, Texas, on Monday sued MySpace and its owner, News Corp., for $30 million, saying she was sexually assaulted by a 19-year-old man she met on the site.

The suit charges the company with failing to take enough precautions to protect minors from sexual predators.
MySpace said it was reviewing the lawsuit, and had for several months been developing safety measures that would make it more difficult for strangers to contact minors using the site.

The company is scheduled to present its plans on Thursday at an event sponsored by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.

MIXED BLESSING

The social networking site, where teens post elaborate profiles of their lives and interests, meet new people and share their taste in new music, has become one of the Internet's fastest growing properties since News Corp. purchased it for $580 million last year.

The purchase made News Corp. head Rupert Murdoch the toast of Wall Street at a time when rivals fretted about losing television viewers and newspapers readers to the Internet and video games.

But its early success has been tempered by reports of sexual predators on the prowl for children on the site.

In March two men were arrested in Connecticut and charged with having illegal sexual contact with young girls — one 11 years old and the other 14 — they contacted through MySpace.

The minimum age for MySpace membership is 14, the company said, but the requirement is hard to enforce with existing technology, Nigam said.

The Texas suit "alleges that MySpace.com had full knowledge that sexual predators were contacting young children on the Web site but did nothing to stop it," according to a statement by law firm Barry & Loew LLP, which is representing the girl.

A News Corp. spokeswoman said the company had no immediate comment on the charges.

In response to the March attacks and subsequent public outcry, MySpace in May hired Nigam, a former prosecutor against Internet child exploitation at the U.S. Justice Department, to lead security efforts.

MySpace said its advertising policy will also be altered to target appropriate age groups. For instance, ads for mature online dating sites will not be presented to minors.
A Texas woman has filed a $30m lawsuit against MySpace.com after her 14-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by someone she met through the site.

The suit alleges that MySpace does not do enough to protect its under-age users, according to a report in the Austin American Statesman, and includes news reports of other sexual assaults that took place after people met on the MySpace network.
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The lawyer representing the family, Adam Loewy, told the newspaper: "MySpace is more concerned about making money than protecting children online."

"We feel that one per cent of that is the bare minimum, that they should compensate the girl for their failure to protect her online when they knew sexual predators were on that site," he said.

He argues that none of the registration information the site requires needs to be true, and nothing is done to verify a user's age.

MySpace.com's chief security officer Hemanshu Nigam issued a statement saying: "We take aggressive measures to protect our members. We encourage everyone on the internet to engage in smart web practices and have open family dialogue about how to apply offline lessons in the online world." ®
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,200360,00.html

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/06/20/myspace_sued/

#2

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 1:08 pm
by Rukia
This girl is fourteen fucking years old. She's living in a world of internet sex preditors....


FOR CHRIST'S SAKE GROW THE FUCK UP YOU TWIT!


Jesus... there wouldn't be any cases of teens being abducted if they would use their head for something more than to grow hair..... shit.

The little bitch probably said she was 17-18 not to mention:

Blonde_QT1531: Hey baby... I can't wait till we meet in RL.
HoTxRocker19: I kno. i bet ur good in the sack *wink*
Blonde_QT1531: may b... that's for me to kno and u to find out.
Blonde_QT1531: hehe


AAAAARRRGGGH!

#3

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 1:17 pm
by LadyTevar
And she probably believed with all her heart that she was truly in love with the guy. :roll:

#4

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 5:03 pm
by Mayabird
People ask me why I boycott Myspace, LiveJournal, high school dances, etc. It's not just because I find it abhorrant and disgusting. It's to protect myself from having to face the chasm of idiocy. I don't want to stare into the abyss and see stupidity staring blankly back at me.

#5

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 6:56 pm
by Scottish Ninja
At my aunt's wedding last month...

Me (to one cousin, who doesn't have a MySpace account): "Don't feel bad. I don't use MySpace, and I have higher self-esteem for it."
Other Cousin: "Yeah, that's probably true."

#6

Posted: Thu Jun 22, 2006 10:59 pm
by Stofsk
Mayabird wrote:People ask me why I boycott Myspace, LiveJournal, high school dances, etc.
What's your problem with high school dances?
It's not just because I find it abhorrant and disgusting. It's to protect myself from having to face the chasm of idiocy. I don't want to stare into the abyss and see stupidity staring blankly back at me.
:lol:

That's one of the best paraphrasing of a Nietzche quote I've read. Another one was "It's like staring into the abyss and the abyss farts in your face."

#7

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2006 10:15 pm
by Mayabird
Stofsk wrote:
That's one of the best paraphrasing of a Nietzche quote I've read. Another one was "It's like staring into the abyss and the abyss farts in your face."
Aww, thanks.
People ask me why I boycott Myspace, LiveJournal, high school dances, etc.
What's your problem with high school dances?
Long story including but limited to four drum majors, a ten minute memory gap, societal rot, and a fake election.