Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close

CITIZEN JOURNALISM: A web of real-world threats

Crisp Thinking's NetModerator Crisp Thinking's NetModerator
Social Networks
facebookFacebook
twitterTwitter

Are the real world and the cyberworld on a cultural collision course? There was a time when smooching at the drive-in and girlie magazines were parents' worst nightmares. Times have changed. These days, sex education has replaced gym class and health education. Home economics? Forget about it.

News these days is about the untoward realities of the cyberworld leaving students thinking they have no choice but to kill themselves after being bullied or harassed online or on their cell phones. And sexting -- sending sexually explicit text messages or images -- which youths use as another form of bullying, quickly has become part of the urban lexicon.

In the real world, parents and teachers can use the V-chip in televisions large and small to keep sexually and violently explicit content at bay. In the virtual world, if parents aren't vigilant, operators of virtual worlds will look the other way.

And just as tweens, teens and college students get busy with those new Christmas netbooks and PCs, up pops the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) with words of warning.

The FTC recently released a report, "Virtual Worlds and Kids: Mapping the Risks," which says youths can easily access adult content online through social-networking sites.

For teachers and parents not yet in the know, a brief course: The FTC considers sexually explicit content to include full or partial nudity and sexual acts (including sexual acts with minors). Violently explicit content includes animations involving blood, excessive blood or mutilation, violence against minors or animals, aggressive conflict, or graphic discussions or portrayals of suicide on virtual worlds.

Here's what the FTC did. It examined 27 virtual sites and found that while most of the adult content appeared in virtual worlds geared for adults and teens, some appeared in sites considered child-oriented. The report gives 10 of the sites a low rating for explicit content; five are rated heavy, and four are moderate. Eight virtual worlds had zero content.

The report urges parents and operators to be more diligent and warns that "some virtual worlds designed for teens and adults allow -- or even encourage -- younger children to get around the worlds' minimum age requirements."

The report includes other warnings for parents:

• Don't rely on age-screening mechanisms. Despite stated age restrictions, underage children may still access teen- and adult-oriented virtual sites by falsifying their ages to evade age-screening mechanisms.

Story Continues →

About the Author
Deborah Simmons

Deborah Simmons

Award-winning opinion writer Deborah Simmons is a senior correspondent who reports on City Hall and writes about education, culture, sports and family-related topics. Mrs. Simmons has worked at several newspapers, and since joining The Washington Times in 1985, has served as editorial-page editor and features editor and on the metro desk. She has taught copy editing at the University of ...

Happening Now

Click for more stories

Most Read

    Independent voices from the TWT Communities

    Bill Kelly's Truth Squad

    A conservative satirist takes on the worlds of politics and entertainment in humorous pursuit of truth, justice, and all things America.

    Payne-Full Living

    Join Matt on weekly adventures in all forms as he pushes his comfort levels in attempt to stimulate body, mind, and soul.

    Omkara World

    Join the Evolution with Adam Omkara! Empowering, cutting edge mind/body/spirit and health dialogue.