Advice for Chat Room Safety
A large amount has been written about dangers on the Internet,
but if your child is going to acquire in danger online,
probability are that it will be because of something
that happens in a chat room. Don’t be worried
Millions of children connect in chat and immediate
messaging every day and the overwhelming majority
is not wronged. Still, a number of the leads
reported to the National Center for Missing.
The vast majority of those started out in a chat
room, the fact that they
represent a tiny fraction of kids online is of no
conciliation to those children or their families.
The perpetrator lurks in a public chat
room looking for a child he thinks is vulnerable.
I use “he” because most sexual predators are male;
however, there have been cases of adult women using
the Internet to ask for underage boys and girls. When
he finds someone who seems vulnerable, he invites the
child into a private area of the chat room to get better
acquainted. Next, he comes with private
chat via an instant message service followed by e-mail, phone conversations
and, finally, a face-to-face meeting.
The practice isn’t unique to the United States.
The United Kingdom recently
experienced its first reported case of a child that was
seduced into a sexual relationship by an adult encountered
online. The girl is 13 and the man – who is now serving a
five-year jail sentence, is 33.
In this UK case, the initial contact took place in a chat
room and was followed by a daily exchange of e-mail, including
some in which the man sent the girl sexually explicit photographs.
There were also regular conversations on a mobile phone
and, finally, a series of meetings at his apartment, which
eventually led to sexual intercourse. After the third
meeting, the girl confided in her parents who contacted
the police. As is often the case, force wasn’t involved.
The vulnerable girl submitted to the man’s advances.
Children who are relatively
quiet in online chats are especially Targeted "Predators
like to go after kids who tend to express agreement in
chat rooms but not say a lot because they know that
these kids are vulnerable." It’s
like children who are on the sidelines on playgrounds.
The ones playing the game are already getting recognition. . The ones that aren’t are more likely to be lonely and happy
for whatever attention they can get.
And, of course, the predator doesn’t start by sexually
propositioning a child. His first tactic is to create a
comfort level, typically by posing as a young person about
the same age as the intended victim. Early in the process,
the predator might even send the child a photograph
of “himself” to reassure the child. Of course, it’s not really
a photo of the person engaged in the chat but of an attractive
child about the same age as the victim — possibly scanned from
a magazine — often engaged in a happy social activity
with parents, friends or siblings.
Sexual predators, according to Rodriquez, are often very
skilled at their crimes. “They know how to manipulate children,
he said. “They know their likes and dislikes and they
know what buttons to push.” And they’re patient. It sometimes
takes months to turn a contact from a chat room into a sexual
victim. And, even though these online relationships typically
begin with the child believing that he or she is communicating
with another child, it’s not uncommon for the predator to
eventually let the child know that he is “a bit older” than
he might have first indicated. Using phrases like, “how do
you feel about a `big brother’ or an `uncle,’ ” the adult prepares
the child for the eventual meeting where his age will become
obvious. Rodriquez said that some kids will cut off the
relationship the moment they realize they’re dealing with an
adult, but others will be flattered by it. Besides, it’s not
uncommon for predators to be attempting to seduce several
children at a time so even if the kid goes away, they have
other victims lined up.
In some cases, the child continues to believe that the person
on the other end of the chat sessions and e-mail is a child
up until the meeting. The adult might tell the unsuspecting
child, “My dad will pick you up,” so the will feels safe getting
into the adult’s car.
The chat itself is only a meeting
point. In many cases, the child and the perpetrator are together
in the chat room for a very short time and continue the
conversation via e-mail and other venues, including mobile phones.
In the UK and Europe. It's very common for teenagers to have
cell phones and unlike the United States of America; many
of those phones have short message system capabilities.
“It’s very popular,” “for kids to exchange messages
on their cell phones.” parents worries that would-be pedophiles
will use the same technology to reach out to kids. Another problem
with cell phones is that kids can use them away from home where
parents have no clue as to who they’re talking with.
If you have kids who chat online — and if you’re a parent you
probably do – you might be wondering how you can protect your
kids. The answer, safety experts, is
to try to keep in close touch with what your kids are doing
online. Be especially wary if they always keep the door shut
or turn off the monitor the moment you walk in the door. Still,
that might not be a sign of a serious problem, but of your
child’s desire to maintain privacy while chatting with other kids.
Parents urges to talk with their children about Internet
safety. Your kids might not like the conversation, but it’s worth
having and worth repeating once in awhile, even if your kids tell
you that they’re tired of hearing about it.
Office Monitoring operates an excellent Web site
(www.office-monitoring.com) that
provides parents with advice on how to recognize and prevent
problems that can arise in chat rooms. Although it’s aimed primarily
at the UK and Europe, there is plenty of good advice for those of
us on this side of the pond.
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