Chatroulette Takes Sexting to a New Level

A Disturbing New Phenomenon and How To Deal With It

If you haven’t heard of Chatroulette.com or seen it first hand, the information I’m about to share with you will leave you in shock – especially if you have children.

Chatroulette in a Nutshell

Chatroulette is a website in which you (or your child) are literally matched up with random strangers on the Internet.  When matched up, you will be sharing a live video stream with one another using your respective webcams.  You can also share a live audio conversation or text chat – much like you see in a traditional online chat room.  At the top of the webpage there is a “Next” button.  When this button is clicked, the website searches for a “random stranger” (the website’s words, not mine) to connect you with.  When the web service finds a random stranger to connect you with, they will be broadcasted live via their webcam.  You will simultaneously be broadcasted to them via your own webcam.  You can see on the website both the other person, as well as yourself.  There are no filters.  There are no parental controls.  There are no limits.  Any child, adult or sexual predator can use this website.  They could be wearing anything or nothing at all and doing literally anything when they come onscreen.  What you will see is shocking.

I have visited the website only once and for less than 3 minutes.  I recorded that visit and have shared that video below.  I have not clipped the video.  I have not edited the video in anyway (except to significantly blur one of the “random strangers” performing a sexual act for whomever the website randomly connected him with).  I wanted my readers to experience the website in an authenticate way without being subjected to the blatant pornography performed by a live, “random stranger”.

Porn in the Classroom

According to Alexa.com, a popular Internet traffic analysis company owned by Amazon.com, Chatroulette is now one of the most popular websites on the web.  So where are all of the site visitors coming from and who is using the website? As of today, 12% of Chatroulette visitors came to the site from Facebook.  The most common location of a person that is using the website…  school! You read that correctly.  The website is not filtered out by traditional filtering software used by most parents or schools.

How to Block Chatroulette

Needless to say, the most important thing you can do is to speak to your children and make sure that they clearly understand your expectations and values.  But having a back up plan is a must.  You will have to get a bit creative to block this website until parental control software catches up with this new phenomenon.  The following is the process to follow for blocking a website if you have a PC running on Windows (I welcome Comments to this post if you are familiar with a similar tactic for a Mac).

Windows uses something called a HOSTS file to maintain a personal list of web addresses. Any time a request is made for a URL (website), the HOSTS file will be checked first.  You can easily and effectively block access to a website – without any special software – by adding it to your Windows HOSTS file. The process that I will describe below will work regardless of the Internet browser that you, your child or your students use.

Step 1: Go to your HOSTS file which is located at:

C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC for windows Vista and XP
C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC for Windows 2k
C:\WINDOWS for Windows 98 and ME

Step 2: Open HOSTS with Notepad.  The default Windows HOSTS looks exactly like this:

# Copyright © 1993-1999 Microsoft Corp.
#
# This is a sample HOSTS file used by Microsoft TCP/IP for Windows.
#
# This file contains the mappings of IP addresses to host names. Each
# entry should be kept on an individual line. The IP address should
# be placed in the first column followed by the corresponding host name.
# The IP address and the host name should be separated by at least one
# space.
#
# Additionally, comments (such as these) may be inserted on individual
# lines or following the machine name denoted by a “#” symbol.
#
# For example:
#
# 102.54.94.97 rhino.acme.com # source server
# 38.25.63.10 x.acme.com # x client host
#
127.0.0.1 localhost

Step 3: Directly under the line that says 127.0.0.1 Localhost, you will want to type:

127.0.0.1 chatroulette.com
127.0.0.1 www.chatroulette.com

Step 4: Close Notepad and answer “Yes” when prompted.

Step 5: Reboot your computer and attempt to access your now blocked website. You should see a “Cannot find server” or a DNS Error saying: “The page cannot be displayed”.

Without getting into too technical of an explanation of what you are doing, this process basically tells your computer to look for the website on your computer instead of on the Internet.  It creates a loop so that your child never hit the Chatroulette website and therefore effectively blocks it.  You can follow the same procedure to block other websites as well.

The Internet and mobile phones can be wonderful things with tremendous utility but they do present risks.  Talk to your child about your expectations using this Internet & Mobile Safety Pledge as your guide and monitor how, when and who they are talking too online.  With disturbing trends like Chatroulette popping up so often, parents and teachers need to be diligent.

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______________________________________________________________

Tim Woda is a passionate advocate for protecting children from today’s scariest digital dangers – cyberbullying, sexting and predators. He co-founded KidSafe, is the author of Keeping Kids Safe: A Guide for Parents of Social and Mobile Children and is a frequent public speaker on the topic.

Copyright © 2009 Tim Woda

Entrepreneurs Take On Sexting and Child Safety Online

Parents’ concern for their children’s risky behavior with new technologies is an untapped market

Last year, Northern Virginia entrepreneur Steve Woda experienced an incident that seems all too common in the Internet Age: A young member of his extended family was contacted online by a suspicious adult. While the family member was not harmed, it forced Woda and his family to think about ways to prevent the new technologies their kids use—such as social networking and text messages—from opening doors to sexual predators. But he didn’t just think about what his own family could do. He and his brother Tim started a business to help parents monitor their children’s use of the Internet, text messages, and cellphones.

Woda’s KidSafe.me is one of several businesses that have recently joined the battle against “sexting”—a relatively new phenomenon involving teenagers sending and receiving sexually explicit messages and images via their cellphones. Television is helping stir the pot; a recent episode of the Tyra Banks Show featured stern adults reading the salacious details of teenage girls’ text messages to a shocked audience. On Good Morning America, Diane Sawyer declared that sexting has reached “epidemic proportions.”

That description might sound over the top, but there is at least some evidence that sexting has become widespread. According to a survey by the Associated Press and MTV released December 3, 30 percent of 14-to-24-year-olds have sent or received nude photos through cellphones or the Internet. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Democratic congresswoman from Florida, introduced an antisexting bill to the House in March that claimed, “One in 5 teenagers…used their cell phones to send explicit photos of themselves to a peer.”

The outrage over sexting has created controversy over whether the laws meant to protect minors have gone too far. The district attorney in Wyoming County, Pa., threatened to bring child pornography charges against three teenage girls who took seminude photos of themselves—but did not send the photos—on cellphones that were later confiscated. In March, the ACLU came to the defense of the three girls, suing the prosecutor for allegedly violating their right to freedom of expression. Earlier this year, Vermont legislators relaxed antisexting laws concerning minors after the state’s chief prosecutor argued that teenagers shouldn’t be pinned as sex offenders. “It’s become a bit of a panic,” says Woda. He’s not taking sides on exactly what the right legal response to the problem should be. “I don’t know if tightening the laws is the right thing. As a parent, you don’t want to rely on that.”

Woda thought parents, instead of depending on the law, would want tools to track what their kids are up to online. Closely related to the sexting scare have been news reports of teens committing suicide after “cyberbullies” revealed embarrassing details about them online. Woda had already worked in the world of online safety when he started buySAFE in 2000, a company that certifies online merchants and guarantees transactions so customers don’t have to fear fraud. Since June, Woda and a small team have been working on KidSafe, which he hopes to launch as both an online program and mobile application in early 2010. KidSafe, which is currently in beta testing, looks like the phone bill that parents wish they had. When the parent logs in to the program, KidSafe displays who texts or calls their child most often, mines publicly available information in order to identify those people, shows if the kid is texting or calling more frequently than the national average, and flags text messages that might contain suspicious words, like references to sex or drugs. A database of more than 10,000 instances of textspeak and emoticons identifies code words that might confound parents. The number eight, for example, is commonly used in text messages as a stand-in for oral sex, says Woda. He is also working to link the program to social networking sites so it can display similar data about how much time a child is spending on sites like Facebook and if he or is she is receiving suspicious messages there.

But KidSafe can access the sensitive information on a phone or social networking account only if the parent can access the phone and install the KidSafe application or provide the user name and password for a Facebook account. More mature teenagers with their own disposable income could easily evade the program. “The parent of the 15- or 16-year-old is not the perfect customer. It’s the parent of the child who is saying, ‘Can I get a phone?’” says Woda. The parent then could strike a deal with the child—he or she only gets the phone if it contains KidSafe.

Woda concedes that kids are often more tech-savvy than their parents, so no tool can provide perfect oversight. But parents’ concern over sexting, cyberbullying, and other online threats is driving businesses to improve protection. Several other start-ups are now competing to offer products to help parents keep tabs on their kids. SafetyWeb, in the process of being launched by Mike Clark, a former executive at Photobucket, is a website that will scour the Web to find any trouble a child or teenager may have gotten into online, such as friending a sex offender or cyberbullying classmates. SafetyWeb recently raised money from venture capital firm Battery Ventures. Woda says his team is trying to a develop a system for KidSafe that could similarly search for potential threats in publicly available information. Some companies claim to have those tools in place already. ReputationDefender is a Silicon Valley-based company started in 2006 whose services include finding and destroying “inaccurate, inappropriate, hurtful, and slanderous information” online. Its MyChild product claims to defend a child or teen’s online reputation for $14.95 a month.

The difficulty for these businesses is similar to the difficulties facing parents. It’s a challenge to keep up with kids who are finding new websites and developing new lingo all the time. “The way kids are communicating is changing faster than the market can adapt,” says Woda.

Reprint from U.S. News & World Report, by Matthew Bandyk

Add to: Facebook | Digg | Del.icio.us | Stumbleupon | Reddit | Blinklist | Twitter | Technorati | Yahoo Buzz | Newsvine

______________________________________________________________

Tim Woda is a passionate advocate for protecting children from today’s scariest digital dangers – cyberbullying, sexting and predators. He co-founded KidSafe, is the author of Keeping Kids Safe: A Guide for Parents of Social and Mobile Children and is a frequent public speaker on the topic.

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