Survey: Online sexual solicitations down
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060809/ap_on_hi_te/online_predators_3

NEW YORK - Fewer youths are receiving sexual solicitations over the 
Internet as they become smarter about where they hang out and with whom 
they communicate online, researchers said Wednesday.

The findings, from a telephone-based survey sponsored by the 
government-funded National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 
run counter to recent media reports and congressional hearings 
suggesting a growing danger of online predators as more youths turn to 
social-networking sites like MySpace.com.

"It may be signs people are paying (attention) to warnings they receive 
about online dangers," said Janis Wolak, one of the study's authors and 
a professor at the University of New Hampshire's Crimes Against Children 
Research Center. "They are being more cautious about who they are 
interacting with online."

But the study found that aggressive solicitations — the ones involving 
requests for contact by mail, by phone or in person — remained steady 
compared with a similar study five years earlier. And the report found 
growth in online harassment and unwanted exposure to pornography.

The report defines solicitation broadly as any request to engage in 
sexual activities or sexual talk or give personal sexual information — 
as long as it was unwanted or came from an adult. Not all requests were 
deemed by the youth as distressing.

In the latest study of online youths ages 10 to 17, conducted from March 
to June 2005 as MySpace began its rapid ascent, 13 percent of 
respondents reported a sexual solicitation, compared with 19 percent in 
a 1999-2000 survey. In both studies, about 4 percent reported aggressive 
solicitations.

Many of the contacts came from other teens rather than adults, and few 
rose to the level of predation, the survey found.

"A significant portion of what they are calling sexual solicitation is 
merely teens being teens," said Nancy Willard, an online safety expert 
who helps schools develop programs and who was not involved in the study.

She said the drop should demonstrate to parents and policymakers that 
"the dangers are real but they are not as significant as they have been 
hyped in recent months."

Parents, school administrators and law-enforcement authorities have been 
increasingly warning of online predators at sites like MySpace, whose 
youth-oriented visitors are encouraged to expand their circles of 
friends through messaging tools and personal profile pages.

Lawmakers have responded by trying to restrict access to MySpace and 
other social-networking sites from schools and libraries that receive 
certain federal funds. A bill the House overwhelmingly passed last month 
is pending in the Senate.

Driven largely by word of mouth, MySpace has grown astronomically since 
its launch in January 2004 and is now the second busiest in the United 
States, according to comScore Media Metrix. The site, owned by News 
Corp., registered its 100 millionth user Wednesday; about 20 percent are 
registered as minors, according to the company.

MySpace's usage was much smaller when the latest survey was conducted, 
but Wolak said she did not believe the conclusions would be different 
today. She said solicited kids had been engaging with strangers the same 
way, be it through a chat room, instant messaging or a social-networking 
site.

"People have fears that these crimes involve offenders and predators who 
look at these (social-networking) sites and then seek to identify these 
kids," Wolak said. "That's not really what's going on."

Researchers did find that in more than a quarter of the solicitations, 
youths were asked to submit sexual photographs of themselves, some of 
which may be a crime under federal child-pornography laws.

In general, youths responded to solicitations simply by leaving a Web 
site, blocking solicitors or ignoring them. Relatively few incidents, 
however, were reported to law enforcement or school administrators.

The survey of 1,500 children who had used the Internet at least once a 
month during the previous six months has a margin of sampling error of 
plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. Nearly 55,000 households were 
reached to find enough participants


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