http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=562&u=/ap/20050112/ap_on_hi_te/cyberbullies&printer=1

 
N.Y. County Tackles 'Cyberbullying' 

Wed Jan 12, 8:23 AM ET 

By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer 

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. - Westchester County has hired an expert on "cyberbullying" 
to talk to students, teachers, parents and police about young people who harass 
their peers with mean-spirited Web sites, hounding text messages, invasive 
cell-phone photos and other high-tech tools. 

Parry Aftab, executive director of wiredsafety.org, will conduct a "summit" on 
the issue Feb. 8 at the Westchester County Center, County Executive Andrew 
Spano announced Tuesday. 

She will be assisted by Spider-Man under an arrangement between her 
organization and Marvel Enterprises Inc. "Kids will listen to him," she said, 
pointing at a man in a Spidey outfit during a news conference. 

Aftab said that while schoolyard bullying has always been a problem among young 
teenagers, "We didn't have the power to communicate what we were doing to 700 
million people with a click." 

Aftab, whose organization is headquartered in Irvington, said examples of 
cyberbullying include "a Web site where children can vote for the ugliest, most 
unpopular or fattest girl in the school. It can involve sending private or very 
personal information or images to others or posting them online for the public 
to see. It can be annoying but otherwise harmless â or it can be dangerous, 
such as when it involves stalking and pornography." 

Spano said a key issue in dealing with such problems is how to involve law 
enforcement without violating free speech rights, especially since much of the 
harassment is generated at home rather than at school. 

"Kids, parents and schools need to know when to ignore it â just as 
schoolyard bullies are sometimes best ignored â and when to report it to law 
enforcement," he said. 

Last year, a video of two Scarsdale high school girls engaging in a sexual 
encounter was widely distributed on the Internet and no charges resulted. In 
2001, two Chappaqua high school boys escaped prosecution for allegedly 
operating an Internet site that listed girls' sexual secrets. 

"No matter how offensive or how repulsive the communications were between these 
boys, they are protected by the First Amendment," District Attorney Jeanine 
Pirro said at the time.
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