An article quoting an AP/MTV study on sexting (the act of sending sexually explicit messages and pictures via your cell phone or PDA) reports that kids are more involved in sexting than anyone thought they were. Even facing the possibility of felony level charges for manufacturing, distributing, and possessing child pornography, teens continue to send explicit images of themselves to others. They don't see it as a problem.
Well, it is a problem, and we need to get the message to our teens about the ramifications sending these types of images can cause. Teens need to understand that once you hit send you have lost control of the image or message you have sent. It falls under the control of the person who received it. If they send it to someone else, even more control is lost and so on... The reality is, once it is sent, the sender has lost total control and it could end up anywhere.
So, the message should be clear, unless anyone would send the image or text to their parents, teachers, minister, or boss, they shouldn't send it. Ignore this rule, or you think you can trust someone, it will come back to haunt you at some point in your life. Online storage of data seems unlimited and years from now you could be confronted about images or messages done long ago and asked questions about your judgment and if you are the best person for a position.
Think before you post anything.
More information can be found at www.internetsafetyconsulting.net
Friday, December 4, 2009
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