What you should know about the World Wide Web and Internet chatrooms:
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Chat rooms register more than 200,000 new members daily, and more than
60 million have registered to date, and a quarter of those users are teens.
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Many users misrepresent their ages on these sites.
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Many sites do not monitor or regulate the age parameters required to register.
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Some sites have been associated with murders in Baltimore and New Jersey, and
with child molestation cases in Texas, Connecticut, Hawaii and Califorina.
Assemblyman McDonough is sponsoring the following legislation:
A.1708 - Creates the crime of attempting to lure or entice a minor, which would protect
children from Internet predators who try to meet them in person.
A.6100 - Creates the Internet Protection Act to safeguard underage viewers from
distributors of explicit material and increase the punishments for criminals who use the Internet
to contact minors.
Internet Safety Tips:
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Keep computers in a family room so responsible adults can monitor Internet use and
online discussions.
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Be alert if children receive gifts or letters in the mail or unusual phone calls.
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Keep kids out of chat rooms or monitor their chats.
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See what Web sites children create online. Review the information and photographs that
are sent and received.
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Take occasional peeks at the computer screen while children are online.
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Review computer files. If confused by computer operations, ask a friend, relative or
co-worker to help.
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Let children know not to give out personal information such as phone numbers or addresses
over the Internet or via e-mail.
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Explain to children that people may not be who they claim to be and that some adults pretend
to be kids as a pretense to meet them outside the home.
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Encourage children to discuss their favorite Web sites and talk about what happens on the Internet,
including people they meet.
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