Cuomo-backed proposal can increase cyber safety
February 24, 2008Attorney general has gotten behind strong and much-needed legislation.
February 24, 2008
Star Gazette , NY
In a perfect world, social Web sites would police the people who join them and bar sexual predators from preying on other Internet users, especially kids. However, that’s a matter of conscience for each site to act upon, and because morals are hard to enforce on Web site owners, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo is trying to do the next best thing.
His support for legislation to ban sexual predators from using sites such as the wildly popular MySpace and Facebook is a critical step toward putting the ultimate responsibility for Internet use on the users themselves. The proposal would make New York the first state in the nation to ban sexual predators from Internet social sites, and it also would expand New York’s sex offender registry to include Internet information such as screen names and e-mail addresses.
The bill already is well on its way to approval, having unanimously passed the Senate on Feb. 12. Cuomo, a Democrat, now needs the Assembly, controlled by his own party, to go along with the measure. The Assembly, which can be notoriously slow in deliberating bills approved by the Republican-dominated Senate, should give this proposal a speedy OK so Gov. Spitzer can sign it into law quickly.
Cuomo deserves credit for pursuing this measure. It’s really the next and most forceful step in his attempt to make social Web sites a safer place for kids to frequent the Internet. Nearly one year ago, Cuomo recruited other state attorney generals to work with him and with MySpace to get the social networking site to provide law enforcement with the identities of registered sex offenders who MySpace had detected and removed from its site.
This past fall, Cuomo pressured Facebook to work with his office on a new method of protecting its users from sexually predatory users. The agreement with Facebook also forced the social networking site to shield members from obscene material and harassment, a move that came after investigators posed online as young teens. The solicitations that followed were enough to convince Facebook to cooperate.
As a result, Facebook and MySpace have helped lead the way in bringing about a degree of self-reform in the social network industry, but that’s only part of the job. The legislation Cuomo is pushing, called the Electronic Security and Targeting of Online Predators Act — nicknamed e-STOP — puts the onus on users to obey the law, not use the Internet to sexually exploit children and, if they are registered sex offenders, to include Internet information with the state.
However, the law can only go so far, and parents and kids themselves have a responsibility to protect themselves on the Internet by not sharing personal information with strangers that could lead to them tracking down where a child might live. Kids also must use privacy settings to block unauthorized use of their accounts, and they should report all suspicious online behavior or messages they see, either to an adult or authorities.
Sitting at a computer keyboard may seem rather harmless, but with the wrong keystrokes, a child can make herself or himself a target for others. Cuomo’s law doesn’t remove all the risk of that happening, but it can certainly reduce it.
