SIGN UP
FORGOT MY PASSWORD
GUYS

Is there a way to flirt without being obvious?

MORE
  • GUYS MAIN
  • GET A BF
    • CRUSH MUCH?
    • ICE BREAKERS
  • DATING 101
    • DUDES DECODED
    • CUTE DATE IDEAS
    • SPLITSVILLE
  • ASK BILL & DAVE
  • DEAR CAROL
  • WHAT GUYS THINK
  • SWEETIE
  • MEANIE
ADVICE

Jessie makes fun of...food allergies? Hmm.

MORE
  • ADVICE MAIN
  • IN THE NEWS
  • DEAR CAROL
  • FAMILY
  • FRIENDS
  • SCHOOL
  • TOUGH STUFF
  • ON THE JOB
    • GET STARTED
    • BABYSITTING
    • GOAL GETTER
    • DREAM JOB
  • DO GOOD
    • GET INSPIRED
    • TAKE ACTION
FUN STUFF

6 ways to make sure your next party rocks

MORE
  • FUN STUFF MAIN
  • STAR SIGNS
  • BLUSH MUCH?
  • SURVEY SAYS
  • CLUBS
  • ADVICE QUEENS
  • CRAFTS
  • RECIPES
  • CONTESTS
  • WINNERS
  • ROCK YOUR WEEKEND
  • YOU WROTE IT
ENTERTAINMENT

Book series you’ve gotta start this summer

MORE
  • ENTERTAINMENT MAIN
  • GOSSIP
  • STAR STYLE
  • GL EXCLUSIVES
  • EDITOR'S PICKS
  • BOOK CLUB
STYLE

Exactly what to wear to your summer job interview

MORE
  • STYLE MAIN
  • FASHION
    • CUTE & CHEAP
    • STYLE 911
    • TRENDS WE HEART
  • BEAUTY
    • BEAUTY SPY
    • BEAUTY TRENDS
    • BEAUTY 911
    • HAIR STYLES
    • HAIR TIPS
    • SKINCARE
  • HOW TO
  • FAB UP YOUR LIFE
HEALTH & FITNESS

Train yourself to do the splits

MORE
  • HEALTH & FITNESS MAIN
  • WORKOUTS
  • RECIPES
  • EAT RIGHT
  • HEALTHY STUFF WE HEART
  • YOUR BOD
    • SKIN
    • HAIR
    • BOOBS
    • DOWN THERE
    • PERIODS, PERIOD
    • EVERYTHING ELSE
QUIZZES

Who's your celeb style clone?

MORE
MAG

Show some #GLcrew love, babes!

MORE
  • MAG MAIN
  • INSIDE THIS ISSUE
  • COVER SHOOT
  • BEHIND THE SCENES
  • BE IN THE MAG
  • EDITOR'S BLOG
  • OUR BOOKS
  • ABOUT US
VIDEO

Bella Thorne rocks WAT-AAH!'s Move Your Body Flash Mob

MORE
avatar

Becca G.

is modding

Lauren R.

is modding

Lynae P.

is modding

 
 
 

GL PROFILES

More Friends = More Fun

MY ACCOUNT

MY PROFILE

CREATE A PROFILE

 
 

GL
Tweets !

1 HOURS AGO How to make your next party really rock: Click Here!

13 HOURS AGO 10 things you can ALWAYS tell your mom: Click Here!

14 HOURS AGO 3 ways to work your way out of an awkward sitch with your crush: Click Here!

 
 
 
Girl's Life Newsletters

sponsored links

OFF MENU PAGES | TOUGH STUFF | FEELING TROUBLED?

78 Comments | Add Yours

Cyberspace Safety

 

Check these out, too...

  • How to deal with grief: A lesson from Sesame Street
  • The truth about teens and prescription pills
  • Yeah, that's not funny: Twitter trolls trend #CuttingForBieber
  • Another school shooting. What's next?
  • YOLO or "Oh, no"? When taking a risk is the right thing to do
Imagine you’re on MySpace and meet a totally cool guy who says he’s your age, lives nearby and has tons of things in common with you. Would you let him into your life—or remember that he’s a complete stranger?

Now, with a few keystrokes, you can reach out to the world. So if you’re going to tangle with the Web, you have to protect yourself from potential risks. And there are plenty.

The most dangerous areas on the Web are probably your faves: chatrooms, blogs and IMs. But, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), that’s where at least one in five kids, ages 10 through 17, receive sexual solicitations every year. Still, most teens think, “How unsafe could it be if I’m sitting online, with my mom and dad in the next room?” Uh, very.

Say you’re hanging out on a social networking site, like Facebook, Friendster, Twitter or MySpace, where you can blog, chat, IM and exchange photos. You think you’re just finger-yappin’ away with another teen but, in reality, you could be talking to—gulp!—one of the many child predators on teen sites looking for his next victim.

Danielle Yates, communications director for The Internet Education Foundation, explains, “Teens just don’t realize the 14-year-old they’re supposedly talking to could just as easily be a 40-year-old man.” Since anyone over 14 can log on to MySpace (while Facebook only requires you to be 13), who knows who’s really out there?

You might think, “But those are teen sites, so only kids use them.” And that’s exactly why predators log on—so they can get tons of information about you. Yikes! Think about it: in your member profile, at a bare minimum, you probably have your name, city and age. Most teens, though, add much more, like hobbies, birthdate, e-mail address, photos, names of friends and daily journal entries.

And why not? If you’re trying to make friends online, you figure you have to describe who you are, right? Problem is, creeps may be reading all about you and could easily track you through your info. Detective Frank Dannahey of the Rocky Hill Police Department in Middletown, Conn., is an expert in online child predators: “Kids think they’re safe on these sites because they’re very naive and trusting. That’s a nice quality, but for going online, it’s not a good thing.”

Staca Urie, manager of Outreach for Netsmartz, explains, “Many teens have a lack of awareness of the magnitude of the Internet—that it really is the World Wide Web. They figure if there are millions of profiles and blogs out there, ‘Who is actually going to see mine?’ But nobody is safe.”

Shockingly, Detective Dannahey has found that most teens using MySpace do not know everyone on their “friends list,” which allows a visitor full access to personal info.

Teens think victimization happens to other kids and that it would never happen to them. “But if a bad guy you meet online finds out where you are and flies or drives for hours to meet you, he’s not going home without getting what he wants—even if he has to force you,” says the detective.

Many girls think sites like MySpace have a strict screening process so sickos can’t log on…right? “They’re doing all they can, like removing inappropriate material but, unfortunately, there’s no way to keep them all off. It’s up to every girl to protect herself online. Nobody else can ensure her safety, not even the police,” says Dannahey.

Wouldn’t it be obvious, though, if you were talking to someone who had evil intentions? Not always. “These guys are good at it. They will be really nice and offer gifts, then casually ask for your address to send the gifts—and kids give it out. That’s the ‘grooming process’ where they put you in a comfort zone so you trust them enough that they can eventually commit a crime against you,” the detective explains. Another clue you’re chatting with a predator is if he asks questions like, “Are you home alone?” or, “Where are your parents right now?”

To pedophiles, going online to find potential victims is “not their hobby—it’s their life,” says Urie, adding, “It’s something they are serious, vigorous and persistent about. They spend hours a day developing an online persona that will appeal to a child.” And the more info you’ve put on your personal page, blogs, surveys or chatrooms, the more info they have to make you trust them online.

It’s impossible to know how many online predators exist, but Dannahey says there are more than the police can go after. What they do know is that they are usually white males from age 26 to over 40. “Online solicitations knows no boundaries,” says Detective Dannahey. “I don’t care if you’re from a rural or urban community, rich or poor. They’re looking for vulnerable kids. “Unfortunately, these crimes are usually not reported because, once kids are sexually assaulted after meeting with a stranger, they are so embarrassed and humiliated that they feel they really screwed up and their parents will kill them. What may be even scarier is that some of these guys don’t even contact you online. They just look at your personal page, and figure out who you are and where to find you.”

Despite the dangers, Dannahey is a supporter of kids using the Internet. “If you prohibit kids from using MySpace, they’ll find a more secretive way to do it. That would be even more dangerous.”

“These sites bring a lot of benefits to children,” adds Yates, “like experiencing new ways to socialize, gather information and use technology. Recently, a school shooting was actually thwarted by kids on MySpace who heard about the event that was to occur and announced it online. As a result, the information got to the proper authorities and the shooting was prevented. So a lot of good can come out of using these sites.”

Urie whole-heartedly agrees, “There is a safe way to use these sites. You just need to know how to be smart about it.”

So how do you stay smart while surfing? If you have a scary encounter online, you should immediately tell your parents, teacher or other trusted adult. Here are some rules to remember from our experts:

Never give out info. Not your real name, address, phone number, e-mail address, birthdate, school, or names of family or friends. Some sites encourage you to post certain info, but the less info that is out there in cyberspace, the less likely you’ll be harmed in any way.

Don’t offer personal details. No description of what you look like, extracurricular activities, or specifics about where you are going, when and with whom. If you do, you’re giving a predator a map of where to find you.

Never send or post photos of yourself. Your friends know what you look like, why risk revealing your identity?

Don’t answer messages from strangers. It will only encourage them. Ignore them, and they will disappear.

Never agree to meet someone you’ve met online. No excuses!

We’ll say it again: Tell your folks if you get a message that makes you uneasy. Protect yourself from being a victim. Safety in numbers, babe.

IF YOU’VE HAD A BAD CYBER ENCOUNTER...
Tell a trusted adult immediately so she or he can report it to the police and to the website’s administrators. You can also go to missingkids.com, the website for the National Center For Missing and Exploited Children, and fill out their “CyberTipline” form. The form will then be forwarded to the appropriate law enforcement agency for further investigation.

By: Sandy Fertman Ryan

POSTED ON 3/2/2010 12:15:00 PM

POSTED IN safety

< PREVIOUS   NEXT >   

Previous1234567…16NextShow All
78 Comments | Add Yours
SORT: OLDEST FIRST | NEWEST FIRST
 

Mod mod mod!
Well she remembered her password & username, but she's way too afraid to go on it... Now what?

report

by poohbear(: on 7/10/2010 7:16:19 PM

 
 

MOD MOD MOD I've been pretty insecure lately about my body. My weight is actually perfect for my age/height and I am very happy with it but lately my stomach just looks huge. Some days it's nice and flat but then other days I look like I'm pregnant! I'm not sure if it has to do with the fact that I eat a lot, or maybe I have to improve my posture or something, I don't know. Lately I've been trying to stop eating random snacks like I always used to, and it's kind of helping but still some days I don't like the way my stomach looks. I don't want to take things too far because I don't want anorexia... but what should I do?

 

Hey chica, junk food can totally make you feel bloaty and unattractive. Eating fruits and veggies and drinking lots of water will make you look flatter than if you eat junk. And you'll feel like you look better too Smile

xxx

Becca G.

report

by helloimkelly on 7/10/2010 5:41:00 PM

 
 

I used to have a Twitter account that was totally public and ANYONE could see it. I had over 100 followers and there were only maybe 5 that i KNEW for a fact were real. There was this one person though... I don't remember their twitter name. They asked me weird questions and ALWAYS responded to my tweets. Once, I checked their profile, and every one of their tweets was them talking to other girls. They changed their picture multiple times and it was never the same person. And whenever I posted a picture of myself they'd comment telling me how pretty I am. This person scared me for a long time. I ended up deleting my twitter (for other reasons) and now I have a Twitter account where my tweets are protected and only the people I approve of can follow me. I once went to see if that creepy person was still around but their account had been deleted. I'm very lucky that I didn't give out personal info about myself, this person was probably a predator whose identity had been discovered by one of the hundreds of girls he spoke to daily.

report

by helloimkelly on 7/10/2010 5:40:40 PM

 
 

Mod mod mod!
She actually doesn't remember her password so she can't really delete anything. She lied about everything though! She said she lied about:
Her name, age, her city, her picture (she used her brother's ex's picture), One of her bestfriends' name and i think thats it. 




Hey girlie the best I can do is give you the link to GL directly so they can help you track down her account and delete it. http://www.girlslife.com/Contact.aspx 
Paige T.

report

by poohbear(: on 7/9/2010 11:37:06 PM

 
 

Mod mod mod!
I'm so sorry I'm commenting so much, but she says I can't tell anyone she knows or anything like that.
She said that she can't tell her parents because they'd be really mad at her. Like SEVERELY mad. Foot She's asking me to go onto the website, but I'm not going to take my chances... She said she needs to find out how to be sure she's safe on her own or with my help, and no one else's.




All she can do is clear her information from her profile now. I wish I could do more for you but there is nothing I can do. You should really tell a trusted adult. 
Paige T.

report

by poohbear(: on 7/9/2010 11:28:06 PM

 
Previous1234567…16NextShow All
You must be signed in to post a comment. SIGN IN or REGISTER

ADD A COMMENT


 

 

 

  • RENEW
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • GIVE A GIFT
  • DIGITAL EDITIONS
  • ACCOUNT STATUS
 
Ah, Memorial Day Weekend, could you get here any slower?! You...


 
 
WIN
TODAY
GRAND
PRIZE
GIVEAWAY
CALENDAR
Orange Crush

Flavor: Pop the top for this electrifying, citrus-flavored gloss.

Fab Fact: This soda goodness has been slicking lips with a yummy fizz since 1976.

Read it for free! Get a sneak peek at Julie Kagawa's thrilling series...

 
The Blood of Eden series continues…and this time, Allie must save her creator—and the world—from a deadly virus that could end
human and vampire existence.
 
CLICK HERE to download a free excerpt of
The Eternity Cure by Julie Kagawa.
 
Posts From Our Friends

sponsored links

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Home
  • Free Newsletters
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Renew

  • Model for GL
  • Pay Bill
  • Questions?
  • Contact Us
  • © 2013 Girls' Life Acquisition Co. All Rights Reserved.