The UK government is attempting to block registered paedophiles from using social networking sites.
The Home Office has been working alongside the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) and childrens charities including the NSPCC, to develop new measures to keep children safe from online grooming by paedophiles.
Under the new plans, police will provide websites such as Facebook, MySpace and Bebo with the email addresses of registered sex offenders. Those email addresses will be used by police to track the online activities of previous offenders, and by the sites themselves to block certain users.
Software to protect children online will now also be able to gain a Kitemark to ensure standards of security are as high as possible.
The NSPCC's Diana Sutton said:
"Many sex offenders will go to extraordinary lengths to access children, and we need to ensure that safety measures in cyberspace are as stringent as they are in the wider world."
Im unclear how these measures will impact upon any but the most careless of child molesters. It seems unlikely that a registered offender would attempt to register on a social networking site, using the same email address which they gave to the police.
Graham Cluley of computer security firm SOPHOS isnt impressed:
"It is not possible to monitor things online without it being incredibly costly and resource hungry.
This makes a good headline, but the fact is a sex offender could just create a different e-mail address in two seconds."
The governments guidelines will also urge young people to be vigilant about what they do and dont share on their profiles.
Default settings on many of the social networking sites leave users' personal details open for public viewing, but the guidelines encourage children
to make sure their privacy is tight.
I find it interesting that the responsibility for ensuring privacy is put with the children, and not with the sites whose default settings these are.
Theres also the question of how well Facebook et al will look after the information that police have given them. After the murder of Sarah Payne in 2001, the News of the World championed a naming and shaming policy, and took it upon themselves to print information on past offenders which had been leaked to them.
As a result:
An innocent man, Iain Armstrong, was beaten up by a mob in Manchester after being mistaken for one of the pictured paedophiles - apparently because he wore a neck-brace which looked like one worn to the man in the News of the World's picture.
Meanwhile, the actual offenders, alerted by the News of the World, fled their homes or otherwise went underground making them harder, not easier, to trace.
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