Archive for the 'Future of the Web' Category

Generation XXX

You may be interested in the following article that appeared in yesterday’s Deseret Morning News:

‘Gen XXX’ findings surprising
By Tad Walch

PROVO — Men are by far the main consumers in the mammoth worldwide porn industry, but today’s college women are surprisingly permissive about pornography, according to a new Brigham Young University study.

The BYU researchers discovered that 49 percent of the female college students they surveyed find pornography acceptable. Only 37 percent of their own fathers agreed.
That information is groundbreaking because it is a subject that hasn’t been addressed by family or development journals, said Jeffrey Arnett, editor of the Journal of Adolescent Research, which published the study.

The study of 813 college students at six American colleges and universities — BYU was not included — is titled “Generation XXX: Pornography Acceptance and Use Among Emerging Adults.”

The research found that 86 percent of college men and 31 percent of college women viewed pornographic material in the previous year. Men said they used it far more frequently — 48 percent used it at least weekly while 3 percent of women did.
Still, Arnett said, “One-third of female students said they’d used it. That surprised me it was that high.”

The key question asked of students and their parents was if they agreed or disagreed that viewing pornography is an acceptable way to express one’s sexuality. Lead author Jason Carroll, a BYU family life professor, offered two explanations for high acceptance among college women and men, 67 percent of whom agreed.

“One is that this is a life-course finding,” Carroll said, “that we captured them at a high point in time and their acceptance will decrease and they’ll be like their parents. The other argument is that because of the proliferation of pornography, this generation has a unique acceptance of pornography different from their parents, and that it will last. I think there is a compelling argument that is the case.”

Arnett rarely publishes quantitative, or statistical, studies. He prefers qualitative data based on subjective interviews. He made an exception this time.

“This is a hugely important issue,” he said, “given that pornography is so massively popular on the Internet. There are questions about how will it affect people’s sexuality and their views of gender roles, and how is that going to affect relationships between men and women. Maybe it will just be a form of entertainment. We just don’t know yet.”

Arnett and Carroll said BYU’s findings raised as many questions as they answered.
Pornography was not a centerpiece of a larger BYU study on emerging adulthood that, as reported last week in the Deseret Morning News, showed college students and their parents no longer see 18-to-25-year-olds as adults. The BYU team regretted not including several more questions on attitudes about pornography.

For example, Carroll said it isn’t clear whether college women were saying pornography is more acceptable for women or whether they are growing more permissive about men using it.

The study does indicate, without establishing a causal relationship, that women who are more accepting about pornography appear more prone to risky behavior.

“If they say pornography is an acceptable way to express one’s sexuality, they have elevated levels of binge drinking and are more likely to engage in risky sexual behavior and have multiple partners in the last 12 months,” Carroll said. “That’s just by being accepting of pornography, let alone using it.”

Carroll said the BYU team is involved in a study in Seattle that could yield more information about how pornography affects couple formation and marriages.

“Only 50 percent of women are accepting but 90 percent of men are reporting some level of usage,” he said. “We know very little about what happens to pornography patterns during couple formation. Do women become accepting? Are more couples using it together? Do men stop using it when they are in a relationship? Do men keep using but hide it from their spouse? We have no evidence.

“It’s an area where there could be some real tension because men’s and women’s approaches to pornography are so different.”

Arnett would like to see researchers do some qualitative work, interviewing subjects personally about when they use pornography, what sort of Web sites they access, if there are some things they don’t find acceptable and whether they use it more when they aren’t in a sexual relationship.

Pornography is a $13 billion industry in the United States, $100 billion worldwide, according to the study. One-fourth of all Internet searches — 68 million per day — are for pornography. The United States hosted 244 million adult Web pages in 2006, according to Ogden-based TopTen Reviews.

Those statistics make it clear that researchers need more information about pornography’s impact on the development of children, relationships and families, Carroll said.

That is even more true as the next revolution in pornography begins to crest.

“Internet and pay-per-view movies broke down social barriers to pornography use, making it seem more anonymous,” he said. “Now we’re entering the pocket-porn movement as society becomes more wireless. Parental monitoring used to be about taking care of Internet use at home. Now a group of 16- or 17-year-old boys could go out for the night and as long as one of them has a handheld device with Internet access, they have access to pornography.

“Parental monitoring becomes impossible, and that puts a high value on helping children improve their ability to self-monitor.”

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E-mail: twalch@desnews.com

Internet on Wireless Toys

Parents: Be careful that the toys you buy for your child this Christmas don’t have unlimited Internet access, or he/she could easily (an innocently) view pornography.

Wireless handheld devices, such as video cell phones, iPods, iPhones, PDAs, and PlayStations and other video game consoles are now conduits for all the good stuff–and all the pornography–available on the Internet.

The Religious Alliance Against Pornography and the National Coalition for the Protection of Children & Families, of which the LDS Church is a member, has sent a strongly-worded warning letter to congregations across the United States. Here are key points from their warning:

  • Lots of wireless gadgets are commonly put in the hands of children and youth and many of these devices are capable of accessing anything on the Internet.
  • Don’t expect government or the wireless industry to protect your children. Companies are just now developing filters for wireless devices, and only T-Mobile, AT&T and Alltel provide any kind of Internet blocking tool.
  • Wireless companies do not intend to warn parents at the time of purchase about the dangers of Internet pornography.

“Let’s be very clear. Wireless technology is not the enemy. Rather, the danger lies in the perverse misuse of the technology and the fact that safeguards are limited in both availability and reliability.”

The letter warns that every child will be impacted directly or indirectly because:
“Pornographers are continually on the offensive and are determined to seduce those not seeking pornography and force their immorality on us. They have learned how to manipulate innocent people from good sites to pornographic sites.
“Every child will have some peers or friends of peers that are plugged into the Internet through a wireless device (video mobile phone, PDA, video iPod, iPhone, PlayStation).
“Pornographic material is powerfully addictive and because those peers who will be impacted, will talk about it, and will offer access to the material.
“Young people and children are often more computer literate than their parents and grandparents and are inquisitive about sexual things.
“Children and youth are already putting pressure on their parents to have video mobile phones, etc. that can access the Internet. That pressure will increase significantly as the video mobile phone industry explodes. Within a matter of months almost every mobile phone will have Internet and picture capacity and we know that the wireless industry will produce a massive advertising campaign because they make their large profits through monthly Internet fees. Peer pressure to not be left behind will intensify.
“If your children don’t succeed with you in getting the Internet, some of their friends or peers will succeed with their parents. When they discover pornographic material, including its addictive nature and how it impacts their hormones, they will share it with others. Knowledge is power and they will become an ‘In Group’.
“When (not if) your child sees that material, because you have trained them in the Christian faith, he/she will likely be attracted and repulsed at the same time. Often the revulsion will wane and the titillation will come back and make it more difficult to say, ‘No’ consistently over a long period of time.”

Read more excerpts from the letter in the Church News of November 17, 2007.

For more information, see the National Coalition for the Protection of Children & Families or my previous blogs on wise/safe use of the Internet.

Use Technology for Good

Attendees at BYU Education Week were told that technology can and should be used for good. Ron Schwendiman, of the Church Internet Coordination Group, reviewed the wonders of the information age and cautioned that it must be harnessed for good. Some key points:

  • With all the information that is available, which information is true and right?
  • What information is of the most value?
  • How do we prioritize our time in conjunction with technology?
  • How do we take advantage of all these great discoveries?

Read more in the Deseret Morning News.

Watch Out Google, Here Comes Facebook

Six weeks ago, I blogged about Facebook’s announcement of a new business model that encourages people to develop and distribute applications on its platform. I also mentioned Paul B. Allen’s prediction that Facebook will become the largest social network in the world

Now Advertizing Age says that Facebook is Google’s biggest competition. Sure, Google is the 900-pound gorilla for search and has one of the largest databanks about users, but Facebook poses a real threat because (1) its network of connections between people knows comparatively more about each of its users than Google does and (2) Facebook is becoming a viral distribution platform unrivaled by any portal or search engine.

Facebook is growing at a stunning rate–nearly 30 million users now–with no signs of stopping. Viral distribution is the most powerful form of marketing and promotion. The potential is huge, and Facebook might have the upper hand.

United Methodist Church Online Social Network

BYU professor Phil Windley points out that the United Methodist Church now has an online social network. Read Phil’s comments about the site.

What are your feelings about the value of such a site for LDS people?

Finding Religion Online

I’ve blogged before about Second Life.

Read a report on MSNBC about religion in Second Life. (Be sure to watch the video on that page.)

“One of the fastest growing sites on the internet isn’t a Web site, but a 3-D virtual world built and owned by it’s residents. It’s called “Second Life,” and for millions of users, it’s a place to escape reality. But just like the real world, good and evil also exist in “Second Life.” As a result, religion is finding it’s way there too.”

11% of US Adults Use Only Mobile Phones

According to a recent study, 11% of US adults now use only a mobile phone to place phone calls and 17% only use mobile and the Internet (VoIP).

Use of telephone services in the USA

So, where is this heading? If you look at the 18-to-29-year-old group, a full third of them use only a mobile phone or the Internet for their calls. One telling statistic is that mobile-phone-only users tended to be male and better educated, but less affluent than the general adult population.

In addition to phone calls, there are other factors driving mobile use, such as text messaging, picture sharing, watching video, and listening to music.

Learn more at eMarketer.

Multi-Touch Computer Screens

A few days ago, I blogged about  Microsoft Surface tabletop computing. I just found a great demo of multi-touch computer screens from Popular Mechanics.

Microsoft Surface: Tabletop Computing

Remember in Steven Spielberg’s movie Minority Report, when Tom Cruise uses his hands to manipulate data on a giant computer screen? It’s here.

Today at the D: All Things Digital conference near San Diego, Microsoft unveiled Microsoft Surface, a tabletop computer. No, it doesn’t sit on top of a table. It is the top of the table. Microsoft Surface is a translucent, interactive façade that recognizes motion and objects, and interacts with cell phones and digital cameras. No more searching for the remote controls on the table because the table is the remote control, and the video game system, and just about anything people over the next few years can dream of.

Microsoft SurfaceMicrosoft Surface

It will be tested with the public in November in restaurants, hotels, casinos and stores. Industry analyst Roger Kay says, “This is game-changing and will cause companies like Apple and Google to go back on their heels. I try not to gush too much. I think this is a really big deal.”

Read more about it:

Facebook: World’s Largest Social Network?

Paul Allen has just predicted that Facebook will become the largest social network in the world. It has just launched a new business model that encourages people to develop and distribute applications on its platform. Great entreprenurial opportunites.

Now, how can members use Facebook to share the gospel?

Read  more about Facebook’s plans:

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