Archive for the 'Internet Safety & Wise Use' Category

Safe and Responsible Surfing

I previously blogged about the podcasts about Internet Safety by two BYU professors. They’ve just launched their 5th podcast about Safe and Responsible Surfing.

This audio podcast addresses technical issues including keylogging and peer-to-peer file sharing. It also addresses the importance of parental involvement in the personal and technical lives of their children.

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 Safety Podcasts

I just found some great podcasts about Internet Safety made by two BYU professors. They are 30-minute audio programs. There are currently three, with more on the way.

The first one is a general overview of technology and the Internet. It is a primer in plain English of what the Internet is and how it works. It talks about the wonders of modern technology, but just like any tool, it needs to be used wisely.

Numbers 2 & 3, are titled “What are your kids finding on the Internet?” They educate parents on ways kids try to hide their Internet activity from them. They also include stats about pornography and strategies of how Webmasters are tricking people into seeing pornography, particularly targeting young people.

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.

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?

Fight Against Pornography: Lighted Candle Society

The Lighted Candle Society will hold its Guardian of the Light Awards Dinner on May 8, 2007. The Most Reverend George H. Niederauer, Archbishop of San Francisco, will give the keynote address at the Little America Hotel in Salt Lake City. Special guests include Mr. Michael Reagan and Ms. Pamela J. Atkinson. This will be a great opportunity to learn more about the fight against pornography.

Utah Sends Message to Washington to Protect Children and Employees Against Pornography

In a previous post, I noted that a subcommittee of the Utah State Legislature unanimously passed a Resolution (H.C.R. 3) Urging Congress to Stop Interent Pornography to Children and Employees. You may be interested to note that this resolution passed the House of Representatives and the Senate with a 100% vote on both floors. (When was the last time anything passed both the House and the Senate with a 100% favorable vote?) On Friday, February 23, Governor Huntsman signed the resolution. There will be a future ceremonial signing and then an official state delegation will deliver the resolution to members of the federal government.

“We are excited about this first step. It shows that people are ready to take action,” said Ralph Yarro, Chairman of The CP80 Foundation

This sends a strong message to Washington that the people of the State of Utah want legislation to protect children and employees from Internet pornography. As I mentioned in comments to my previous post, this doesn’t accomplish anything in itself, but it lays a groundwork for bills ready to enter on Capitol Hill.

Safer Cyber-Playrooms

Did you catch the USA Today article today about Safer Cyber-Playrooms?

Disney and Nickelodeon have created safe social network sites for kids 14 and under. Disney Extreme Digital and Nicktropolis are free, video-rich interactive Web sites with secure, kid-safe chat functions.

Dangers of Pornography

Meridian Magazine just published a story on pornography entitled “Pornography: If it Quacks Like a Duck” about the dangers of pornography. Hopefully, we’ll recognize the dangers of pornography individually and as a society before it’s too late.

In addition to this article, you may want to visit combatingpornography.lds.org for further information and help.

Utah Sub-Committee Passes Resolution

Friday morning, a subcommittee of the Utah State Legislature unanimously passed a Resolution (H.C.R. 3) Urging Congress to Stop Interent Pornography to Children and Employees. This resolution would put the US Government on notice that the people of the State of Utah want something done about Internet pornography.

The resolution will go to the floor for a vote some time in the next two weeks. If you want to help stop Internet pornography, please call your state representatives and let them know you want them to approve H.C.R. 3: Resolution Urging Congress to Stop Interent Pornography to Children and Employees.

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