Use caution when viewing spam websites, could hold viruses, adware and spyware.
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=78588081
Use caution when viewing spam websites, could hold viruses, adware and spyware.
Use caution when viewing spam websites, could hold viruses, adware and spyware.
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=78588081
Use caution when viewing spam websites, could hold viruses, adware and spyware.
THIS HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED AS SPAM. DO NOT FOLLOW THE LINK IN CASE OF VIRUS OR SPYWARE.
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THIS HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED AS SPAM. DO NOT FOLLOW THE LINK IN CASE OF VIRUS OR SPYWARE.
After 15 years or so of trying to transform the child you gave birth to into a thinking, functioning adult, it comes down to this: Either you raised the kind of kid who’s going to sell weed, talk about killing his classmates and offer sex to grownups on myspace.com, or you did not.
If you’re one of the many who didn’t, good for you. You can relax and let your kid enjoy the portal to hell that is the Internet without worrying that he’ll be corrupted by the depravity beckoning from the other side of the monitor.
But if you’re one of the many who decided to overprotect or under-encourage your kids, or tell yourself that parenting consists of prayer and Prozac, you may not then blame myspace for the mess you’ve created.
Myspace started as a site for unknown bands to promote their music and concerts while getting their name out to potential fans, but has now morphed into an online community dominated by and geared toward two groups of people: teenagers and creepy adults who like to talk to teenagers using teenage slang.
Most kids use it to do what every other kid has ever done, at least while I’ve been alive: Trade music and gossip, posture and make themselves out to be more than they are while trying to lure members of the opposite sex.
And just like every other generation of normal kids with normal upbringings, there are a few on the fringes whose behavior would make any parent proud — as long as that parent is Charlie Sheen.
Selling dope, seeking or offering sex, planning to blow up their school — you name it, and a handful of kids have done it on myspace.
And since myspace gives the degenerates the same access to their forum as they do the normal kids, the site’s operators have been vilified constantly over the last few weeks by the media, parent groups and grandstanding politicians.
Myspace must be regulated!
Myspace is hurting the kids!
Congress is going to take a close look at myspace!
Yeah, that’s the answer.
Congress. The guys who can’t figure out if immigrant laborers should stay, go, or just hang around long enough to pick celery for $1.50 a day.
It used to be the fault of Judas Priest every time a kid put a rope around his neck. When I was a kid it was Metallica and action movies. Now it’s “Grand Theft Auto” and myspace.com.
The one common denominator is the American tradition of blaming the thing the kid happened to be doing at the exact moment he messed up instead of tracing the path of the mess-up back to its root: The two irresponsible idiots who wanted a child but instead created the poorly raised result of a poorly planned pregnancy.
Instead of regulating Web sites, someone should tell them what they forgot to tell their kids: The world is not here to clean up your mess.
Andrew Lisa wrote this for The (Vineland, N.J.) Daily Journal.
Internet companies are looking to MySpace.com for inspiration.
MySpace.com owes its success to effectively filling the social-networking needs of teens and young adults.
CNN reports AOL joined the pack recently with its own take on the service.
The MySpace parent company was bought by News Corp. for $580 million.
“MySpace went from being this curiosity to a cultural phenomenon,” Greg Sterling, an industry analyst with Sterling Market Intelligence in Oakland, California told CNN. “People started to think this is a really, really big opportunity.”
Since its 2004 launch, MySpace grew exponentially and ranks as the second most viewed site in the United States behind Yahoo Inc.
MySpace is also a key component of Helio’s new cell-phone launch. My Space is already enjoying the company of Google and Yahoo! as one of the top three most-visited sites on the Internet.
Google and Yahoo! have both launched their own respective mobile services, Google mobile and Yahoo! mobile. But the mobile landscape is still very much undefined and will prove to be an interesting platform for the Internet majors to compete over.
A board made up of city police and law officials met behind closed doors today to discuss the cases of six officers who have been administratively charged for content and postings they made on the popular Web site MySpace.com.
The six officers — Gene Haynes, Joshua Cromer, Aaron Noel, Richard Sisk, Adam O’Quinn and Paul Stewart — were present for the meeting along with their supervisors, said Maj. Mike Bosse, commander of internal affairs and chairman of the disciplinary board. The meeting lasted more than four hours.
Bosse said the board made discipline recommendations in each of the officers’ cases. Although he could not release the specifics of the recommendations, Bosse said punishment can include anything from a written reprimand to termination.
The board will forward its recommendations to Police Chief Anthany Beatty, who can accept or adjust them. Beatty will then present his discipline to each officer, probably within the next couple of weeks.
The officer can accept Beatty’s decision or reject it. Rejecting the decision would send the case to the Urban County Council for a hearing. If the council finds the officer’s conduct improper, members would decide on the punishment.
“The board carefully considered all the aspects of each individual case and made recommendations based on evidence and the officer’s response to the questions,” Bosse said. “I think the board was professionally conducted with the interest of the public as well as the rights of the officers in mind.”
The six officers could not be reached for comment or did not return phone calls today.
The police department began investigating the MySpace.com Web sites on March 20, when another police officer informed a supervisor about the sites. That officer was “very disturbed” by some of the content on the Web pages, Beatty said.
On the Web pages, officers discussed their jobs, commented on arrests they had made and used derogatory language about gays and the mentally disabled. Officers said they worked for the “snobby people of Lexington” or the “Lexington Fayette Urban Communist Gov. PD.” Many of the pages featured Lexington police badges or photos of officers in uniform.
Lexington Mayor Teresa Isaac could not be reached for comment today.
On March 29, Haynes and Cromer were relieved of sworn duties with pay, meaning they may not make arrests until the disciplinary process is completed. They continue to work for the police department but turned in their badges, police cars and weapons. The other four continue to work as arresting officers as disciplinary proceedings continue.
The six were administratively charged with violations including interfering with a criminal case, acting in a way that does not reflect favorably on the division, and breaking guidelines that officers are required to follow when making public statements.
Police officials did not elaborate on why Cromer and Haynes were relieved of their sworn duties, but Cromer’s Web site was particularly controversial because of content relating to Cromer’s arrest of country music star John Michael Montgomery.
Montgomery was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol in February. On Cromer’s site, officers discussed the case and congratulated Cromer on such a high-profile arrest. His site also included an altered photograph — posted by Haynes — of Montgomery and a fan, in which Cromer’s face had been placed on the body of the fan.
Cromer’s page, along with many of the other officers’ pages, has since been deactivated.
Reach Cassondra Kirby at (859) 231-3266 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 3266, or ckirby@herald-leader.com.
Two Broadview Heights men are accused of raping young girls they met on the web site MySpace. Channel 3 News first told you about 21-year-old Albert Azolino back in March.
He is accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old Strongsville student lured to his home through internet chat.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Bill Mason says Azolino and 33-year-old friend Timothy Norman face rape, unlawful sexual contact with minors, and pandering charges.
The prosecutor warns parents to be leery of the kids spending time on this web site.
“It’s like a catalogue for predators,” Mason said. “It’s got the pictures of the kids so anybody who wants to get online — they go on to myspace.com, look at the pictures and click on it. Up comes the profile of the person they just click on.”
Mason says the suspects would offer alcohol to the kids then photograph them during sex acts.
If convicted the two could face life in prison.