School Official Sues Over MySpace Page 527
SoCal writes, "How much legal liability do parents have for what their kids do online? A lawsuit filed in Texas by a high-school assistant principal may give some answers. Some students she had disciplined set up a fake MySpace page in her name depicting her as a lesbian (which she happens not to be). In its coverage, Ars Technica notes that 'What sets this case apart from many other lawsuits filed over the content of blogs is that it doesn't target only the teenagers who created the site. It also argues that the parents were guilty of negligence by failing to supervise their children, and that they bear some of the responsibility for the defaming site.'" The article links the Media Law Resource Center's resource tracking more than 50 cases now in the courts nationwide, in which bloggers have been sued for libel and related claims.
... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Funny)
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How about depicting a lesbian as straight or by so she gets hit on by a bunch of men she isn't interested in?
Or depicting a democrat as a Bush supporter.
Or depicting a married person as single?
A. Not everyone would agree with you that there is nothing wrong with being a lesbian. There is that respecting others belief thing. Obviously these kids didn't think that there was nothing wrong with it since they oviously thought it would be hurtful.
B. Even if you thing th
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:5, Informative)
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Howver, the myspace posters are very explicitly given absolutely freedom of speech and print.
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Informative)
That IS NOT covered by free speech.
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Informative)
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Oh, wait...
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It's kind of wierd that way. See, since you're a child molesting terroris
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:5, Insightful)
Good; because that cliche isn't valid, and never was. There is no harm in yelling fire. There is no harm in filing out of a building that isn't burning, There is no harm in filing back in. These are the acts of reasonable people. In fact, the practice would do people some good. We used to do it all the time in school. The fire alarm would go off, and out we'd go, not knowing if there was a fire, or not. No one ever got trampled. The theatre owner has, as an owner of a private business, the option to no longer serve that customer. Of course, should one patron fail to file out reasonably, and in the process trample another, then a crime has been committed, that of assault by that patron upon another. The idea that it is acceptable for people to trample one another — or that it somehow "isn't their fault" — is just one of the things that is wrong with the cliche, aside from the initial, completely incorrect, idea that one could not yell fire — or anything else — in a crowded theater. It's socially retarded, and if it were *my* theatre, it'd be the last time you ever got in the door, but other than that, there you go. Free speech trumps all. Every time. That's the basis of liberty.
Can speech lead to secondary consequences? Sure. Those consequences may be actionable, and reasonably so, but the speech itself is not, and cannot be.
An example of secondary consequences: A fire truck is called. The person who called the truck is liable for the expense. If there is no fire, then there you have it. Worse, if the fire truck is not available for a real fire, then the person who called them is liable for issues there if it appears that the presence of the truck in the wrong place is complicit in the damage. You can't request a service and not be liable for the consequences. You're making a contract, albeit a verbal one.
The problem with the US is that the idea of responsibility has gotten very, very twisted.
Well, it's been about five minutes since I last read it, and you are wrong.There are no caveats, limitations, etc. It says congress shall make no law. That's it. Nothing else. No "except whens", no "other thans", no "only in the case ofs", etc. No law. Until or unless this is changed, using the only procedures allowed to change it, that's the only legitimate position for the government. No law.
No. They're a complete waste of paper giving lawyers something to do. Pay attention now: If people decide to run me out of town on a rail, there are laws against that already. That's illegal, and rightfully so, because I am entitled to a fair trial, no cruel and unusual punishment, etc. Anyone can say anything they like, it does me no harm at all. Running me out of town does me harm, but as I say, there are remedies for morons who would undertake such an action. There is no need to limit speech because morons might do something bad. What you need to do is control the morons.
I'm not claiming the courts do the right thing here, I'm just telling you what the right thing is. The courts are long out of control and need
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If I build a machine to cut off your head, and press the button when youre in it, then I have committed murder. If I tell someone to cut off your head, and know they will obey, then I have still committed murder. That my methods included some sor
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Informative)
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~Rebecca
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You fail at life for presuming exclusivity in activities you don't approve of.
~Rebecca
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Funny)
You might look really cute in a hat, though... :-)
Re:... depicting her as a lesbian. (Score:4, Funny)
Woohoo! Hold those parents accountable! (Score:2, Insightful)
I think if parents started being charged with involuntary manslaughter or negligent homicide when their kids go on s
Re:Woohoo! Hold those parents accountable! (Score:4, Insightful)
While I agree wholeheartedly that parents should be held accountable, should be responsible for the proper upbringing of their children, and should be involved with their kids' lives I don't believe that it would change the fact that there are some seriously fucked up kids out there that think killing/harming others is the answer.
Re:Woohoo! Hold those parents accountable! (Score:5, Insightful)
It takes a tribe......
I think all sides bear a responsibility.
Holding the parents responsible in all cases is not good either. I have to admit, I was involved in shit my parents never got wind of between my 13th and 18th birthdays. And they were good parents.
And here we are, at a geek forum, with many posters regularly poo-pooing the idea that their mother ever could use any flavor of linux because it's too hard, yet they should be savvy enough to know every website their kid inhabits and every thing they post.
And that's figuring the kids aren't smart enough to swipe the cache.
I have a feeling that routers/modems with harddrives that log everything that goes through them and presents the data in a easy to adminster HTML format may be in demand soon...... and I have no doubt the 13 year olds will pwn those things in short order.
Re:Woohoo! Hold those parents accountable! (Score:4, Insightful)
exactly. Parents are not exclusively responsible for their childs behavior, because parents do not raise their children in a vaccuum. A society that rewards bad behavior can't really blame parents and parents alone when their kids behave badly.
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I mean, would YOU enjoy it if someone brought suit against you, personally, for not restraining or even becoming involved with what your brother or sister said about someone? Alth
Re:Woohoo! Hold those parents accountable! (Score:4, Informative)
Similar incident at another Texas school... (Score:4, Informative)
No word concerning a lawsuit against the student(s) responsible.
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It is important for kids to learn that their actions have consequences and to take responsibility. If the kid who did it gets away cleanly un
Bwahaha (Score:3, Interesting)
That is a horrible idea. No one will step forward, and you will just publicise the fact that this occured to anyone who didn't already know about it, many of whom will think it is hilarious. This will only encourage the person who did it. The only possible good that could come from it is if the announcement causes the perpetrator to brag about it and the word gets around to the administration. Even then, it isn't a good idea to punish a st
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It's not an idle threat. If you file a lawsuit (against John Doe, for libel) you can subpoena MySpace to find out the IP addresses and timestamps for the people responsible, then subpoena the ISP for their billing records. If the kids did it from home, you've got them. Even if they did it from a public library
Similar incident in my school... (Score:4, Informative)
I'm glad MySpace is not getting sued in this one. I didn't RTFA, but I have to wonder if the Vice Principal tried to resolve this with the parents before escalating it to a civil case. It is quite possible that she did and got a response along the lines of, "kids will be kids," or worse yet, "it couldn't be my child, you have no proof, I'm not going to do anything, I'm not listening, la-la-la-la-la-la-la."
Ok, enough rambling. Time to sleep.
Punishing ignorance (Score:5, Interesting)
People should get used to the fact that lots of info one gets from the web is fake [snopes.com]. So what?
And who cares about MySpace anyhow? A high-school assistant principal doesn't seem to be in the right circle of social relations to be harmed by that page.
If I were in the jury, I would propose a verdict "guilty but harmless, throw away".
Re:Punishing ignorance (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, employers have started checking out prospective job candidates via MySpace, Google and other online resources to see if there is anything that may stand out as a conflict with the company. Read about it here [foxnews.com].Now, sexual orientation used a reason not to hire someone would be considered as discriminatory however if other information was posted such as someone bragging about the $3000 they stole from X company while they weren't looking could cost someone a potential job.
So, obviously someone does care about MySpace.
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What?
A high-school assistant principal is in the middle of that "circle of social relations".
Just because that assistant principal's peers aren't going to be seeing that MySpace page, doesn't mean that having X,000 students see it isn't going to cause harm.
P.S. FTFA: "And it wasn't just school students; "a few were individuals Ms. Draker did not recognize, that lived near Clark High School,
Parental responsibility required (Score:5, Insightful)
Raising kids is hard work (got 2 me'self), and it is **your** work, not the state's or school's work or myspace's work!
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Please. It's hardly lawsuit material. How about two or three hours of detention?
Re:Parental responsibility required (Score:4, Insightful)
Hope that helps you understand.
Re:Parental responsibility required (Score:5, Insightful)
This case isn't about parental responsibility however, it's about parental liability. How are parents supposed to be held liable for not stopping their kids from posting a fake Myspace page? Are parents supposed to act like little police states, spying on their kids at every moment? I could see the parents being held liable if they knew about this whole fiasco before it got shut down by MySpace. But what about the far more likely case that they had no idea?
Re:Parental responsibility required (Score:4, Insightful)
If that's what's necessary to keep their children under control, then yes, absolutely. Of course, if they need such draconian steps, they've probably already been failing as parents for a long time.
People need to understand that kids are not adults. That's why they're kids. They have not yet learned to behave responsibly as an adult should, and they have not yet earned the rights and freedoms we give to adults. In an ideal world, as children get older and become more responsible, their parents (and society generally) would confer on them increasing freedom in return, until they transition naturally to adulthood with full rights and full responsibility. But respect is earned, and with freedom must come responsibility. If a child doesn't behave appropriately, they don't deserve the privileges, and that includes luxuries like computers in their room, Internet access, and the freedom to combine them unsupervised.
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Well almost. Children have no right to privacy from their parents. They can earn some privilege to some privacy, but this is not a right.
I could see the parents being held liable if they knew about this whole fiasco before it got shut down by MySpace. But what about the far more likely case that they had no idea?
That is for the courts to determine on a case-by-case basis. But, it is right that parents should be pr
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Well almost. Children have no right to privacy from their parents. They can earn some privilege to some privacy, but this is not a right.
So because children have no right to privacy, parents should simply not give them any rights or freedom? Err. ok.
That is for the courts to determine on a case-by-case basis. But, it is right that parents should be prosecuted, even if they are not guilty, or found guilty, in this case
Are you really saying that anytime a kid does something legally wrong, the parents should
Overblown (Score:2, Insightful)
Personally, I think what they did is about on par with yelling at somebody in a crowded room. It may hurt your feelings, but is any
Why use the courts? (Score:2)
Re:Why use the courts? (Score:4, Informative)
This is because the parents have made it this way. You wouldn't believe how much the hands of administrators and teachers are tied when it comes to disciplining a student in a public school. I wouldn't last a day without a lawsuit.
Case in point. My wife is an elementary school teacher. She had to take "restraint training" and I asked her what that was. It's training to "restrain" an unruly and potentially violent student. But here's the thing, she's not allowed to touch the student! The student can physically assualt her and the other children in the classroom, but she can't grab him by the wrist. Remember the saying "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me"? Well, the students are the only ones allowed to have sticks and stones. Administrators and teachers can't even use words.
The best that can be hoped for is that the parents will take care of the situation, that's it. You can't punish a student anymore. You can't expel them. Parent's will sue, district's will give in. Basically, the unruly kids with poor parents have won. They can do whatever they want without any recourse. Which is why I hope this lawsuit succeeds. It's about time that the parents and courts agreed that sometimes kids need to be disciplined.
-dave
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I don't know about everywhere, but in many places, the actual law is that teachers have every bit as much legal right to touch students to maintain discp
Slow down on the parent blame game (Score:2)
I'm somewhat divided (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm up in the air about making it the parents' fault.
On the other hand, I strongly disagree with the idea that "Allowing access to the Internet, unsupervised and without restraint poses an obvious and unreasonable danger that such children would utilize the Internet for illicit purposes"
Claiming negligent supervision over the kids' use of the internet.... that creates an incredibly high burden for any parent. Unless the kids have done this before, I can't imagine that the "obvious and unreasonable danger" charge is going to hold up.
Re:I'm somewhat divided (Score:4, Interesting)
I once saw a court case centered around this particular notion flame out after one exceptionally bright young attorney asked the jury, "Could YOUR mother do it?"
Deliberation didn't even take that long.
Reasonable Measures (Score:3, Interesting)
I've seen
Re:I'm somewhat divided (Score:4, Funny)
A wake up call for parents (Score:5, Insightful)
The end result seems that common law holds, by precedent, that parents have a legal duty to teach their children right from wrong. Unless it can be proved, by reason of obvious mental defect, that the child is incapable of learning this, then why not hold the parent liable when the kid does something bad enough to warrant criminal or civil proceedings?
Kids will be kids, to be sure, and there's only so much you can do. But the bar of "only so much" is one it seems many parents fail to clear. Wrapped up in their own issues, they don't stop and say: "I'm responsible for this kid and I need to put a few of my needs on hold so I can make sure this kid turns out okay."
The negligence that caused these kids to end up doing what they did was not recent, but systematic. I hope the principal wins a significant judgement, it holds up on appeal, and that the kids spend the rest of their lives being reminded how their own selfishness (likely learned from their parents) ruined the lives of their families.
- G
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Wouldn't it be hilarious if it turns out these teens actually set up this MySpace riff on the asst-Principle from the school. What's the school to do then, sue themselves?
The biggest problem I see with these indirect lawsuits by association (Parents you didn't watch your schoolkids close enough) is that the schools themselves are the absolute worst when it comes to avoiding responsibiliti
Re:A wake up call for parents (Score:4, Informative)
If indeed there was defamatory content on the page, I think this case is a slam dunk. Parents are civilly liable for the actions of their minor children; there are probably thousands of cases on this. The "should the parents have been spying on them? huh?" argument is basically worthless. The answer is, "Whether the parents spy on the kids or not is up to them, but if the kids screw up, the parents are on the hook."
How do you prove an online case? (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, I've always wondered how someone can do it. The RIAA, this assistant principal...anyone.
How do they know, beyond a resonable doubt, who did it?
Seems like in this case you'd need logs from Myspace on what user and IP address did the deed. Then, you'd need logs from the ISP to match the IP to the account. Then, you'd need to prove which computer had that IP. And then, you'd need to prove who was actually on it at the time. And finally, wouldn't you have to prove that the box wasn't hacked/
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According to the complaint, the local police have reportedly obtained information from MySpace that confirms the computers used to make/access the MySpace page are locat
Am I the only one.. .. (Score:2, Insightful)
"Good for the wrong reasons" (Score:3, Insightful)
I, like so many others, would like to see parents being held accountable for many things such as the health and well-being of their children, and yes, their behavior as well. I have some issue with the reasons in this case, however.
Is it Libel to fraudulantly claim to be someone else and then claim things that are untrue? In many cases, examples of this sort of thing are found in comedy and other materials as a form of satire. Satire is generally targetted at public figures, but in their circles, an assistant principal is a very public figure. And making absurd or outrageous claims is all part of this thing we call freedom of expression in these United States.
If they were acting as themselves and reporting that they have evidence that what they claimed about their assistant pricipal was correct as stated, that might indeed be considered libel. But in this case, I would have to consider a MySpace blog posted in the first-person would have to beconsidered as nothing short of satire since it can be easily shown that the origins of the content were not truthful and therefore the whole set of contents were suspect. Under no reasonable circumstance could the content have been considered or mistaken as factual and therefore could only be construed as an artistic expression... a very First Amendment activity.
I think before parents should even be considered as partially responsible, let's first determine if there's an actual crime. I doubt this should be considered a crime in this case.
I'm surprised! (Score:3, Funny)
Internet! What has happened to you?? You had such promise...
Reminder on Truancy Laws (Score:2)
We need to make up our minds ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Proposed kindergarten curriculum (Score:5, Funny)
2. Sticks and stones may break my bones, but libel makes me call my lawyer
3. Sit down and shut up: Intro to Democracy
4. Why did those mean men take mommy away? Homeland Security for kids
Should be fired right now (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Should be fired right now (Score:4, Informative)
At no time is she in any danger by this myspace page, and any judge will recognize that. It's all completely harmless. At no time is she at risk for a financial loss by the page, and she won't be in the future. Nobody can prove any harm was done whatsoever.
What makes you think this? Did her husband leave her because of this page? Do you know? Did her boyfriend break up with her? Did her mother cry after reading it? Employers have been known to check myspace before hiring people. Did a school pass on offering her a job as principal there because they did not want to deal with the controversy surrounding hiring a lesbian? Again, do you know, or are you just assuming?
I would pull my kids out of the school immediately (whether they have anything to do with this or not), and/or go to the superintendant and complain.
Great way to teach them to take responsibility for their actions. They broke the law. If you, as a parent, failed to teach them ethics, such as the ethics about lying, maybe you should be held legally responsible for any damage that causes to society until they are old enough to make their own decisions. For that matter do you even know if the parents were approached before the lawsuit? Supposedly these kids had caused problems before. Maybe legal action was the only way she felt the kids would actually be taught a lesson given the lack of response from the parents. You don't know. I don't know. Maybe then, you should stop making assertions until you do know.
Re:Should be fired right now (Score:4, Insightful)
According to the court filing, Ms. Draker has been harassed by others accessing the web page
More to it than that. It isn't that simple.
Super Duper... thanks for asking... (Score:2, Funny)
Follow the money (Score:3, Informative)
Answer this and we'll understand more about the goal of the suit.
Sounds fair. (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it still libel on the Internet? The Internet makes it much easier to publish stuff for a wide audience, but you're still doing that, however easy it may be.
Are parents responsible for the acts of their children? Yes. In civil cases, and in many criminal cases, the parents can be held responsible.
Is this going to bring a "chilling effect"? I think the only thing it's going to chill is people publishing hurtful lies about other people online. I have no problem with that. The only thing new here is that minors have greater access to the eyeballs of the public at large than they did before.
Aside from the legal battle... (Score:3, Insightful)
Myspace has become a common tool used by employers to seek out more information about their potential hires. If someone makes a fake page about you, portraying you as a satanist or druggy, or some other socially undesirable label then that could effect whether you get a job or not.
Aside from this it could put your existing job in jeopardy. What if the kids had made this page out to look like the teacher was a sexual predator, preying on her underaged students, and even go so far as to make fake blogs depicting sexual encounters with her students.
If the student's intent was malicious and not just to be funny, they could easily put the teacher's job in a situation for review. A student shows his parents the myspace page, the parent notifies otehr parents, brings it up to the pta, to the school board. All of a sudden this teacher is on a suspension until an investigation is complete as to whether or not this teacher is actually a sexual predator. This is the good-case scenario, worst case of course is that the teacher cannot prove her innocence and all this fake evidence is enough to get the teacher fired and even listed as a sex offender, being pubicly humiliated.
I can only imagine how difficult and lengthy the process is to get a fraudulent page removed from myspace unless it specifically violated several myspace rules.
Maybe looking at it this way will help (Score:3, Insightful)
Look at it this way: if my daughter spray paints your house, breaks all your windows, and writes "Dirty Slut!" on your garage door, who do you think pays for that? While my daughter would probably spend some time in community service--which is exactly what these kids should do, probably related to gay rights or antidefamation--the parents should be held financially responsible for restoring this woman's good name, including monetary reward for pain and suffering. It sounds like it's more than just calling her a lesbian online, but disparaging her reputation and putting her name and picture out there when she did not want nor ask for that publicity.
In any case, these kids are just mean little bastards, and if the parents aren't going to take responsibility for them, they should at least reimburse society for having to do it for them.
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Not really (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Not really (Score:4, Funny)
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When you're in public and it's not socially acceptable to hit your kids, why not try crippling verbal attacks that focus on their most deeply held insecurities? It's fun, it's free, and if any of your yuppie liberal friends complain about it, remind them that THEIR kid just took the fall and is going to jail because someone stumbled upon the princi
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Re:Bout time (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah. The problem is, the kids got disciplined and instead of taking it like young adults they went and screwed around on the Internet, calling their teacher a lesbian (among other things). Sounds like some snotty brats that either haven't been properly parented or need some community service or something to redirect their energies.
Re:Bout time (Score:4, Informative)
In earlier days, if students started passing around notes about this teacher, the teacher wouldn't receive obscene phone calls as a direct result. FTA: a few were individuals Ms. Draker did not recognize, that lived near Clark High School, and had made suggestive, lewd and obscene comments based on the content of the webpage.
Passing around notes about a teacher leads to a bunch of kids laughing and goofing around, pretty easy for a teacher to get over that. Posting a fake profile leads to local perverts contacting and maybe stalking the teacher, that's quite a different situation.
Apparently you don't have children (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Apparently you don't have children (Score:5, Informative)
If you're children are 12+, supposedly know right from wrong, but still think posting defamatory material about someone is "right", then you should seriously question your parenting skills and, if you ask me, should thusly be held liable for your childrens' actions.
Until they reach the age of 18, (or whatever age the courts decide is adult,) their actions should be as good as your actions.
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Re:Apparently you don't have children (Score:5, Insightful)
True. However, can you spot the difference between :
Re:Apparently you don't have children (Score:5, Informative)
My parents raised me right, but as a kid I still did some bad things
I dont see why they should be held liable for my actions when they took every reasonable step to make sure I had a good set of morals in place and that I was responsivle. I acted out sometime, Kids will be kids, boys will be boys. It's not their fault.
Kids will be kids (Score:5, Insightful)
These teens didn't exactly post shocking confessions about how they were abused by this person, and make claims of pedophilia. They claimed she was GAY. Maybe it's just me, but BIG FREAKING DEAL. I think the reactions here reflect more on the posters than on the teens - apparently being gay is such a horrible thing to most Slashdotters that accusations of it amount to libel. Sad, really.
Next, we'll see some 5 year old sued because they called their ex-best friend a "doodie head".
Lighten up, folks. It's a harmless teenage prank. Don't any of you remember being kids? Give the kids some community service. The parents are probably pretty damned embarassed. But a lawsuit against them? You'd think these kids had gone on a shooting rampage.
Yeesh.
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Simply put, you're right, but it's still within the parents' duties to teach extremes of right and wrong (nothing is ever black and white.) Where public defamation lies in that spectrum could also, of course, be debated.
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But you cannot monitor EVERYTHING your child does.
True, which is why it is important to teach your children ethics and how to make good decisions. Someone who tries to control their children's behavior through micromanagement and force will fail miserably.
I'm sure these kids are probably over the age of 12, which by then they should probably know right from wrong.
Unless their parents did not teach them both right from wrong and personal responsibility.
I'd say give these kids 120 hours of community
My question: (Score:2)
Re:Bout time (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that that is what you're proposing, and it's the stupidest idea I've heard in a long time.
You send a pretty poor message about personal responsibility to kids by punishing their parents until they turn 18.
Re:Bout time (Score:4, Informative)
The point here is that its the responsibility of both. Its just like when you're under 18 and you get a speeding ticket (we'll continue to use Texas as the example). Atleast in Harris County a parent, or legal gaurdion, is required to attend the hearing with you, its a matter of punishment to both the child and the parent. The child is embarassed and (hopefully) is required to pay the offense, and the parent is punished enough that they continue to drive the message home at home.
I haven't yet had a chance to read the article, or understand the details, but I'm guessing that the parents are indeed responsible of (at the least) neglect in the fact that they aren't policing the child's activities on the net. And if you are about to tell me that its an invasion of privacy, then you are far to liberal for me.
Re:One step closer (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:One step closer (Score:4, Funny)
Well, I would, if your reply didn't amount to "Is not!"...
Container doe not equal content (Score:3, Insightful)
Would you punish the postal service because somebody sent defaming letters?
Would you punish Adobe because a terrorist organisation found it easy to use Photoshop to make its propaganda?
MySpace is a container, a nonjudgemental tool. It is similar to an arts and crafts workshop, where anybody can use the tools. The workshop managers can attempt to supervise and prevent abuse of their "equipment" and their "displ
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The correct response (Score:4, Interesting)
Parents are generally held responsible for their children's actions. Be it destruction of property, driving without a license and having an accident, someone getting hurt with a firearm, theft, and so on.
We don't need better firewalls. We don't need some intelligent filter at myspace to catch this stuff.
Hold the parents responsible for what their kids post. Even if I think my 13 year old should drink, and drive, and sell their body on the street, well, shucks, society and the law holds me responsible for their actions till they are 18. So I make sure that they are not drinking, or driving without a license, or prostituting themselves out. After a few parents pay some big fines, well heck, they will want to know what web pages their kids are working on.
This nonesense will all go a way in another generation. When the kids who don't remember what life is like before the internet existed grow up, they will watch their kids. They will not cop out and say they don't understand computers, or that their kids could do that. Life should be interesting once that generation of pirates and scallywags have kids of their own.
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We don't know if the school talked to the students or parents. If anyone refused to take the page down. If the students were threatend with expulsion, if a lawyer was brought in and told the school district could not do that. We don't know all of what was published on the page. Her address? That she has rape fantasies and wants a stranger to come over to her house? Also, with the way things are archvied on line. She could go and apply for a job as a prin
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
OTOH, this apparently was done from outside of school; not all states and districts give schools the same degree of latitude to punish offenses, even if they relate somehow to school, that aren't at school, especially when the incidents aren't student-to-stud