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  1. Added Aug 21, 2007 by trustteam
    For longtime users, the influx of grownups means that information once intended for a circle of fellow students is now available for anyone to see. That has introduced a new social conundrum: deciding whose invites should be accepted -- and how much of your profile they should be able to see. "You can't really unfriend your mom," says Hillary Woolley, a junior at the University of California at Davis. "So I've been upping my privacy settings."
  2. Added Aug 21, 2007 by trustteam
    MySpace.com has found and deleted profiles of 29,000 convicted sex offenders, more than four times the initial 7,000 profiles they claimed in May. The numbers were discovered after MySpace turned over info detailing the offenders they had removed from the service. MySpace turned over the records after states filed a formal legal request.
  3. Added Jul 26, 2007 by trustteam
    Online predators are a smaller risk than the public is led to believe by the media and by law enforcement officials.
  4. Added Jul 10, 2007 by trustteam
    SAN FRANCISCO On the last day of June, the big topic among young women on the MySpace page for the Victoria's Secret Pink brand were the magazine coupons for free Pink flip-flops that could be found in Cosmo and Seventeen.
  5. Added Jun 29, 2007 by trustteam
    Every month 800,000 young people in the US enter the teen age bracket and join a constantly changing teen population numbering 33.9 million, the largest teen group ever. Of that group, 83% are online. And they have tons of cash, lots of information, and some pretty bold ambitions. The new American Dream? It includes a huge house AND Angelina Jolie virtues. Probably before age 30 if possible...
  6. Added Jun 27, 2007 by jmfrancis
    Many companies that recruit on college campuses have been using search engines like Google and Yahoo to conduct background checks on seniors looking for their first job. But now, college career counselors and other experts say, some recruiters are looking up applicants on social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, Xanga and Friendster, where college students often post risqué or teasing photographs and provocative comments about drinking, recreational drug use and sexual exploits in what some mistakenly believe is relative privacy.
  7. Added Jun 27, 2007 by jmfrancis and 1 other
    Freshmen told not to reveal too much on social Web sites
  8. Added Jun 27, 2007 by jmfrancis
    Despite the fears that kids are leaving permanent digital footprints when they post personal information online, college students think it would be even weirder if someone didn't exist on the Web.
  9. Added Jun 27, 2007 by jmfrancis
    This snippet from my fieldnotes depicts an attitude that i keep hearing from teens that completely contradicts adult norms. Many teens are content (if not happy) to start over with most of their accounts in most places. Forgot your IM password? Sign up again. Forgot your email address? Create a new one. Forgot your login? Time for a change.
  10. Added Jun 27, 2007 by jmfrancis
    As younger people reveal their private lives on the Internet, the older generation looks on with alarm and misapprehension not seen since the early days of rock and roll. The future belongs to the uninhibited.
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