MYSPACE PARTNERS WITH THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR
MISSING & EXPLOITED CHILDREN TO PROVIDE ADDED DISTRIBUTION FOR AMBER ALERTS
MySpace Users Mobilize to Help
Law Enforcement Find Abducted Children Nationwide
Site Also Expands Safety Product
Features to Heighten Safety and Security for Members Including Email
Verification and “Over/ Under” Privacy Tool
LOS
ANGELES—January
23, 2007—MySpace.com,
the leading social networking and lifestyle portal, and the National Center for
Missing & Exploited Children® (NCMEC), announced today a
partnership to distribute localized online AMBER Alerts via MySpace. In
addition to its traditional distribution methods, the AMBER Alert program
will now benefit from the mass distribution of the MySpace network and provide
rapid, viral support to law enforcement in bringing home an abducted child. The
AMBER Alerts on MySpace go live today. In other news, MySpace today announced a new set of safety
features to increase online safety and privacy for its community, including
email verification and an “over/ under” privacy tool for all users.
”When a
child is abducted, the AMBER Alert program is a tool that allows everyone to
join in the search. To date 314 children have been recovered as a result of
this program,” said Ernie Allen, NCMEC president and CEO. “MySpace AMBER Alerts
will allow the online community to be part of a nationwide effort to bring even
more children home. We are grateful that MySpace has agreed to help us
distribute these important alerts.”
The AMBER
Alerts on MySpace will be updated constantly. As soon as NCMEC is
notified that an AMBER Alert has been issued by law enforcement, MySpace will
relay that AMBER Alert information to all users within the zip codes of where
the AMBER Alert was issued. The AMBER Alert notification will appear in a small
text box at the top of a profile, giving users the option to receive additional
information such as the photo and description of the abducted child, suspect
and vehicle. Users who have information on the abducted child or the
suspect’s whereabouts should immediately call 9-1-1.
“AMBER
Alerts on MySpace give users nationwide the opportunity to help in the recovery
of an abducted child in their area—just by logging on,” said Hemanshu
Nigam, Chief Security Officer, MySpace. “We applaud NCMEC and will continue
working with industry leaders such as Ernie Allen and his team to implement
creative programs that share the goal of protecting teens.”
The AMBER
Alert program, named for 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, who was kidnapped and
murdered in Arlington, Texas, is a voluntary partnership between
law-enforcement agencies, broadcasters, and transportation agencies to activate
an urgent bulletin in the most serious child-abduction cases. The goal of an
AMBER Alert is to instantly galvanize the entire community to assist in the
search for and safe recovery of the child. Posting AMBER Alerts on MySpace uses
the power of the connected community to provide rapid assistance to law
enforcement in recovering an abducted child.
President
Bush authorized the national AMBER Alert initiative as part of the PROTECT Act
signed in 2003. The law formally established the federal government’s role in
the AMBER Alert program, appointing the Department of Justice (DOJ) as the
agency responsible for coordinating AMBER Alert programs on the national level.
DOJ has officially partnered with NCMEC, authorizing them as the agent that
coordinates and disseminates AMBER Alerts to secondary distributors such as MySpace.
"I
applaud the efforts of NCMEC and MySpace to alert the public and
increase awareness of AMBER Alerts," said Regina B. Schofield, Assistant
Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs and the National
AMBER Alert Coordinator. "This partnership expands the AMBER
Alert secondary distribution network, allowing even more people to serve as the
extra eyes and ears of law enforcement as they work to bring abducted children
home."
In other
news, MySpace today announced a number new additions to the company’s arsenal
of user protections including mandatory email verification and an “over/ under”
privacy tool. Mandatory email verification requires that all MySpace users
register with a valid email address and all users creating a profile on MySpace
will be required to confirm their new membership via email. The “over/under”
blocking tool expands on privacy features previously available only to younger
users. The over/ under blocking feature prevents users under 18 from being
contacted by users over 18 and it also allows users over 18 to block users
under 18 from contacting them.
Other
recent privacy and security features include:
- Privacy Alert: MySpace safety teams
recognized that many users were misrepresenting their ages to avail
themselves of privacy options exclusively given to younger users. In
response, MySpace has made the full range of privacy options available to
the entire community and has communicated the availability of expanded
privacy options to such users. MySpace deletes an average of 25,000
profiles per week due to age misrepresentation.
- Instant
Messaging and Chat Safety Restrictions: Users can only receive
instant messages from other users on their Friend list. Users under
18 years of age cannot access romance-specific chat rooms.
- Safety
Suggestion Alerts: All users under the age of 18-years old receive
security warnings before they post content. MySpace encourages users of
all ages to recognize the public nature of the Internet and reminds
younger users to use common sense before posting content throughout the
community.
- Age
Restrictions for Communication and Content: All younger users listed
on MySpace—14- or 15-years old— are tagged to be
un-searchable by age on any search engine or Internet portal.
Additionally on MySpace, no user can Browse for users under 16 and
adults can never add users under 16-years old as a friend unless they
know the user’s last name or email address. Lastly, users 19 years or
older cannot search for high school students and younger users can only
receive group invites from those individuals within their friend
network.
Safety
and Customer Care Response:
- Law
enforcement hotline, 24/7 both emergency and non-emergency
- Streamlined
abuse reporting to better differentiate between the type of abuse
- CAT
team development; MySpace has created a Content Assurance Team
(CAT) to assume the roles of various users and view the site
‘through their eyes’
- Parent
Care, dedicated parent care email and downloadable guidebook
- School
Care Team, dedicated educator hotline and guidebook
Primary
Safety Tools for Members:
- All
members can set profile to “private”
- Users
can pre-approve all comments before being posted
- Users can block another user from contacting them
- Age-specific blocking capabilities available to all
users
- Younger user birthdays only visible to friends
- MySpace “profile details” limited to
age-appropriate activities for younger users
- Users can conceal their ‘online now’ status
- Users can prevent forwarding of their images to
other sites
- 32,000 trained school moderators
oversee forums
- Users have the option to make
their profile public for those in their age range
# # #
About MySpace.com
MySpace, a unit of Fox Interactive Media Inc., is the
premier lifestyle portal for connecting with friends, discovering
popular culture, and making a positive impact on the
world. By integrating web profiles, video, mobile
communications, instant messaging and more, MySpace has
created a global connected community with a wide
array of communication choices. As the world's
top-ranked web domain in terms of page views*, MySpace is
the most widely-used and highly-regarded site of its kind.
MySpace’s international network includes localized
community sites in the United States, the United Kingdom,
Japan, France, Germany, Australia, Italy, and Ireland.
*Among the top 2000 domains comScore Media
Metrix, November 2006. For more information on
comScore Networks, please go to www.comscore.com.
About the
National Center for Missing & Exploited Children
(NCMEC)
NCMEC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that works
in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice's
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
NCMEC’s congressionally mandated CyberTipline, a reporting
mechanism for child sexual exploitation, has handled more
than 419,400 leads. Since 1984, NCMEC has assisted law
enforcement with more than 125,200 missing child cases, resulting in the recovery of more than 107,600
children. For more information about
NCMEC, call its toll-free, 24-hour hotline at
1-800-THE-LOST or visit its web site at www.missingkids.com |