
  By DAVID  POGUE 
  
A few years ago, a parenting magazine asked me to write an article  about the dangers that children face when they go online. As it turns out, I was  the wrong author for the article they had in mind.
 The editor was deeply disappointed by my initial draft. Its chief  message was this: “Sure, there are dangers. But they’re hugely overhyped by the  media. The tales of pedophiles luring children out of their homes are like plane  crashes: they happen extremely rarely, but when they do, they make headlines  everywhere. The Internet is just another facet of socialization for the new  generation; as always, common sense and a level head are the best  safeguards.”
 My editor, however, was looking for something more sensational. He  asked, for example, if I could dig up an opening anecdote about, say, an  eight-year-old getting killed by a chat-room stalker. But after days of  research—and yes, I actually looked at the Google results past the first page—I  could not find a single example of a preteen getting abducted and murdered by an  Internet predator. 
 So the editor sent me the contact information for several parents of  young children with Internet horror stories, and suggested that I interview  them. One woman, for example, told me that she became hysterical when her  eight-year-old stumbled onto a pornographic photo. She told me that she  literally dove for the computer, crashing over a chair, yanking out the power  cord and then rushing her daughter outside.
 You know what? I think that far more damage was done to that child by  her mother’s reaction than by the dirty picture.
 See, almost the same thing happened at our house. When my son was 7  years old, he was Googling “The Incredibles” on the computer that we keep in the  kitchen. At some point, he pulled up a doctored picture of the Incredibles  family, showing them naked. 
 “What…on… earth?” he said in surprise.
 I walked over, saw what was going on, and closed the window. “Yeah, I  know,” I told him. “Some people like pictures of naked people. The Internet is  full of all kinds of things.” And life went on. 
 My thinking was this: a seven-year-old is so far from puberty, naked  pictures don’t yet have any of the baggage that we adults associate with them.  Sex has no meaning yet; the concept produces no emotional charge one way or  another.
 Today, not only is my son utterly unscarred by the event, I’m quite  sure he has no memory of it whatsoever.
 Now, I realize that not everybody shares my nonchalance. And again,  it’s not hard to find scattered anecdotes about terrible things that happen  online. 
 But if you live in terror of what the Internet will do to your  children, I encourage you to watch this excellent hour long PBS “Frontline”  documentary. (I learned about it in a recent  column by Times media critic Virginia Heffernan).
 It’s free, and it’s online in its entirety. The show surveys the  current kids-online situation—thoroughly, open-mindedly and frankly. 
 Turns out I had it relatively easy writing about the dangers to  children under age 12; this documentary focuses on teenagers, 90 percent of whom  are online every single day. They are absolutely immersed in chat, Facebook,  MySpace and the rest of the Web; it’s part of their ordinary social fabric to an  extent that previous generations can’t even imagine.
 The show carefully examines each danger of the Net. And as presented by  the show, the sexual-predator thing is way, way overblown, just as I had  suspected. Several interesting interview transcripts accompany the show online;  the one with producer Rachel Dretzin goes like this:
 “One of the biggest surprises in making this film was the discovery  that the threat of online predators is misunderstood and overblown. The data  shows that giving out personal information over the Internet makes absolutely no  difference when it comes to a child's vulnerability to predation.” (That one  blew my mind, because every single Internet-safety Web site and pamphlet hammers  repeatedly on this point: never, ever give out your personal information  online.)
 “Also, the vast majority of kids who do end up having contact with a  stranger they meet over the Internet are seeking out that contact,” Ms. Dretzin  goes on. “Most importantly, all the kids we met, without exception, told us the  same thing: They would never dream of meeting someone in person they'd met  online.”
 Several teenagers interviewed in the story make it clear that only an  idiot would be lured unwittingly into a relationship with an online sicko: “If  someone asks me where I live, I’ll delete the ‘friend.’ I mean, why do you want  to know where I live at?” says one girl.
 Fearmongers often cite the statistic, from a 2005 study by the Crimes  Against Children Research Center, that 1 in 7 children have received sexual  propositions while online. But David Finkelhor, author of that report, notes  that many of these propositions don’t come from Internet predators at all.  “Considerable numbers of them are undoubtedly coming from other kids, or just  people who are acting weird online,” he says.
 “Most of the sexual solicitations, they’re not that big a deal,” says  another interview subject, Danah Boyd of Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet  and Society. “Most of it is the 19-year-old saying to the 17-year old, ‘Hey,  baby.’ Is that really the image that we come to when we think about sexual  solicitations? No. We have found kids who engage in risky behavior online. The  fact is, they’ve engaged in a lot more risky behavior offline.” 
 As my own children approach middle school, my own fears align with the  documentary’s findings in another way: that cyber-bullying is a far more  realistic threat. Kids online experiment with different personas, and can be a  lot nastier in the anonymous atmosphere of the Internet than they would ever be  in person (just like grown-ups). And their mockery can be far more painful when  it’s public, permanent and written than if they were just muttered in passing in  the hallway.
 In any case, watch the show. You’ll learn that some fears are  overplayed, others are underplayed, and above all, that the Internet plays a  huge part in adolescence now. Pining for simpler times is a waste of time; like  it or not, this particular genie is out of the bottle.
 Visit David Pogue on the  Web at DavidPogue.com »   
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