What’s The Matter With Teen Sexting?
February 9, 2009 by Marc Lamont Hill

Sex and predatory adults are not the biggest dangers teenagers face online. Their main risk is garden-variety kid-on-kid meanness.
What’s the Matter with Teen Sexting?
By Judith Levine
A couple of weeks ago, in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, prosecutors charged six teenagers with creating, distributing, and possessing child pornography. The three girls, ages 14 and 15, took nude or seminude pictures of themselves and e-mailed them to friends, including three boys, ages 16 and 17, who are among the defendants. Police Captain George Seranko described the obscenity of the images: They “weren’t just breasts,” he declared. “They showed female anatomy!”
Greensburg’s crime-stoppers aren’t the only ones looking out for the cybersafety of America’s youth. In Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Utah (at last count) minors have been arrested for “sexting,” or sending or posting soft-core photo or video self-portraits. Of 1,280 teens and young adults surveyed recently by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, one in five said they engaged in the practice — girls only slightly more than boys.
Seranko and other authorities argue that such pictures may find their way to the Internet and from there to pedophiles and other exploiters. “It’s very dangerous,” he opined.
How dangerous is it? Not very, suggests a major study released this month by Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet Studies. “Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies,” the result of a yearlong investigation by a wide range of experts, concludes that “the risks minors face online are in most cases not significantly different from those they face offline, and as they get older, minors themselves contribute to some of the problems.” Almost all youth who end up having sex with adults they meet online seek such assignations themselves, fully aware that the partner is older. Similarly, minors who encounter pornography online go looking for it; they tend to be older teenage boys.
What’s The Science? (2009 Grammy Awards)
February 9, 2009 by Marc Lamont Hill

Due to travel/vacation, I’ve been away from TV for the last week. Can someone fill me in on last night’s Grammy Awards? Who were the best acts? Who got the major awards? Who looked ridiculous? What’s the Science?
Just Jokes…
February 9, 2009 by Marc Lamont Hill
Most-Wanted Nazi Believed Dead In Cairo
News reports suggest Aribert Heim, a Nazi war criminal known as Dr. Death, died in Cairo in 1992. What do you think?
Alyssa Thornton,Systems Analyst
“The infamous Nazi known as Dr. Death actually died in Cairo in 1992? I better go apologize to my neighbor.”
Dave Blitz,Kitchen Manager
“It’s awfully ironic that a man known as Dr. Death would someday die himself.”
Stefan Piskor,Credit Controller
“Boiling skulls, injecting gasoline into hearts—you can see why he’d want to start over in a warm, dry climate.”
Photo of the Day
February 9, 2009 by Marc Lamont Hill
Today’s photo of the day shows Alex Rodriguez, who is one of 104 Major League Baeball players who tested positive for steroids in 2003. Hopefully, now that A-Rod has been outed, people will stop talking about how the “clean” Rodriguez will save the game (and the home run record) from the “evil” Barry Bonds.

Video of the Day
February 9, 2009 by Marc Lamont Hill
Today’s video of the day comes from last night’s Grammy Awards, where Jay-Z, T.I., Lil Wayne, Kanye West, and M.I.A. teamed up to perform “Swagga Like Us”.

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