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The Unsafety Net: How Social Media Turned Against Women [TheAtlantic.com]

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If, as the communications philosopher Marshall McLuhan famously said, television brought the brutality of war into people’s living rooms, the Internet today is bringing violence against women out of it. Once largely hidden from view, this brutality is now being exposed in unprecedented ways. In the words of Anne Collier, co-director of ConnectSafely.org and co-chair of the Obama administration’s Online Safety and Technology Working Group, “We are in the middle of a global free speech experiment.” On the one hand, these online images and words are bringing awareness to a longstanding problem. On the other hand, the amplification of these ideas over social media networks is validating and spreading pathology.

We, the authors, have experienced both sides of the experiment firsthand. In 2012, Soraya, who had been reporting on gender and women’s rights, noticed that more and more of her readers were contacting her to ask for media attention and help with online threats. Many sent graphic images, and some included detailed police reports that had gone nowhere. A few sent videos of rapes in progress. When Soraya wrote about these topics, she received threats online. Catherine, meanwhile, received warnings to back up while reporting on the cover-up of a sexual assault.

All of this raised a series of troubling questions: Who’s proliferating this violent content? Who’s controlling its dissemination? Should someone be? In theory, social media companies are neutral platforms where users generate content and report content as equals. But, as in the physical world, some users are more equal than others. In other words, social media is more symptom than disease: A 2013 report from the World Health Organization called violence against women “a global health problem of epidemic proportion,” from domestic abuse, stalking, and street harassment to sex trafficking, rape, and murder. This epidemic is thriving in the petri dish of social media.

 

[For more of this story, written by Catherine Buni and Soraya Chemaly, go to http://www.theatlantic.com/tec...gainst-women/381261/]

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As the parent of a now 14 yr old 9th grade daughter....I can attest that the idea of her having a "sheltered" childhood" invoking Norman Rockwell imagery is doubtful. That said, as a digital native, my daughter is actually better equipped to handle almost every virtual situation than individuals who were born prior to 2000.  This statement includes her parents who love her dearly.

 

My daughter has learned a number of strategies to demonstrate good "digital citizenship" and "netiquette." She has also fused her "virtual" world with a "virtuous" one - which has helped her tremendously to avoid living a duplicitous existence that so many youth are now (and in the future) will be contending with. It has also helped her to develop a sense of a "digital red flag" or awareness that helps her move between virtual spaces and real-time relationships. 

 

 

In my own professional role, I am working with a company that specializes in equipping parents and educators of 21st Century learners to be successful, contributing, and caring digital citizens. I will share more information on that with anyone who is interested now in helping to shape what will soon be a number of courses available to educators (teachers, counselors, administrators) nationwide.

 

I will leave the comment here that the rigor involved in being a 21 Century learner and "digital citizen" is a vastly steeper learning curve than anyone born say - before 1990. I take solace in the notion that as my daughter applies "real world" values into this virtual "free speech experiment" she continue to deepen her understanding that there is nothing "free" about speech which costs one their dignity, safety, integrity, or rights. The high cost of free speech can be seen in the lives of those adversely impacted by the opportunities it affords. 

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