Archive for November, 2009

Facebook site lead to beating of 12-year-old

Facebook news: The beating of 12-year-old boy by a group of classmates at a Southern California middle school may be linked to a Facebook posting encouraging kids to target redheads.

The redheaded boy was beaten up by a group of seventh and eighth graders at A.E. Wright Middle School in Calabasas in two separate incidents Friday, according to a statement released Sunday by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

A Facebook page stating that Friday was “Kick a Ginger Day,” referring to redheads and possibly inspired by an episode of the “South Park” series, may have sparked the injuries at the middle school, authorities said.

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Making Money from YouTube Viral Videos

YouTube has been the birthplace of many Internet stars, but few of them have had the business savvy to turn video views into paychecks. Take Sam Tsui, the site’s latest crowd pleaser. A fresh-faced a cappella singer at Yale, Tsui has an impressive voice, but the real draw is the electronic wizardry that allows him to harmonize onstage with five digital versions of himself. Glee, meet Attack of the Clones.

YouTube stars need to move quickly. This is not only because online attention spans are so short but also because viral videos have spawned a subindustry of viral vultures. Clips get downloaded and reposted without permission, and there are sites that specialize in selling T-shirt designs within hours of a video’s meteoric rise on the Web, making money the original stars never see.

But more and more fan favorites are figuring out how to parlay their 15 seconds of fame into cash. Chief among them: Charlie Schmidt, who has managed to make some $20,000 from his truly ridiculous Keyboard Cat video. The graphic designer in Spokane, Wash., digitized old VHS tapes of his cat, Fatso, “playing” a keyboard, a low-tech feat achieved by manipulating the cat’s paws from underneath Fatso’s shirt. Since the Keyboard Cat video went viral in February, the original has had nearly 3.8 million viewings, with millions more for the remixes.

(See videos that have cashed in on the YouTube effect.)

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Social network sites criticized on bullying

The world’s biggest social networking site has brushed off criticism by a senior UK police officer responsible for preventing online bullying that it is failing to combat abuse.

Jim Gamble, head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection (Ceop) Center, said Facebook and MySpace, which between them have more than 500 million users, could work harder to stamp out bullying.

The initiative came as UK charity Beatbullying highlighted Bebo, owned by AOL, and Microsoft’s instant messaging service as hotspots for bullying.

In a poll of 2,094 young people across England conducted by the charity, 30 percent of 11 to 16-year-olds who had been “cyberbullied” had been targeted on Bebo.

Earlier this year 18-year-old Keeley Houghton became the first person in Britain to be jailed for Internet bullying.

Houghton spent six weeks in the young offenders’ wing of Eastwood Park prison in Gloucestershire, western England, after posting a threatening message about a girl on her own Facebook profile.

Part of the message read: “Keeley is going to murder the bitch,” according to the Press Association.

In response to fears that online bullying is on the rise, Gamble praised an initiative adopted by Bebo, whereby children who fear they are at risk can press a panic button. This allows users to report online abuse, bullying and illegal activity.

But Facebook said Wednesday it believed adopting the button would have no effect on reducing abuse and it had a number of measures in place already on bullying.

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Google releases Dashboard privacy tool

Ever wonder what information Google knows about you? With a click or two, now you can find out.

Google released a feature Thursday that lets users see and control data that the Web giant has collected about them. Called Google Dashboard, the service provides an online summary of a user’s Google files — Gmail, Google Docs, Picasa photos and so on — by collecting pre-existing privacy controls in one place.

Dashboard users can review and delete recent Google searches, see recently opened and shared documents and survey their interactions with other Google-powered sites such as YouTube.

Google, which has come under fire from politicians and privacy advocates for its data-collection practices, announced the service with a blog post headlined, “Transparency, Choice and Control — now complete with a Dashboard!”

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