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"Get out of MySpace!"
For many teenagers today, meeting face to face has become a thing of the past. It is cooler these days to meet online to socialize, get dates, share good music, and chat. Kids have always looked for places to gather to gossip, be seen, be cool, listen to music and "hang out". This isn't new. What is new is where these gathering places are and who else is around.

MySpace.com, and other social networking web sites, have quickly replaced local restaurants, shopping malls, and parks as places for young people to hangout. For a generation of media-savvy kids that are used to looking into cyberspace for everything from new ring tones to help on homework, it is not surprising that making friends and socializing are starting to take place online as well. Especially given that websites like MySpace.com offer expansive, creative and enticing worlds made up almost entirely by young people. Most of MySpace's almost 50 million users are under the age of 22.

A MySpace profile is actually a lot like an online version of teenagers’ bedrooms- plastered with posters and pictures of friends, blaring popular music, and hosting a variety of notes and messages from a long list of MySpace “friends”. Kids spend hours chatting and blogging, listening to music, posting photos of themselves, and searching for other people to catch up with online. And just like bedrooms, many parent have been told to “Get out of MySpace!”

"If you weren't on MySpace,
where would you make friends?"

- 10th grader in Mpls, MN
Does keeping up with your kids’ online activities feel like a daunting task?

Take a MediaWise Tour of MySpace.com, a popular online teen hangout!
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We’ll show you some of the key features of the site and what kids can do there. Learning more about sites like MySpace helps you talk to your kids about their online hangouts.

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TIPS FOR
MySpace.com
  • Learn about MySpace and all of its features
  • Have your kids show you around the site
  • Limit time as you would other screen time
  • Set ground rules and consequences about acceptable behavior.
  • Talk to your kids about MySpace "cyberbullying.”
  • Encourage your kids to tell you if they see anything inappropriate.
  • Trust but verify. Tell your kids you’ll be checking in.
  • Be MediaWise: Watch What Your Kids Watch.
Parents and Teachers Take This to Heart
CAUTION ON
MySpace.com
  • Watch for mean messages and “Cyber– Bullying”
  • Be prepared for Lewd Language and Pictures.
  • There are Online Predators — teach your child not to divulge personal information.
  • Stay involved, check for multiple accounts, pay attention.
  • Remember that a lot of the profiles contain fake information
The pressure to fit in, be cool, and have a lot of friends is no different in the virtual world than it is in the real one. In fact, as more and more kids pour onto sites like MySpace, the distinction between “real” and “virtual” becomes less and less important. Parents and teachers should take this to heart. Although MySpace seems like a “kids only” site, we adults better be paying attention because online social sites have just as many, if not more, opportunities and pitfalls as “real-world” teen hangouts.
Popularity
There have been other popular online hangouts for teenagers and young adults, like Friendster and Facebook, but MySpace is winning the race by a landslide. MySpace recently passed Google in terms of number of hits and the number of pages viewed monthly, and is the fourth most popular website on the internet today. For many kids, having an account on MySpace is more important than having a date to the senior prom.
Possibilities
Websites like MySpace.com offer incredible opportunities for teenagers to express themselves and to have fun connecting with friends. Unlike a teenager’s real bedroom, MySpace can be repainted, redecorated and given a new feel with just a few mouse clicks. It allows teenagers to do what they have always done; try out new identities and looks, express themselves in new ways, and socialize. With this in mind, it is no wonder that MySpace is such a popular phenomenon among youth. With parent involvement, MySpace can be a fun and safe.
Pitfalls
Unfortunately, MySpace is not all fun and games. The same risks associated with any unsupervised online environment are true for MySpace as well. Teachers across the country are dealing with the effects of mean messages and degrading photographs aimed at other kids posted on MySpace, something we call “cyberbullying.” Bullying other kids seems easier and consequence- free in an online, anonymous environment. In addition, lewd language and pictures are easily accessible and prolific on MySpace. It is also very common for kids to have numerous “online” identities. Some that are created by lying about their age, profession, and much more. It is not clear whether these false identities are actually harmful however, because MySpace is the perfect cruising ground for online predators. Many kids post very personal, accurate information on their site, including their school, neighborhood, age and interests.

This isn’t to say that MySpace can’t be a fun teenage hangout. But it is important that adults don’t take it too personally when kids say “get out of MySpace!” and continue to talk with kids about where they've been and who they’re hanging out with in the virtual world.
 
 
 
© National Institute on Media and the Family.