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Lawmaker Targets Second Life as Unsafe for Kids

This article originally appeared in SLJ’s Extra Helping. Sign up now!

Joan Oleck -- School Library Journal, 5/14/2008 2:05:00 PM

U.S. Representative Mark Kirk (R-IL), who last year tried to revive a bill to protect kids from online predators, and is still trying, is now setting his sights on a new target: Second Life.

Kirk says the 3D gaming site offers "no protections to keep kids from virtual 'rape rooms,' brothels, and drug stores.

"If sites like Second Life won't protect kids from obviously inappropriate content, the Congress will,” Kirk said in a press release.

Second Life allows users to create "avatars," or online personas, then control them as they participate in virtual activities.

In a recent letter addressed to Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairman William Kovacic, Kirk protested that Second Life has no age controls in place. The site "claims to prevent children under the age of 13 from accessing the site, but there are no age verifications built into the registration process," he wrote. “Many features require a credit card, but other areas offering explicit content are free and available."

Kirk has included a series of FTC requirements in his Deleting Online Predators Act (DOPA) legislation, which was refiled last year. The bill would require that the FTC, within 90 days of the legislation's passage, create a Web site with a "distinctive" URL to educate parents and educators about the Internet's dangers to child users.

DOPA passed the House in 2006 by a 410-15 vote but received no support in the Senate. The bill made no progress in 2007.

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