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	<title>About Sue Scheff</title>
	<link>http://suesuescheff.bloghi.com/</link>
	<description>Hi! I'm a parent advocate and founder of Parent Universal Resource's Experts. Visit my homepage at http://www.suescheff.com</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2008 18:07:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>About Sue Scheff</title>
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		<title>Tangled In the Web</title>
		<link>http://suesuescheff.bloghi.com/2007/07/11/tangled-in-the-web.html</link>
		<comments>http://suesuescheff.bloghi.com/2007/07/11/tangled-in-the-web.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 20:23:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://suesuescheff.bloghi.com/2007/07/11/tangled-in-the-web.html</guid>
		<description> The Capital-JournalPublished Tuesday, February 06, 2007Once dismissed as foolish, Internet addiction is now getting second look from parents worried about teens' time online.Oh, what a tangled Web we weave, when first we practice to... get...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[The Capital-Journal<br><br>Published Tuesday, February 06, 2007<br><br>Once dismissed as foolish, Internet addiction is now getting second look from parents worried about teens' time online.<br><br>Oh, what a tangled Web we weave, when first we practice to... get online.<br><br>Many
Topeka teenagers admit they never feel quite right until they have
checked their MySpace, Facebook or e-mail accounts in the morning and
when they get home from school and again before bed.<br><br>None, however, believe they are addicted to the Web.<br><br>Since
the term "Internet addiction" was introduced in the late 1990s, Web
users and medical professionals have dismissed the idea. Some think the
long hours of isolation characteristic of too much Web use are just a
by-product of other mental issues such as depression.<br><br>But
Kimberly Young, director of the Center for Internet Addiction Recovery,
said the idea is gaining popularity. Parents are starting to research
the addiction as they watch their teens become more attached to the
computer.<br><br>Sue Scheff, a Florida mother who helped start PURE, an
organization for parents to help other parents with struggling
teenagers, said Internet usage should be a major concern for parents.<br><br>"Parents
aren't as concerned with their teens who are online once in a while,"
she said. "Parents are concerned with the teens who are completely
addicted to MySpace or some other Web site. The ones who are not able
to tear themselves away."<br><br>A January media survey released in
China showed 2 million Chinese teenagers are Internet addicts. The
survey also indicated the crime rate among teens has risen dramatically
in the past five years, and some officials have linked the two
findings. Other studies from sociologists and psychiatrists around the
world have linked Internet addiction to growing levels of anxiety,
depression, loneliness, self-consciousness, obesity and other problems
facing youths.<br><br>Numbers for U.S. Internet addicts aren't as
exact. Young said the belief is that 6 percent of the population are
online addicts, with the numbers rising to 19 percent of the population
on college campuses.<br><br>Internet addiction, Scheff said, is only
part of the problem. Not only are teenagers spending more and more time
online — and subsequently less and less time in reality — they are
clueless about the rules governing the virtual world.<br><br>"There are
several issues here," Scheff explained. "The fact is that these teens
can become introverts. It affects levels of growth and maturity. The
other thing is teens don't understand that people lie online, people
aren't honest online. Do you really know who is on the other end of
those messages or chat rooms?"<br><br>Scheff recently won an online
defamation suit that was one of the largest jury-decided victories to
date. She was given an $11.3 million decision after an organization
attacked her and her family verbally online with threats and rumors.<br><br>She
continues to be concerned about the abuse that goes on between teens.
Web sites have become the new school playground where teasing and
bullying begins.<br><br>And, Scheff said, punishment isn't as easy as throwing someone in time out.<br><br>"I
was told from the very beginning my case would be difficult because
Internet laws aren't concrete," she said. "Internet defamation is a new
law. We set the precedent."<br><br>In Topeka, teenagers, too, have
recently run into issues with Internet regulations. In a December issue
of the Topeka West's newspaper, The Campus View, staff members ran
photos from students' Facebook accounts in the paper. The pictures were
blurred out, but parents said not enough to prevent lawsuits.<br><br>However,
lawsuits about Internet ownership are hazy. Chris Joseph, a Topeka
lawyer, said, though he couldn't speak directly about the Topeka West
issue, like defamation, ownership rights on the Internet also are hard
to prosecute.<br><br>"It may be that the person who puts a picture on
the Internet doesn't forfeit rights to that photo, but I just don't
know that anyone short of Paris Hilton would be able to afford going to
court over it," he said.<br><br>According to Facebook and MySpace,
anything posted on a profile, comment, blog or message still belongs to
the user, but the Web site has the right to use it in the advertising
for their site. This means if someone posted song lyrics on MySpace,
the site, owned now by Fox's Rupert Murdoch, could use the song in a
MySpace commercial.<br><br>With the possibility of teenagers becoming
isolated and the hazy regulations, Scheff said she has to wonder why
parents allow teens to be online as much as they are.<br><br>"I just don't understand why the time they are on the Internet is growing," she said.<br>According
to a study by the Pew Internet Project, teenage internet usage
increased by 24 percent between 2001 and 2005, and still continues to
grow. It is estimated that more than 77 million children and teenagers
are online.<br><br>But some Topeka teenagers say they aren't worried
about the downsides of the Web. For the most part, they haven't
experienced depression, isolation or anything falling into the grey
area of legal issues.<br><br>"I'm on the Internet all the time," said
John David, 17. "I still have friends, and I'm not sad. We always here
about the bad things that could happen, but they haven't happened to
those of us who are smart online."<br><br>Scheff said making sure
teenagers use their brains online is the best way to keep them safe,
but she said she still thinks its necessary to enforce some limitations.<br><br>"It's
really sad because it use to be family time. Now it's computer time
playing Free Cell," she explained. "People need to go back to being a
family together and being safe."<br><br>Taylor Atkins can be reached at (785)295-1187 or <a href="mailto:taylor.atkins@cjonline.com">taylor.atkins@cjonline.com</a>.

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