Last updated: February 21, 2008 - 2:08am
AS FREEDOM SHRINKS, TEENS SEEK MYSPACE TO HANG OUT
[SOURCE: Reuters, AUTHOR: Jill Serjeant]
Although originally aimed at 20-somethings interested in independent music, Web sites like MySpace.com, which is owned by News Corp, have attracted an enormous following among middle school students, and cultural theorists say it's not hard to see why. As the real world is perceived as more dangerous with child abductors lurking on every corner, kids flock online to hang out with friends, express their hopes and dreams and bare their souls with often painful honesty -- mostly unbeknownst to their tech-clumsy parents. "We have a complete culture of fear," said Danah Boyd, 28, a Ph.D student and social media researcher at the University of California Berkeley. "Kids really have no place where they are not under constant surveillance." Driven to and from school, chaperoned at parties and often lacking public transport, today's middle-class American kids are no longer free to hang out unsupervised at the park, the bowling alley or to bike around the neighborhood they way they did 20 years ago. "A lot of that coming-of-age stuff in public is gone. So kids are creating social spaces within all this controlled space," said Boyd.
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=internetNews&storyID=2006-05-11T122933Z_01_N09287157_RTRUKOC_0_US-LIFE-MYSPACE.xml&archived=...
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