You are currently browsing the Milliwatt weblog archives for the day July 25, 2007.
- AMSAT (47)
- Apple (8)
- ARRL DX BULLETIN (48)
- ARRL Letter (10)
- ARRL Web Extra (149)
- ATV (4)
- BPL (13)
- Classes (1)
- CQ News Service (3)
- DX (10)
- DXCC (13)
- Exams (2)
- GB2RS (8)
- Hamfests (22)
- iPhone (3)
- iPod (3)
- IRTS (1)
- K7RA Solar Update (6)
- Meetings (16)
- Miscellaneous (63)
- Public Service (11)
- RAC (3)
- RSGB (36)
- Silent Key (16)
- Some Thoughts (12)
- Travel (60)
- USA Today (86)
- WA7BNM Contest Calendar (15)
- WIA (3)
- WiFi (19)
- Wireless (7)
- May 14, 2008: ARRL DX Bulletin 2008 #20
- May 13, 2008: ARRL DX Bulletin 2008 #19
- May 12, 2008: FCC Denies Two Amateur Radio Petitions for Rulemaking
- May 12, 2008: Newspaper Reports "BPL plan is dead in Dallas"
- May 12, 2008: New RSGB HQ up and running
- May 12, 2008: The K7RA Solar Update (May 9, 2008)
- May 12, 2008: Ronald A Parise, WA4SIR (SK)
- May 12, 2008: ARRL DX Bulletin 2008 #18
- May 11, 2008: ARRL DX Bulletin 2008 #17
- May 10, 2008: Wilmington, N.C., to test TV change over to digital
Archive for July 25, 2007
Official: MySpace finds 29,000 sex offenders on its site
July 25, 2007 by kb3ljm.
MySpace.com has found more than 29,000 registered sex offenders with profiles on the popular social networking website — more than four times the number cited by the company two months ago, North Carolina officials said Tuesday. North Carolina’s Roy Cooper is one of several attorneys general who recently demanded the News Corp.-owned website provide data on how many registered sex offenders were using the site, along with information about where they live. After initially withholding the information, citing federal privacy laws, MySpace began sharing the information in May after the states filed formal legal requests. At the time, MySpace said it had already used a database it helped create to remove about 7,000 profiles of sex offenders, out of a total of about 180 million profiles on the site. Two MySpace spokeswomen did not immediately return calls seeking comment Tuesday. Cooper is pushing for legislation that would require children to receive parental permission before creating social networking profiles, and require the websites to enact procedures for verifying the parents’ identity and age.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2007-07-24-myspace_N.htm
Posted in USA Today | Comments Off