Chapter 4 Cyber-stalking, online grooming and sexting
4.1
Cyber-stalking, online grooming, sexting and illegal and inappropriate
content all represent significant cyber-safety and are the focus of this
chapter. The prevalence, impact and sanctions and research status of these
activities is also discussed. Sanctions against these abuses are set out in
Chapter 11.
Cyber-stalking
Cyber-stalking and grooming are emerging phenomenon that
often do not have their origins offline unlike cyber-bullying ... Those who received sexual solicitations were
more likely to share personal information with strangers online and engage in
offline risky behaviours.[1]
4.2
According to the Australian Institute of Criminology, cyber-stalking can
include:
- Sending repeated unwanted messages using email and SMS, or
posting messages on blogs, profiles on social networking sites;
-
Ordering goods and services on behalf of a victim that could
result in legal and financial losses to the victim, including to her/his
reputation;
-
Publicising private information about a victim;
-
Spreading false information;
-
Gathering information online about a victim;
-
Encouraging others to harass a victim; and
-
Unauthorised access to a victim’s computer(s) or Internet accounts
(e.g. email and social networking site accounts.[2]
4.3
Cyber-stalking is harassing behaviour using one or more of the platforms
in the online environment. It can include frequent and intrusive threats,
cryptic messages and sexual innuendo. Its usual goal is to create a sense of
fear in the recipient based on control and intimidation. Some adult predators
pretend, by creating fake profiles with false ages and identities, to be a
young person to befriend and gain the trust of young people online.[3]
4.4
There appears to be a relationship between bullying and stalking, as
episodes are sometimes preceded by bullying behaviour.[4]
4.5
Young Australians appear unsure of what cyber-stalking involves.
Participants in the Committee’s Are you safe? survey aged 13 years or
older were asked if repeatedly accessing a stranger’s Facebook page is
stalking. Of the survey’s participants in this age category, 26.8 percent
believe that this conduct is stalking, 43.4 percent believe that it is not, and
21.6 percent are unsure. The remaining 8.2 percent of respondents did not
answer the question.
Figure 4.1 Is repeatedly accessing
someone’s Facebook page stalking? (Aged 13 years and older)
Table 4.1 Is
repeatedly accessing someone’s Facebook page stalking?
|
Yes |
No |
I don’t know |
Not stated |
Total |
|
% |
# |
% |
# |
% |
# |
% |
# |
# |
Male |
29.9 |
1855 |
48.5 |
3013 |
19.8 |
1230 |
1.8 |
109 |
6207 |
Female |
27.6 |
2108 |
45.1 |
3446 |
26.2 |
2001 |
1.1 |
82 |
7637 |
Gender Not Stated |
11.6 |
196 |
16.3 |
274 |
7.6 |
128 |
64.5 |
1086 |
1684 |
Total |
26.8 |
4159 |
43.4 |
6733 |
21.6 |
3359 |
8.2 |
1277 |
15528 |
4.6
The wealth of personal information and pictures online can potentially
be used by individuals and sexual predators to identify, locate, contact, stalk
and harass their victims. More than half of victims and offenders did not have
prior relationships, probably because of the ease of locating victims online.
Opportunities for cyber-stalking may increase with age, as older students will
have greater access to platforms in the online environment.[5]
When engaging with the pre-teen audience, particularly
younger children aged between 5 and 10, Childnet’s privacy messages focus on
the importance of keeping personal information, such as full name, email
address, phone number, home address, photos, school name and passwords,
private. The 2010 Safer Internet Day message of "Think Before You
Post" is particularly important for those who frequently use social media
services like Facebook. Information and images online have longevity and an
incredible reach, which should be factored into any decision to post content
and Childnet encourages all users to think about the possible implications and
impact of their posts.[6]
4.7
People with online profiles are more likely to be harassed and bullied
online, and to receive personal messages via email, instant messaging chat or
text messages from strangers, than those without such profiles. Those who have
posted photographs of themselves and created profiles on social networking
sites are more likely to have been contacted online by people that they do not
know. Girls are significantly more likely than boys to be contacted by someone
they do not know.[7]
Genuineness of others online
i was chatting to a friend of mine, but slowly realised
that it didn't seem like her. i asked and they replied that they were her
cousin. without writing anything else i signed of and deleted that account
(Female aged 16).
|
4.8
BraveHearts noted that meeting and corresponding with new people is an
exciting aspect of the online environment. However, the Child Exploitation and
Online Protection Centre found in 2007 that, of the eight million children in
the United Kingdom with Internet access, one in 12 admitted to meeting someone
they had initially met online.[8] An Australian Institute
of Criminology study in 2009 reported that 7 percent of young people reported
that they had met someone offline, after meeting them online.[9]
4.9
BraveHearts noted that 24 percent of the young people in an Australian
Institute of Criminology study published in 2009 reported that the person who
had purported online to be a child was an adult. BraveHearts believed that
meeting a person only previously encountered online is ‘one of the most
dangerous things’ young people can do.[10]
4.10
Predators can often use the identities of professional musicians and
celebrities to lure young people into conversations online because of their
popularity among targeted age groups. Ms Sonya Ryan said that she has received
‘hundreds’ of emails from children seeking help, too afraid to talk to their
parents in fear of punishment or removal of technology, or because they are
embarrassed. She has also been contacted by parents who do not know what to do,
and are looking for information because they do not know what their young
people are doing online.[11]
4.11
With implications for their safety and their privacy, many young people
have no knowledge:
-
of the terms and conditions of access to social networking
sites;
-
about privacy settings being continuously updated without notification;
-
that, if they have devices that are enabled for access to Global
Positioning System, they can be found through photographs posted on their
Facebook pages, or
-
about the different Facebook applications that give details of
where someone has logged on, via Google Maps for example, so that potential
predators could locate other people while they are on computers or a social
networking sites.[12]
Prevalence
4.12
The prevalence of cyber-stalking in Australia is not known because
little research has been published. It is therefore difficult to estimate how
many young people are subject to this abuse. One study indicated that 5 percent
of people overall are stalked online. Combined estimates from Australia, the United
States and the United Kingdom indicate that about 7 percent of people are
victims of cyber-stalking.[13]
4.13
iKeepSafe referred to a European Union study that showed meeting a
stranger online was the ‘least common risk’: about 9 percent (one in 11),
rising to one in five in some Eastern European countries. However, in several
(unspecified) countries 15 to 20 percent of teenagers reported ‘a degree of
unease’, or feeling uncomfortable or threatened online.[14]
4.14
The Committee’s Are you safe? survey asked its respondents aged
between five and 18 years of age, if they feel unsafe online. Female
respondents reported higher rates of feeling unsafe than their male
counterparts:
Figure 4.2 Proportion (%) of those who have felt unsafe online (Age and
gender)
Table 4.2 Do you feel unsafe online?
|
|
Yes |
No |
|
Sex |
% |
# |
% |
# |
5 Years |
M |
36.0 |
27 |
64.0 |
42 |
F |
32.9 |
27 |
67.1 |
46 |
6 Years |
M |
33.3 |
16 |
66.6 |
27 |
F |
37.5 |
24 |
62.5 |
37 |
7 Years |
M |
35.5 |
39 |
64.5 |
60 |
F |
39.2 |
38 |
60.8 |
51 |
8 Years |
M |
36.8 |
156 |
63.2 |
221 |
F |
45.4 |
224 |
54.6 |
230 |
9 Years |
M |
36.0 |
361 |
64 |
554 |
F |
46.1 |
497 |
53.9 |
514 |
10 Years |
M |
29.0 |
493 |
71.0 |
1084 |
F |
41.8 |
752 |
58.2 |
953 |
11 Years |
M |
26.2 |
603 |
73.8 |
1585 |
F |
37.4 |
935 |
62.6 |
1459 |
12 Years |
M |
22.3 |
499 |
77.7 |
1650 |
F |
33.1 |
749 |
66.9 |
1428 |
4.15
Respondents in the Are you safe? survey explained their reasons
for feeling unsafe when online:
A few unknown people have added me before or talking to me
on a social networking sites, but most of them seemed harmless but all of
them I blocked and haven't heard from since (Female aged 15).
A man contacted me after I posted on a public thread on
Facebook. I thought nothing of it until recently, when he wanted to be more
than just friends (Female aged 15).
A man on facebook sent me an 'inbox' message. Who I didn't
know. And didn't plan on. He told me to add him as a friend and that I was
beautiful and stuff... (Female aged 14).
About a month ago I went on msn and had heaps of friends
that I knew that wanted to add me. While I was accepting the ones I knew and
declining the ones I didn't, I accidently accepted one I didn't know. When I
saw that I'd added them, I messaged them and said "Hey, do I know
you?" They replied by saying "Noo. Well, sort of." But I
honestly didn't know this person, I had never met them or even heard of them.
Anyway, I left the room with my friend and I left for about 2 hours and
completely forgot about my msn. When I got back in my room I remembered and
went and checked it. When I looked at my chat screen with this person, there
was a massive amount of abuse towards me on there. Such as threatening to
rape me, then kill me, and then eat my flesh. I was so scared. I still am
today, I'm afraid that this person knows alot about me, knows what school I
go to or knows where I live and that they are going to come and do what they
said. It's scary going through that thought everyday (Female aged 15).
i feel uncomfortable when people that have no mutual
friends try to get me to be their friends. how did they find me? (Female aged
13).
I feel unsafe at times because there is always evidence of
what you do on the net (Male aged 14).
I googled myself as a joke, to look at others with the
same name as me... but i found pictures of myself on there aswell. This
freaked me out (Female aged 15).
I have a close friend who, a few years ago, was not very
careful with posting personal information on the Internet. The issue has
since been resolved, but at the time I was quite worried that her
carelessness was putting us both in danger (Female aged 16).
I have had a recent issue with a group of girls who have
threatened me, thus feeling unsafe (Female aged 17). |
4.16
Some respondents went on to explain the dangers they perceive when asked
why they feel unsafe:
I believe that the cyber world is a dangerous place and I
believe that the amount of information about yourself and other without their
permission should be kept to a minumum or should not be expresses in the
cyber world (Female aged 16).
I love being online talking to friends. But there are the
chances of something bad happening. My parents always warn and inform me to
be aware when being online for e.g. don't tell anybody your personal details
(Female aged 15). |
4.17
Conversely, those that feel safe online, commented through free text
spaces their reasons for feeling safe:
I don't [feel unsafe] because all of my accounts have the
highest security settings and my parents check my accounts regularly (Female
aged 13).
I dont feel unsafe because im aware of the dangers. I do
not have facebook or other exposing things ie twitter, myspace. The only
thing i have is Msn which im really safe with and i dont use it that often.
The detail i put on there is very limited even to my friends because i do not
know what the dangers of a predator are and if my friends are really my
friends. I do not talk to strangers and ask my friends if they have msn and
add them myself (Female aged 13).
I don't have any online accounts that i use except for a
family shared email account and my own. Therefore my family can always see
who i'm keeping intouch with (Female aged 13).
I don't have Facebook or any of those things because I
don't like them but I don't think that they are safe either. They aren't
safe because people can track you down and you have to put some information
on that you shouldn't be asked to show (Female aged 13).
i have always been very careful on the internet and make
sure i'm not putting myself in a dangerous situation (Male aged 13).
I think that the internet can be a safe place if you know
how to use it probably. for example if you are using a site like facebook it
is very important that you konw who you are talking to when you are in a chat
room and only accept people as friends if you know them like your family
members and close friends (Female aged 13).
if you reject people you don't know, and control and limit
the information you put up there, it is a safer way to be. I don't go out
looking for strangers on the internet (Female aged 16). |
Impact
4.18
By using fake profiles and false ages, criminals lured young people such
as Carly Ryan and Nona Belomesoff to their deaths in Australia, and there have
been ‘a number’ of similar cases in the United Kingdom. Although murder is not
always the outcome, rapes, assaults and kidnappings can result from
cyber-stalking.[15] Further, cyber-stalking may
progress to sexual grooming.[16]
4.19
Mr Mark Newton commented on the impact that cyber-stalking can have on
the target:
The aim of a stalker is to undermine the victim’s sense of
personal security. A stalker will use any means available to carry out their
task: Physical presence, telephone calls, letters, text messages: Anything that
makes the victim think about the stalker ... The online world can also assist a
stalker by providing access to any parts of the victim’s life which have been
published online with inadequate privacy: Blogs, networks of acquaintances
stored by social networking sites, photographs on personal websites. Any
personal information the victim has published during the entirety of their
pre-stalked life can aid the stalker.[17]
4.20
Ms Candice Jansz cautioned that on average young people’s profiles on
social networking sites contain 40 separate pieces of personal information
including full names, ages, contact details, sexual experience and
relationships.[18]
Such exposure in what is an essentially public setting, can
leave young people open to potentially unsavoury consequences, including but
not limited to damage to their long-term reputations and employment prospects,
cyberbullying and online solicitation.[19]
4.21
The Mental Health Council of Australia believed that cyber-stalking was
a risk area that posed great risks to the mental health of young people, both
immediately and chronically.
4.22
The National Children’s and Youth Law Centre’s Lawmail service had
received Lawmails relating to threat or concerns about a stalker:
Community legal education should be increased to make young
people aware that such threats are not tolerated by the law and will be taken
seriously by police.[20]
4.23
Similarly, the NSW Primary Principal’s Association commented:
In Primary schools, children’s names are regularly reported
in documents such as newsletters and Annual School Reports – this could
potentially put them at risk of harm as these documents are now published on
school websites. A child’s name combined with knowledge of the suburb in which
they live could potentially give a person sufficient details to contact a child
via a social networking site at home. Schools are now considering ways to protect
children’s identities to avoid the possibility of being contacted online
inappropriately.[21]
Sanctions against cyber-stalking
4.24
All Australian jurisdictions have laws dealing with cyber-stalking.
Victoria and Queensland have explicitly extended the definition of the crime to
include the sending of electronic messages. State/Territory jurisdictions can
also rely on offences in the Commonwealth Criminal Code which directly address
these abuses.[22] These offences are
listed in Appendix E.
4.25
Sanctions for cyber-stalking are dealt with in more detail in Chapter 11
were legislative options are considered.
Sexual grooming
4.26
Sometimes known as ‘child grooming’ or ‘online grooming’, sexual
grooming refers to a range of calculated behaviours designed to make it easier
for an offender to procure a young person for sexual activity.
4.27
While technology has not been shown to substantially increase the number
of paedophiles (older people with a pathological interest in children/young
people), it has sped up the process and intensity of sexual exploitation.
Potential offenders do not now have to look around their neighbourhoods to gain
access to a child or a young person, as personal information is easily found
about individuals online. Targets are easily found.[23]
Most offenders who initiate sexual contact via the Internet
met their victims in chat rooms.[24]
4.28
Before a subject is targeted, it may be preceded by cyber-stalking. For
example, an offender might build a relationship of trust with a child and then
seek to sexualise that relationship by encouraging romantic feelings, or by
exposing the child to sexual concepts through pornography.[25]
There is:
... a subgroup of the whole—a very small proportion—who
actually go through and, if you like, consummate the relationship. They do this
even once they become aware that the person on the other end of the
conversation is not actually a 23-year old but, rather, a 45-year old, for
argument’s sake. They still feel that there is something in that relationship that
meets whatever needs they feel they have. It is a very alarming and unfortunate
subset of kids.[26]
4.29
The Youth Affairs Council of South Australia added that:
In fact, research suggests that in the majority of online
sexual solicitation cases referred to police, adult offenders are honest about
being an adult, and are honest about their intentions to have sex with the
young person they have solicited.[27]
4.30
Research has shown that 75 percent of young people who meet the adult physically
do so on more than one occasion:
This suggests that offenders are using young people’s natural
curiosity towards sex and sexuality to build relationships – no matter how
inappropriate – rather than coercing or threatening young people.[28]
4.31
The Alannah and Madeline Foundation expressed concern that:
Young people are often unaware of the offline consequences of
their online actions. Adolescents who are vulnerable for a variety of reasons
and who may be having trouble at school or at home tend to engage in the most
serious risk-taking online. They are the group that is the least likely to
self-protect online by guarding passwords, or showing caution in posting
pictures and so forth.[29]
4.32
Children have always been at a higher risk of being the prey of older
people with a pathological interest because of their incomplete social and
emotional development:
Unfortunately, not everyone is honest about who they are and
children and young people can be particularly susceptible to trusting people
on-line. The reality is that there are predators who pretend to be a young
person in order to befriend and gain the trust of children and young people.
Twenty-four percent of the young people in findings discussed in Choo (2009)
reported that the person they met had presented themselves as a child on-line, but
had turned out to be an adult.[30]
4.33
While some children engage in inherently risky behaviour, those with ‘low
self-esteem, lack of confidence and naivety’ are more at risk and likely to be
targeted by offenders.[31]
We increasingly live in a
society where online users are forced to enter their personal data to access
services, purchase goods or interact with one another. Nothing online is
private and in fact every keystroke leaves a digital footprint. Law enforcement
agencies find this digital footprint useful and increasingly use it to track
arrest and bring offenders of many persuasions to account.
4.34
The South Australian Police use a number of methods for policing
suspicious communications between adults and children including covert and
under-cover operations and these matters are referred to other law enforcement agencies
where there is a jurisdictional nexus.[33]
4.35
When asked if they have ever felt unsafe online, the Committee received
comments from female respondents addressing attempted sexual grooming:
I have occasionally recieved friend requests from
strangers through social networks Myspace and Facebook. They are generally
male, and middle-aged. I never accept. However, they can (and sometimes have
in the past) contacted me via the 'message' section, which freaks me out (Female
aged 17).
i dont like men looking at my profile, not knowing who
they are, it freaks me out! i have trued to put my account on private but im
not sure how (Female aged 13).
I am almost 18 so I feel like I would be less of a target
for paedophiles and the like, so I feel more comfortable putting up details
like my age and the school I attended. I don't think this should be done by
younger children and teenagers who are more at threat (Female aged 17).
|
Prevalence
4.36
About 75 percent of young people who are sexually solicited online were
able to deal with approaches because they had strategies to block them and it
did not bother them.[34]
The degree to which children are targeted for online sexual
purposes is difficult to determine because of its illegal nature and the
secretive behaviours of both perpetrators and victims. Child victims are
unlikely to report for the same reasons they do not report bullying: shame,
fear that adult intervention will make the problem worse or that their access
to favourite applications will be removed.[35]
4.37
The Australian Institute of Criminology provided the following summary
of the available statistics:
Until 2007, there have been over 130 completed prosecutions
for online procuring, grooming and exposure offences in Australia (Griffith
& Roth 2007). The number of police investigations into online child
exploitation has increased considerably in recent years. Statistics compiled by
the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions indicated that in the financial
year 2008-2009, there were;
- two Summary
(Charges) and 18 Indictable (Charges) under Section 474.26 Criminal Code 1995
(Cth) – Using a carriage service to procure persons under 16 years of age’; and
- five Summary
(Charges) and 15 Indictable (Charges) under Section 474.27 Criminal Code 1995
(Cth) – Using a carriage service to “groom” persons under 16 years of age (CDPP
2010).[36]
4.38
Mr Bruce Arnold pointed out that, while sexual grooming certainly occurs
in Australia, most molestation of children is independent of the Internet, and
of strangers.[37] The Youth Affairs
Council of South Australia reported that ‘the
type of sexual solicitation most often reported by the media, and most dreaded
by parents and caregivers – that of the adult stranger targeting a young person
– is very rare’.[38]
The experience of the stranger danger” in real world settings
is instructive here. The focus on stranger danger initially adopted by
authorities was eventually discarded when it became clear that the most common
source of adult abuse of children was from adults known to them.[39]
4.39
Adolescents are in fact more at risk from parents/carers, cousins, older
siblings or babysitters, rather than from the unknown ‘monster behind the
modem’.[40] The Youth Affairs
Council of South Australia commented:
There are four common misconceptions raised by adults when
considering the sexual solicitation of young people online: that adults who
sexually solicit young people online conceal their identity and trick or coerce
young people into meetings; that the majority of sexual solicitations are
directed at children, rather than adolescents; that social networking sites the
online places young people are in most danger of receiving unwanted sexual
solicitations; and that it is predominantly older adults who target and solicit
children and young people. Not one of these assumptions is supported by any of
the existing research into online victimisation of young people.[41]
4.40
The Youth Affairs Council of South Australia highlighted some related research:
Additionally, research suggests that those young people who
are more likely to take significant risks online– such as responding to sexual
solicitation – are also more likely to take risks in other areas of their
lives. Young people who take such risks often demonstrate characteristics
including elevated rates of substance use, involvement in offline
victimisation, perpetration of relational, physical, and sexual aggression, a
propensity to respond to stimuli with anger, poor emotional bonds with
caregivers, and poor caregiver monitoring.[42]
4.41
The National Children’s and Youth Law Centre noted that:
Although statistically, most child sex abuse takes place
within the family or social circles rather than by strangers on the Internet,
it is apparent that sexual predators do exist online and both sources of risk
must be seriously and comprehensively addressed.[43]
Impact
4.42
The Office of the Victorian Child Safety Commissioner commented that the
effects of sexual grooming include:
cognitive disorders, emotional pain, avoidance behaviours,
low self-esteem, guilt, self-blame, self-harming behaviours, delinquency,
substance abuse, vulnerability to repeated victimisation, interpersonal
difficulties, dissociation and disbelief about the abuse, functional amnesia
and effects on relationships with others (Calmer Classrooms, 2007). These can
affect a young person’s ability to experience success at school, either by the
effects the abuse has had on the cognitive capacity of the child, or, exclusion
from school due to extremely challenging behaviours. As can be seen the effects
are long lasting and for many, the damage is permanent.[44]
4.43
Parents Victoria provided the following example:
I never imagined my child (14) would have been preyed upon. I
considered our family to be really diligent with internet use but now I feel we
did drop our guard. People would say we were lucky as our school were very
communicative and supportive. We have worked closely with them and Victoria
Police not just for our child but for any other students at risk. There were
signs, we discussed and dismissed these behaviours as typical adolescent
changes but unbeknown to us it was far more intrusive and sinister. Now the
person has come to the attention of the authorities and it was confirmed our
child was being groomed. I advise to all families that where there is
information or opportunities on offer to learn prevention or strategies to
remain cybersafe please pay attention and attend, you could save a family
member from being another statistic.[45]
Sanctions against sexual grooming
4.44
The sanctions against sexual grooming will be consider in detail in
Chapter 11 which considers legislative options.
Research
4.45
It is difficult to determine the extent of online grooming in Australia.
ninemsn supported the call for additional research:
we do not have any data regarding the level of cyber-grooming
in Australia. ninemsn believes more Australian-based research into cyber safety
risks is needed so that we are better informed about the prevalence of
particular risks and the specific contexts in which
they arise.[46]
4.46
Yahoo!7 commented that:
There is a distinct lack of
research and evidence into how Australian children are engaging with the
Internet and how they, and their parents / carers perceive the safety risks
associated with their children’s use of the Internet. It would be extremely
valuable for government and industry to gain a better understanding of the
level of awareness amongst parents and carers of the range of existing safety
tools available to assist in keeping their children safe online by way of
example.[47]
Sexting
4.47
Although sexting is seen as a ‘new’ technological trend, it was first
reported in media in the United Kingdom in 2005. It is described as the
practice among some young women and men of creating, sharing, sending or
posting sexually suggestive or explicit messages or images via the Internet or
mobile phones. This material often portrays the individual sending the message.[48]
A recent survey in the UK in 2009 by the South West Grid for Learning
revealed that around 40% of teens questioned said that
they knew friends who had been involved in sexting. Over a quarter, 27%, of
respondents said that sexting happened regularly or ‘all of the time’.
Additionally, 56% of respondents were aware of instances where images and
videos were distributed further than the intended recipient, indicating that
the majority of respondents knew that these images and videos were sent on
beyond the people for whom they were intended, highlighting where sexting and
cyberbullying can converge.[49]
4.48
Once a message or image is sent, it is usually stored on the mobile
phone, email inbox or on the social networking site of the individual or the
group to whom it was sent. If a relationship deteriorates, the image may be
posted online, used to cyber-bully, or go into collections of such material
held by the offender(s).[50]
4.49
The Australian University Cyberbullying Research Alliance commented that
sexting raises moral, ethical, legal and parenting concerns at a significant
time in young people’s lives, as they are developing their sexual identities
and engaging in early romantic relationships.[51] However, Professor Karen
Vered commented that:
I increasingly find it very interesting that we continue as a
society to deny young people’s interest in sexual experience, for instance. We
simply do not want to accept the fact that teenagers are sexually active, and
by ignoring that and by pretending it is not so we make a lot of mistakes, and
some of them have consequences for young people’s health that they wear for the
rest of their lives. It is that kind of thing. We really need to be realistic
about what young people are doing with their time, whether we approve of it or
not. You might not like it, but the fact is that if young people are engaged in
certain behaviours and if we still feel responsible for them then we need to
provide them with the tools, the means and the guidance to make those
activities safe for them.[52]
4.50
Sexting reflects the increasing sexualisation of the way young people
present themselves. Dr Judith Slocombe from the Alannah and Madeline Foundation
commented that young people have picked up ‘adult values’ in our society:
bullying, violence and sexualised images. This raises the issue of
whether it is an error to approach cyber-safety in isolation without considering
a wider spectrum of behavioural issues.
Prevalence
4.51
It is not clear how common sexting is in Australia. Kids Helpline has
found that while sexting is a topic of interest among young people that ‘due to
its rising social stigmatisation, young people may not willingly admit that
they engage in this behaviour’.[54]
4.52
American research has indicated that about 4 percent of young people
have sent nude or near-nude images to other people, and about 15 percent have
received them. This suggests that such images had been passed to a wider group
by the recipients.[55] Another American study
revealed that 20 percent of young people 13 to 19 years have electronically
sent or posted online nude or semi-nude pictures or videos of themselves: 22
percent girls, 18 percent boys.[56]
4.53
Recent Australian research showed that, of 5,000 female and male
students surveyed, about 10 percent had sent nude photos of themselves by
mobile phone. However, numbers rose from year 9 so that, by Year 11, about 17
percent had sent such photos.[57]
Generation Next (Public Seminar Group on Children &
Teenagers) reported 69% of teenagers have engaged in ‘sexting’ their
girlfriends or boyfriends.[58]
4.54
Sexting has become ‘normalised behaviour’ in adolescent culture. The
American research referred to above showed that 17 percent of teenagers who
send these images to people they know and trust manage their own mobile phone
accounts, usually pre-paid. Of those whose parents manage the accounts, only 3
percent have sent such images which are then spread rapidly.[59]
4.55
Dr Barbara Spears commented that,
Regarding sexting, we certainly had evidence in the insights
project where counsellors were reporting the sexting going on but one of the
issues was not that it was being sent from peer-to-peer initially but that a
sibling within the family, as a payback, would take the mobile phone and send
something on.[60]
4.56
Participants in the Committee’s Are you safe? survey were asked
if they have sent nude or semi-nude photos to others via email, text or other
communication methods. Overall, 91.2 percent of participants would not or have
not sent nude or semi-nude pictures via new technologies.
4.57
There was a peak of this activity at the both ends of the age sample in
that survey. Notably, 22.8 percent of female respondents aged 18 years answered
that they would send nude or semi-nude photos. There was also a peak in 18 year
old males: 17.3 percent identifying that they send nude or semi-nude photos to
others. Such actions may expose these young adults to significant risk, and can
have huge implications later in life.
Figure 4.3 Do you send nude or semi-nude pictures? (Age)
Table 4.3 Do you send nude or semi-nude pictures?
|
|
Yes |
No |
I don’t know |
Not stated |
Total |
|
Sex |
% |
# |
% |
# |
% |
# |
% |
# |
# |
5 Years |
M |
18.7 |
14 |
70.7 |
53 |
6.7 |
5 |
4.0 |
3 |
75 |
F |
23.2 |
19 |
61.0 |
50 |
9.8 |
8 |
6.1 |
5 |
82 |
6 Years |
M |
16.7 |
8 |
64.6 |
31 |
8.3 |
4 |
10.4 |
5 |
48 |
F |
12.5 |
8 |
76.6 |
49 |
4.7 |
3 |
6.3 |
4 |
64 |
7 Years |
M |
6.4 |
7 |
76.4 |
84 |
11.8 |
13 |
5.5 |
6 |
110 |
F |
6.2 |
6 |
76.3 |
74 |
14.4 |
14 |
3.1 |
3 |
97 |
8 Years |
M |
5.0 |
21 |
84.2 |
357 |
8.7 |
37 |
2.1 |
9 |
424 |
F |
2.6 |
13 |
86.6 |
427 |
9.7 |
48 |
1.0 |
5 |
493 |
9 Years |
M |
3.9 |
39 |
87.8 |
882 |
7.3 |
73 |
1.0 |
10 |
1004 |
F |
1.9 |
21 |
91.3 |
984 |
5.8 |
62 |
1.0 |
11 |
1078 |
10 Years |
M |
3.4 |
58 |
92.2 |
1568 |
3.8 |
65 |
0.6 |
10 |
1701 |
F |
1.5 |
27 |
95.0 |
1708 |
3.1 |
55 |
0.4 |
8 |
1798 |
11 Years |
M |
2.3 |
53 |
94.2 |
2171 |
2.8 |
64 |
0.7 |
17 |
2305 |
F |
1.5 |
38 |
95.9 |
2399 |
2.0 |
50 |
0.6 |
15 |
2502 |
12 Years |
M |
2.9 |
65 |
93.5 |
2093 |
2.7 |
60 |
0.9 |
21 |
2239 |
F |
1.8 |
41 |
96.2 |
2176 |
1.4 |
31 |
0.7 |
15 |
2263 |
13 Years |
M |
5.0 |
95 |
92.3 |
1745 |
2.4 |
45 |
0.3 |
5 |
1890 |
F |
3.1 |
75 |
95.7 |
2350 |
1.0 |
25 |
0.2 |
6 |
2456 |
14 Years |
M |
5.9 |
95 |
91.6 |
1476 |
2.2 |
35 |
0.4 |
6 |
1612 |
F |
2.4 |
48 |
96.3 |
1908 |
1.2 |
23 |
0.2 |
3 |
1982 |
15 Years |
M |
6.7 |
80 |
90.0 |
1072 |
3.2 |
38 |
0.1 |
1 |
1191 |
F |
2.1 |
29 |
96.6 |
1327 |
0.9 |
12 |
0.4 |
6 |
1374 |
16 Years |
M |
4.8 |
39 |
92.7 |
748 |
2.4 |
19 |
0.1 |
1 |
807 |
F |
1.8 |
18 |
96.4 |
962 |
1.3 |
13 |
0.5 |
5 |
998 |
17 Years |
M |
9.4 |
37 |
87.3 |
345 |
2.5 |
10 |
0.8 |
3 |
395 |
F |
2.1 |
12 |
96.3 |
547 |
1.4 |
8 |
0.2 |
1 |
568 |
18 Years |
M |
17.3 |
54 |
76.3 |
238 |
5.1 |
16 |
1.3 |
4 |
312 |
F |
22.8 |
59 |
69.1 |
179 |
6.6 |
17 |
1.5 |
4 |
259 |
4.58
Analysing its own research, Berry Street commented that for vulnerable
young people:
Between 7 and 15% of respondents indicated they had either
sent, requested or received naked or semi-naked photographs of themselves or
others online or via mobile phone. In consultations staff, carers and educators
told us that they were concerned about the growing trend in ‘sexting’ among
their clients. More concerning were the stories about teenage girls using
photographs of themselves in suggestive poses and varying states of undress to
barter with strangers as well as their peers for drugs, phone credit and
cigarettes.[61]
4.59
Concerns were also expressed by parents and communities who have noted an
increased prevalence of sexting via mobile phones , and the impact it is having
on Indigenous young people.[62]
Impact
4.60
While most originators seem to send these messages voluntarily, the
consequences of sexting are clear, including invasion of privacy via subsequent
distribution, the impact on the individual’s reputation, and shame. BoysTown
commented:
Consequences include poor self-esteem and self-image,
isolating behaviours, school avoidance, eating disorders, self-harm and
suicidal ideation and behaviours.[63]
4.61
Civil Liberties Australia added that other possible consequences
include:
While it may make parents unhappy, young people are going to
be in relationships, and some of these may involve sex. As such, and given that
young people are now in possession of camera-equipped mobile phones, it is
inevitable that some will choose to send sexual pictures to each other. Whilst
the sexual education above should discourage this behaviour, no minor involved
in a healthy relationship should ever be considered a “child pornographer” nor
in possession of “child pornography” for such behaviour. About the worst thing
we can do to our young people is brand them as sex offenders: the current laws
turn experimenters into criminals. The real issue is when and how the images
are made publicly available. The person(s) who makes the images publicly
available should be made responsible for that act.[64]
4.62
Distribution of such images also invites possible long term effects on
the sender’s ‘digital reputation’, potentially causing problems with possible
employers in the future.[65] Material can be traced;
what is posted on line may come back and remain online forever because the
digital footprint of Internet access is indelible. Some private investigation
firms now have the capacity to search for a variety of personal information.[66]
4.63
The Alannah and Madeline Foundation highlighted a significant concern:
A number of companies now routinely review a potential
employee’s online history, particularly on facebook and other social networking
sites, and use this information as part of their decision making in the
recruitment process. Because of permanent records or the ‘digital footprint’
that young people leave on the internet, naïve and inappropriate postings may
have a long term and detrimental effect on a young person’s life.[67]
4.64
The NSW Secondary Principals Council commented on the permanence of
postings:
One of the greatest risks to young people is the permanence
of the postings made on the internet. This concept is not fully understood by
Gen Y and Gen Z. Government needs to consider protections to reduce the
permanence of postings for under 18s.[68]
4.65
BoysTown added that:
Like cyberbullying, the impacts of ‘sexting’ can also be
permanent as it is almost impossible to withdraw inappropriate images or
messages created and shared through mobile and internet technologies once they
are sent and/or posted. This means that these images and messages could be
circulating as young people start applying for universities or jobs which may
impact on the individual’s reputation and life opportunities.[69]
4.66
An American study showed that 70 percent of recruiters and human
resource professionals said that they had rejected candidates for jobs based on
information found online. While only 7 percent of consumers thought that their
online information affected their searches for jobs, 75 percent of American companies
required their hiring personnel to do online searches about candidates. Among
recruiters and human resource professionals, 85 percent said that ‘positive’
online reputations influenced hiring decisions, ‘at least to some extent’.[70]
While it is possibly illegal to do so, potential employers can , and some do,
‘automatically’ check on Internet search engines, and in other ways, on
potential employees, whether for part-time staff aged 15 or graduates.[71]
4.67
‘Data mining’ is now one of the fastest growing industries in Australia,
whereby information can be collected on many aspects of an individual’s life
and behaviour. Civil Liberties Australia commented:
people simply do not realise that the Internet never forgets,
and information posted online in the heat of the moment may come back to haunt
him/her at a later date.[72]
4.68
However, Dr Helen McGrath emphasised that:
if we get out a message that
says, ‘It is the end of the world if something you foolishly put up about
yourself when you 13, particularly a semi-nude picture, will be up there
forever and it will come back to bite you,’ then we are going to get lots of
kids who become deeply depressed and self-harm as a result of that. I am very
concerned about that, if they have done it and they find out afterwards that it
really was dumb. It is a silly thing to do, in the same way that you should
never have a webcam in your bedroom— and it is amazing how many parents do not
understand how a boyfriend at one end and a girlfriend at the other end, both
with webcams, can have interesting times with the door shut. But if they think
it is going to destroy their lives it can lead to incredible depression and
occasionally self-harm. That is why I think going down the path of wise
education, with warnings but not necessarily terrifying sensationalism, is the
way to go.[73]
4.69
The Alannah and Madeline Foundation commented that,
the use child abuse legislation to prosecute regardless of
age, on the grounds of production and distribution of images ...can mean young
people may have a criminal record and in a worst-case scenario, although
unlikely, find themselves on the sex offenders register.[74]
4.70
In Australia, 32 Victorian teenagers were charged with child pornography
offences resulting from ‘sexting’.[75] Many young people are
unaware that ‘sexting’ may be considered a criminal offence.[76]
4.71
Furthermore, not all young people view ‘sexting’ as unsafe:
58 percent of the respondents in the Cox Communications
(2007) study did not think that posting personal information and photos on
public networking sites was an unsafe practice, 47 percent were not worried
about other people using their personal online information in ways they did not
want them to, and 49 percent were unconcerned that the posting of personal
information online might negatively affect their future.[77]
4.72
The Australian Council for Computers in Education commented that:
The reported prevalence of posting of photographs of students
to SNS, suggests that the legal and ethical issues involved with the posting of
photographs – which include privacy, confidentiality, defamation and copyright
– merit specific attention in any cybersafety curriculum. The significance of
understanding these issues is emphasised by the incidents involving a Melbourne
teenager posting naked photos of AFL footballers to her Facebook site.[78]
4.73
The NSW Government is conducting a campaign entitled SAFE SEXTING: No
Such Thing:
This work is designed to warn young people of the negative
consequences of sexting; the campaign produced a fact sheet available to
schools, parents and teenagers on the topic. This is a good example of positive
government efforts to educate, inform and help reduce negative online behaviour.[79]
4.74
The National Children’s and Youth Law Centre Lawmails contained
questions about nudity or pornography, demonstrating a concern about criminal
sanctions and a desire to comply with legislation. In relation to naïve young people
transmitting sexually suggestive photos, if child pornography laws are rigidly
applied, ‘these children will not only suffer personal consequences but also
potentially very serious criminal consequences’.[80]
Sanctions against sexting
4.75
The sanctions are dealt with in more detail in Chapter 11.
Research
4.76
Sexting is an area where further research is needed to understand the
motives behind this behaviour and to develop effective intervention strategies.[81]
4.77
BoysTown suggested that the Australian Government fund a
nationally-representative study on sexting in relation to Australian children
and young people with the purpose of identifying effective prevention
strategies.[82]
Illegal and inappropriate content
4.78
There are no restrictions on access to the online environment because of
the age of users, or potential users. Young people may therefore be exposed to
content that is inappropriate, regardless of their age. This could include
illegal and inappropriate sexual, violent, racist or hate material, promotion
of consumption, perpetuation of negative stereotypes, as well as misinformation
and other problematic content.[83]
4.79
Sexual content may include legal adult pornography, illegal child abuse
or self-produced sexting images or other inappropriate images, video or audio
files. The Alannah and Madeline Foundation submitted that:
While the likelihood of stumbling across child abuse images
is relatively low, these images are deliberately sent as part of the ‘grooming
processes’ to normalise sexual behaviour. On the other hand, very graphic adult
pornography is easily accessed and often free. While young adults have viewed
pornography in ‘magazine format’ for decades, at no other time have we
experienced such heightened access to pornographic material.[84]
4.80
Illegal material may be accessed accidentally when music or videos are being
downloaded. While the great majority of young people will never encounter, or
use, any of the sites offering illegal material, its presence in the online
environment is a sufficient threat to need attention.[85]
My daughter was seven when she first encountered
pornography online. Her school (she was in Year 2) participated in the online
maths practice program Mathletics. One day when she clicked on the link to
Mathletics, it took her to a pornography website and she called me saying Mummy
the computer has done something funny and there are strange people on the
Mathletics site. Some hacker or virus had attached itself to the Mathletics
address and was taking children to a porn site. Fortunately, it was one that
needed you to accept that it was an adult site and you had to click a link to
access the more graphic content .... The images would have been classified as
images of full frontal male and female nudity in sexualised depictions and
have been at least in the MA15+ classification range.[86]
|
4.81
Industry also has a role to play. For example, Facebook does not allow
materials such as nudity, hateful speech, abusive behaviour or threat to life
or safety:
It is important to understand just as a matter of how
Facebook operates and what its terms of service are—how it is laid out, what is
allowed and what is not allowed—that it is much more restrictive than almost
any legislation I have ever seen in any place in terms of what is allowed on
the site, what is not allowed on the site and what we police for.[87]
4.82
The National Children’s and Youth Law Centre expressed concern about the
lack of community legal education which would enable people to make wise
decisions and given the serious nature of the potential consequences, young
people must have this information to make informed and reasoned decisions.[88]
4.83
Sanctions in relation to illegal content are dealt with in Chapter 11.