Facebook Installs ''Panic Button,'' May Come to US

Status
Not open for further replies.

Humans think

Distinguished
Jan 15, 2009
75
0
18,580
A minor alert for the rest should also be helpful!

You are talking to Tania, no age specified. A pop-up comes out

"Tania is a minor, in certain countries the use of sexual innuendos is considered a felony"

-bb Tania got to go

Also I believe that the panic button should be in the main interface, not an app.
 

Humans think

Distinguished
Jan 15, 2009
75
0
18,580
[citation][nom]blurr91[/nom]Any chance that this "panic button" might be mis-used?[/citation]

Lots:
1) overuse/flooding: will lead to late response
2) revenge/set-ups: payback time!
3) punish the weirdo: You are sick!

but none the less it is helpful, a friend of mine had a stalker calling her and we called the police and they said that they need a court order to first monitor and then they could give us his phone number. So having a "loaded-gun" in a button comes in handy.
 

mr_tuel

Distinguished
May 23, 2009
178
0
18,630
Kids do stupid stuff. Some unfortunately die because of stupid stuff. I've lost many friends because of stupid stuff. It is a fact of life. This button won't change that.
 

someguynamedmatt

Distinguished
Feb 7, 2010
160
0
18,660
Tuel, I couldn't have said it better. And this button, no matter what they say about it, will cause more problems than it solves. If there are 'kids' we're talking about here, how long do you think it will take before the waves of people start reporting each other to the authorities because they don't like each other in real life? What a waste of the 'authorities'... Oh, it's alright if there are drug dealers and criminals out the wazoo on the streets, we just don't want people abusing each other in the internet. Morons.
That is a downright horrible thing to say.
No. That's life. I must just be ignorant or something, but no matter what anyone says, I can't wait until the day when something happens that make people have to learn to defend themselves and not be so stupid that they try to set themselves up with an absolutely random person they found on the internet. It isn't Facebook's fault, nor is a button going to help.

So having a "loaded-gun" in a button comes in handy.
Well, if that's the case, then millions of 'children' all over the UK will be shooting at each other. I remember how it was, how there were always people you absolutely hated and wanted something bad to happen to... now, all the kids on Facebook will have a way they think can make this happen.

No matter what they try to do about it, there isn't anything that will help other than completely tearing down Facebook. I don't know what they're thinking is causing the deaths; it's not like these people are being forced into doing something... it's not physically possible to drag someone to your house through the Ethernet cable hooked to your PC. They're doing it on their own free will, and there lies the problem.

Sorry about the speach... Just my $0.02+tax on the subject.

 

freename

Distinguished
Jun 11, 2009
16
0
18,560
If someone is posing as a teenager, as mentioned in the main article, how is the targeted teen going to know to push the panic button?

It will only help if they know the person is dodgy and if they already know that, wtf is a panic button going to do?
 

ithurtswhenipee

Distinguished
Mar 6, 2010
57
0
18,580
[citation][nom]blurr91[/nom]Any chance that this "panic button" might be mis-used?[/citation]
From the story it seems as thought all the button does is give the pusher links to reporting agencies. The pusher would still need to do the actual reporting. So really all this does is bypass Google.uk for those who are going to report and don't know where to do it.
 

JonathanDeane

Distinguished
Mar 28, 2006
192
0
18,630
What would be nice is if the app would send a IM with details about the purp so that they could do a little more investigation on the person (after all I can see this thing being abused by bad people too, so a real investigation would need to be carried out.) logs would be nice too if Facebook would turn them over in cases where the police obtained a warrant.
 
"Grooming?" Must be a term I don't know - combing my hair doesn't seem to threaten minors.
Seriously, can someone fill me in on what that refers to, if only because I have an online teenage daughter?
 

Camikazi

Distinguished
Jul 20, 2008
745
0
18,930
[citation][nom]WyomingKnott[/nom]"Grooming?" Must be a term I don't know - combing my hair doesn't seem to threaten minors. Seriously, can someone fill me in on what that refers to, if only because I have an online teenage daughter?[/citation]
Child grooming is a somewhat euphemistic term for the development of a relationship with a child by an adult for the purpose of engaging in sexual activities with the child. The "groomer" is sometimes refered to as a "chickenhawk".

In addition to acts which by themselves are legal, sexual grooming may include acts such as showing pornography to the child, perhaps even child pornography. The pornography may be used to arouse the child, as an example of what the adult desires or to give the child the impression that the depicted acts are normal or common.

One form of grooming is "Internet grooming" or "online grooming", that is, nurturing an Internet friendship, usually by means of online chat, which may later result in "real life" contact. In 2003 MSN Chat was restricted to better protect children from what they called "inappropriate communication". Yahoo! and the New York State attorney general’s office agreed in October 2005 that Yahoo! will remove and bar user-created chat rooms with names that promoted sex between minors and adults [1]. That's from http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Child_grooming/id/1964581
 

zaznet

Distinguished
May 10, 2010
262
0
18,930
Seems it is like adding a bookmark to each kids browser to a page where they can report stuff.

The page has always been there, kids that don't report suspect activity are fooled by the perps and won't use the panic button.

Without capturing data, emails, chat that is ongoing from Facebook and sending those to the agency this is nothing more than a link to yet another web page.
 

omnimodis78

Distinguished
Oct 7, 2008
326
0
18,940
[citation][nom]Humans think[/nom]Lots:1) none the less it is helpful, a friend of mine had a stalker calling her and we called the police and they said that they need a court order to first monitor and then they could give us his phone number. So having a "loaded-gun" in a button comes in handy.[/citation]
What does a telephone stalker have anything to do with Facebook? Unless by 'calling' you meant via Facebook which is ridiculous because she could have blocked him/her.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.