As in America it could be done at a stroke by requiring a user to give a credit-card number
As in America, it could be done at a stroke by requiring a user to give a credit-card number, and effectively barring children from these services. Other forms of identification which could be asked for, such as passport numbers, might be considered, unwilling as one is to hand over personal information of that sort to a private company, and they certainly could not be given the means to check whether the information is correct.But it is surely not outside the bounds of ingenuity to create a tool capable of identifying users with suspicious patterns of behaviour – ones who approach a series of other users in exactly the same terms, for instance, or users in teenage chatrooms who engage with one other user at enormous length. Some of them, however, will certainly pursue their obsession through other, much more shadowy means.In the case of Michael Wheeler, a 36-year old man from Cambridge, he could be prosecuted for 11 sex offences against young girls on the strength of two 13-year-old girls he contacted via a chatroom. It is a very fine line to draw, but it might be argued that a more closely controlled and supervised structure might make it easier for the police to identify cases of abuse.However many people are currently using MSN’s chatrooms for these disgusting purposes, it can’t be thought that when the chatrooms close down, the problem will vanish. But it doesn’t seem undoubtedly true, as yet, and only a relatively small number of cases have surfaced.It is worth saying, too, that when such tragic cases have come to light, the evidence of the chatroom exchanges has been of great importance in demonstrating the facts of the case. Everything is sex nowadays, and I can’t help thinking that the limitless provision of sexual material has in part created the hunger.
Perhaps an abuser does start more easily because the internet allows him to disguise himself so thoroughly; perhaps the medium does create the user.If we could be sure that this was the case, then there should be no hesitation in closing down chatrooms, or at the least, putting measures in place which would make it impossible to use them entirely anonymously. Certainly, the vast ocean of pornography visible through the internet has clearly led to a sickeningly tedious level of sexual imagery throughout our culture. It is perfectly possible to imagine that the loss of the service would be a great blow to many people who live in isolated or unsympathetic places, who use it simply for a little society. The question is whether the provision of the service creates the conditions for child abuse, or whether it is just a convenient medium. In other cases, young teenagers have thought they were talking to someone their own age, and talked with greater freedom than was sensible; subsequently, they found they were talking to adults who were intending to abuse them.It’s not quite clear to me, or indeed to the authorities, how widespread such cases are, and whether in reality they justify closing down what is evidently a service which gives harmless pleasure to a great many people.
Unfortunately, that also means that you have no real idea whether the person you are talking to is who he says he is. In one high-profile case, a former US marine eloped with a 12-year-old girl He claimed that he had no idea of her real age. The dangers arising from misuse are, it seems, substantial enough to justify removing the whole operation.These misuses are to do with child abuse, and are certainly very frightening and worrying cases. Many users of the chatrooms are teenagers or younger, for obvious reasons; at what may be a difficult and confusing time in life, it is tempting to acquire the instant “friends” of a chatroom, and to pass yourself off as more attractive, more confident, funnier or more charming than you are in real life.Chatrooms are, for all realistic purposes, anonymous You can be anyone you choose. However, 1.2 million people in this country use chatrooms every month, so it is clearly a popular and perhaps even useful resource.Chatrooms are principally used, it seems, for fairly desultory conversation about trivial things, and, very enthusiastically, for lonely or oversexed people to talk dirty to strangers or even to pick them up. Conceivably, however, they could form a resource through which users with a particular, uncommon enthusiasm, for growing cacti or for the novels of Maud Diver could contact each other and discuss the subject to their hearts’ content.I’m not sure that this actually does happen to an appreciable extent, but clearly the resource does theoretically permit this, and could become a useful tool. Microsoft have announced, quite out of the blue, that they are closing down all their UK chatrooms on the internet with effect from 14 October.

