Monday, April 21, 2014

The Dangers that New Media Users Face


                There are many dangers to new media users that can cause depression, unsafe situations and even suicide. One of these dangers is sexting. Sexting is sending provocative pictures to another person through text messages or one of the most popular ways, Snapchat. With today’s technology and the newest apps coming out for smartphones, sexting has become incredibly easy, but what teenagers and even children don’t understand is that sexting can cause a very dangerous situation for them. According to Today.com, a girl named Jessica Logan committed suicide because of an incident of sending nude pictures to her boyfriend over the time. When they broke up, he ended up sending them to different high school girls that they went to school with. The girls that he sent these pictures to made Jessica’s life literally a living hell by calling her a slut and harassing her. She literally felt like she was being tortured. While all of this was happening in school, the officials did absolutely nothing to help her or to inform her mother of what was going on during school hours to her daughter. There was one day when Jessica felt like she couldn’t handle this anymore and she hung herself in her bedroom, where her mother found her hanging in her closet and her cell phone in the middle of the floor. I think that the issue of sexting will never disappear or go away, but there are ways to help prevent this and to protect your children from this. When you are a parent and your child is a teenager there are ways to stay aware of the new ways that high school students communicate with each other and are able to send different forms of media to each other. Just by looking up different articles and summaries of what is going on within the world and by keeping your children aware of the dangers that come along with sexting can help make them safer and to help make the world a safer place regarding sexting.

 

Celizic, Mike. “Her Teen Committed Suicide over ‘Sexting’.” TODAY.com. NBC News, 6 Nov. 2013. Web. 21 Apr. 2014.