Perils of online dating prompt safety efforts

Released on = March 25, 2006, 1:57 am

Press Release Author = Anees Ahmed

Industry = Entertainment

Press Release Summary = Online dating services taking precautions for their members
to save them from frauds.

Press Release Body = Josie Phyllis Brown never had a chance against her
6-foot-6-inch (2-meter) killer, although his stature was one of the few things she
should have known from his Internet profile.
John Christopher Gaumer, who confessed to the murder and led Baltimore County police
to Brown\'s body on February 7, listed his height and other attributes in his quest
for dates on MySpace.com, a free Internet social site owned by News Corp. where
mostly young people connect for friendship and romance.

Some personal profiles on the Web site are frighteningly revealing. People publish
their birth dates, schools they attend, even clubs they will frequent on a given
Saturday night, complete with a cellphone number for whomever might care to join
them.

\"Think about, there are millions of people we\'re dealing with here and somehow
people think they are all preachers,\" said Paul Falzone, chief executive of Together
Dating service, a brick-and-mortar company that performs background checks on all
members. Falzone says background checks result in 10 percent of applicants being
rejected.

For most of the 40 million people using Internet sites for dating and socializing
each month, a disastrous 15 minutes over coffee at Starbucks is the worst they will
suffer.

But there is enough danger out there that some U.S. states are considering
legislation to force Internet dating sites to police themselves, while companies
that do background checks say business is booming.

Only a small percentage of \"intimate partner violence\" -- nearly 700,000 such
incidents were reported to the U.S. Department of Justice Department of Justice in
2001 -- originate from Internet dating, according to Mark Brooks, editor of Online
Personals, which monitors the dating industry.

For upstart online service True.com, even one assault is too much. The site performs
background checks on every member, ferreting out sex offenders, felons and married
people. About 11 percent of those who apply are rejected.
\"To think a felon could find a victim, especially for a heinous crime, gives me the
heebie-jeebies. I do all I can do to prevent that,\" said Herb Vest, chief executive
of True.com.
Nevertheless, Robert Wells, convicted of lewd and lascivious acts with a child under
14, passed the True.com screening and posted a profile on that site. The company is
suing him, claiming he committed wire fraud.

The small competitor is pressing for legislation to force big Web sites like
Match.com and Yahoo! to perform background checks, or clearly state they don\'t. So
far, California, Florida, Texas and Michigan have considered legislation.
Yahoo! and Match.com, the industry leaders with 6 million and 15 million monthly
visitors respectively, continually stress dating safety.
Match.com forces the 60,000 people who sign up for the service each month to review
its safety policies before they subscribe. On both sites, every profile is reviewed
and approved by human eyes to screen out excess information or obscenity.

Around 15 percent of postings are rejected, according to Kristin Kelly, spokesperson
for Match.com.

For further information, please visit at http://www.datingservices-online.net

Web Site = http://www.datingservices-online.net

Contact Details = Beverly Hills, CA
323 3083703
aneeskalsekar@yahoo.co.in

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