Social Networking Law and Missouri Teachers and Students

social networking law - social media law

Will social networking law hurt or help students?

What does the new Missouri Social Networking law do?

The Missouri legislature passed a new social networking law in order to restrict communications between teachers and students over the internet.

Specifically, the law prevents teachers from adding their students as friends on social media websites like Facebook (and probably Google+ Circles too), and it restricts teachers from communicating with students in over other online communication services. Though intended to prevent teachers and students from engaging in sexual encounters, many have criticized the broad language of the bill, and complained that the bill will in fact restrict valuable communication between teachers and students.

Why is the Missouri social networking law controversial?

While perhaps the state social networking law will prevent some teachers from exchanging lewd messages with their students using social media, many claim the law will have numerous unforeseen consequences. Electronic communication currently legitimately used by coaches to alert players about changes in practice schedules and teachers to alert students about new homework requirements might be eliminated because of the new law. With such a law in place, perhaps even simple email communication between teachers and students, such as when a student has questions about an upcoming test, concerns some individuals.

Questions also have arisen in regard to teachers who are family friends of a student, or friends of that student’s parents. Would the Missouri social networking law prevent teachers from interacting with students online even when teachers have preexisting social relationships with those students? The actual practicality of the bill stopping teacher/student sexual relationships perhaps also deserves scrutiny as those teachers intent on having sex with students could instead communicate in other ways, as they undoubtedly did prior to internet communications.

What does this new social networking law, and other similar laws, mean for Missouri and the country as a whole?

Teachers, especially in Missouri and in others states considering passing a social networking law similar to the Missouri one, should avoid electronic communication with students unless they thoroughly understand the ramifications of what could go wrong. Time will tell whether the law does in fact cut down on teacher/student sexual relations, or if it simply puts a boundary between the two groups and impedes actual legitimate learning.

Missouri’s passage of another law further demonstrates the state’s concern with and attention paid to, issues involving schools and the internet. In this second law, lawmakers responded to pressure from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other like-minded groups by removing non-explicit homosexual websites from the list of websites censored from schoolchildren. The legality of informational non-explicit gay and lesbian websites was seen by lawmakers and advocates as information that could be beneficial to a student’s education, and thus not information that should be further banned or prevented by school censorship.

The only thing that remains clear is that Missouri, like other states, is struggling with how to protect students online, including censorship issues and social networking law restrictions.

Share

Google Plus Privacy Policy: What You Should Know

google plus privacy

Do you know your Google+ privacy rights?

Google Plus Privacy

Because I’m an Internet lawyer, I decided to test out the new Google Plus Privacy. You can click the link in the prior sentence to see my Google+ profile as an example.

After the company’s privacy fiasco with Buzz last year, the new Google+ goes out of its way to explain privacy rights.

Four Google Plus Privacy Policies

Actually, there are at least four Privacy Policies that cover Google Plus privacy…

1. Google’s main privacy policy

2. Google+ privacy policy

3. The Google +1 button privacy policy (this is similar to the Facebook “Like” button)

4. Google’s mobile privacy policy (for smart phones etc.)

Every one of these policies describes the type of information Google collects and how it is used by Google and others.

What You Should Know About Google Plus Privacy

My take is that Google+ is more user-friendly than Facebook, particularly the ability to sort your contacts by category into circles for communication purposes. Some of your information may be used by Google and its advertisers pursuant to the company’s privacy policies. It’s up to you to weigh the pros and cons. This means that if you’re trying to protect yourself online, be sure to understand Google Plus privacy policies before using Google+ (or other social media for that matter).

Share

Don’t let your website get weinered

internet lawyer social media twitter

Talk with your Internet lawyer about a social media policy

You don’t have to be an Internet lawyer to know that Congressman Anthony Weiner was tweeting things he shouldn’t while working, using his employer’s computer equipment and office space to do it.

Fortunately for Congressman Weiner, his employer is the government so there’s unlikely to be a lawsuit against it as a defendant because of his misconduct.

But when you do business online, you don’t have that special privilege.

When your employees or freelancers are doing work on your behalf, the last thing you want is for them to embarrass you using Twitter, Facebook, or other social media.

Here’s what to do…

1. Pre-screen who does work for you. If nothing else, check them out through Google and a peek at their social media postings before they start working for you. If you’d be embarrassed by what you see online already, don’t use their services…because they’re likely post more stupid stuff while they’re working for you.

2. Put a written social media policy in place for your business that restricts what employees and freelancers can do while working for you. If they want to act like drunken clowns or perverts in social media, you don’t want your business’ reputation to get hurt because of it.

3. And if someone is acting like a fool in social media after they have done work for you, ask them to remove any reference they have made online to your business. Avoid being tied to their shenanigans by association.

4. If you have any questions about what is acceptable social media behavior from a legal standpoint, ask your Internet lawyer for help.

Best wishes,

-Mike the Internet lawyer

Share