Facebook and Time Warner are teaming up to address a problem that torments millions of children and young adults: cyber-bullying.
Mark Zuckerberg (right) is the founder and CEO of Facebook. The popular site is teaming with Time Warner to fight cyber-bullying. |
The partnership announced Tuesday calls for Facebook and Time Warner to use their clout to raise awareness about online bullying and encourage more people to report the abuses when they see them.
Facebook's participation reflects a growing recognition that its online social network consisting of more than 750 million people has become an outlet for harassment as well as friendship.
"We believe that by working together with parents and teachers, we can teach young people to speak up and stop bullying," said Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer.
The anti-bullying campaign will be waged on the Internet, on TV and radio and several major U.S. magazines. It's being billed as "Stop Bullying: Speak Up," a theme that Time Warner's Cartoon Network has been trumpeting since last year.
Now the message is being extended to Time Warner's CNN on TV and in three of its magazines, People, Time and Sports Illustrated. CNN's Anderson Cooper will host a town hall meeting focused on bullying in October, while the magazines will all delve into the topic during the same month.
By the time most kids return to school later this summer, Facebook plans to release a new application that will broadcast a user's pledge to help prevent bullying. Four months ago, as part of a White House conference that President Barack Obama held on bullying, Facebook introduced a feature to make it easier to report cyberbullying.
The White House estimates that 13 million students, or nearly one-third of the school-age population in the U.S., are targets of bullying. In a 2009 survey by The Associated Press and MTV, half of the people from 14 to 24 years old said they had been cyberbullied.
The harassment, aimed at everything from a person's sexual orientation to his or her fashion taste, can lead to emotional problems, drug abuse and, in extreme instances, suicide.
Other media outlets catering to young people have also adopted anti-bullying stances. For example, Viacom Inc.'s Nickelodeon television network unveiled a public service campaign advising its target audience of children ages 2 to 14 on how to counter taunting texts, emails and Facebook posts.
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