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Gambling With Chatroulette

In the ever-changing terrain of online social networks, there seems to be a new chat-tweet-skype-till-you-drop Internet craze popping up just about, oh, every 15 seconds or so. One of the latest rages grabbing everybody’s water cooler gab time is something called “extreme social networking.”

Haven’t heard of it? It’s an experience delivered through a Website called chatroulette.com. Join in and you’re spontaneously connected to random strangers somewhere in the world via your webcam. From French jugglers to deep-South garglers to morons asking users to lift up their shirts, you can never be sure who you’ll meet next.

Foxnews.com reporter Joshua Rhett Miller put it this way: “One minute you’re chatting with a mom of two from Montauk, N.Y.—and the next you’re staring at a stark-naked man in Bangkok.” A vimeo.com video-maker named Casey Neistat broke down his several hour Chatroulette experience to connections like this: 71% guys, 15% girls and 14% perverts.

One of the big attractions of the experience—though I personally can’t see how one might find it appealing—is what Neistat calls “nexting.” In essence it’s when someone spots you on their monitor and instantly hits the “next” button to connect with someone else. Neistat reported that he was nexted by the first 19 out of 20 people he saw on Chatroulette—a hang-around rate of about 2.9 seconds each.

Think about it: 19 thumb-your-nose rejections in under a minute. And by Neistat’s own statistical odds, at least one of them was probably naked. Man, this sounds like great fun doesn’t it? In spite of that, though, CNN reported that about 35,000 people are connected to Chatroulette’s homepage at any given moment.

The biggest crime, however, is that among all the thrill-seekers and deviants are a fair number of kids. To participate, you have to confirm that you’re at least 16 years old, but bypassing those barriers would be a breeze for the average 10-year-old—who could probably reprogram my computer in less time than it’s taking to write this blog.

“It’s a predator’s paradise,” said psychiatrist and Fox News contributor, Dr. Keith Ablow. “This is one of the worst faces of the Internet that I’ve seen. … Parents should keep all children off the site because it’s much too dangerous.”

I’m no doctor, but that’s one tidbit of advice I wouldn’t “next” too quickly.

Bob Hoose

After spending more than two decades touring, directing, writing and producing for Christian theater and radio (most recently for Adventures in Odyssey, which he still contributes to), Bob joined the Plugged In staff to help us focus more heavily on video games. He is also one of our primary movie reviewers.