MySpace.com provide popular social networking Web site

MySpace.com will provide a number of state attorneys general with
data on registered sex offenders who use the popular social networking
Web site, the company said Monday.

Attorneys general from eight
states demanded last week that the company provide data on how many
registered sex offenders are using the site and where they live.
MySpace initially refused, citing federal privacy laws.

MySpace
obtained the data from Sentinel Tech Holding Corp., which the company
partnered with in December to build a database with information on sex
offenders.

“We developed ‘Sentinel Safe’ from scratch because
there was no means to weed them out and get them off of our site,” said
Mike Angus, MySpace’s executive vice president and general counsel.

Angus
said the company, owned by media conglomerate News Corp. had always
planned to share information on sex offenders it identified and has
already removed about 7,000 profiles out of a total of about 180
million.

“This is no different than an offline community,” he said. “We’re trying to keep it safe.”

Angus said the company had also made arrangements to allow law enforcement to use the Sentinel software directly.

MySpace is owned by media conglomerate News Corp.

Attorneys
general in North Carolina, Connecticut, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi,
New Hampshire, Ohio and Pennsylvania asked for the Sentinel data last
week.

North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office said in
a statement the information could potentially be used to look for
parole violations or help in investigations.

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