12:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · children|Controversia|Games|society|Tech · 3 Comments
23 Apr 2009Apple probably wasn’t banking on a whole lot of controversy when it decided to allow anyone to add their own homegrown applications to their repository of iPhone applications, the App Store. But banking or not, they are getting it with one application which has outraged people all over; the Baby Shaker app (see video above) lets users shake a crying baby until it dies all in the name of fun. The SF Chronicle reports:
“Baby Shaker,” a simple app from Sikalosoft, was first released Monday for 99 cents. It shows pictures of babies with the sound of them crying and a stop watch. To stop the crying, you shake the iPhone hard and then little Xs appear on the eyes of the baby, who will presumably never cry again.Apple apparently pulled the app sometime Wednesday afternoon after blogs and sites such as TechCrunch and Cnet caught on to the story. It’s hard to believe that this got through the iPhone app certification process in the first place.
According to The Chronicle, infant brain injury advocates are outraged. As well they should be. Child abuse is not a game.
Saul Hansell of The New York Times’ Bits thinks Apple was wrong to cave into pressure about this application. Read his opinion here.
What do you think? Was Apple right to let the app through in the first place? Or did they overreact when they pulled it? Let us know your opinion.
Via / SF Chronicle
9:49 am By la Macha · Media|media justice|Women|youth · 2 Comments
30 Mar 2009I’m sure you’ve heard the stories of Josef Fritzl, the father who locked his daughter in a dungeon for decades and continuously raped and impregnated her. Well, from Colombia we get the story of Arcedio Alvarez Quintero–another man who has raped and impregnated his daughter for decades. < --more-->
Alvarez’s lawyer, Ricardo Correa, told CNN affiliate Caracol that his client appeared Saturday before a judge, who read the three charges. The judge ruled that the case against Alvarez was strong enough for him to be jailed with special protection as he awaits trial. No trial date has been scheduled.
Caracol reported that Alvarez entered “innocent” pleas to the charges.
Correa did not respond to CNN requests for an interview.
According to Caracol, the 59-year old Alavarez told the court he is innocent. Correa told Caracol that his client’s defense “will be that Alba Nidia is not his biological daughter,” but his adopted child.
Nidia insists that she is his daughter.
Authorities plan to conduct blood tests to determine the two’s genetic relationship, local officials said.
Because, you know, “having sex” with a five-year-old is totally an every day natural occurrence as long as she’s not related to you!
Gilma Jimenez, an official in Colombia, got it right when she said:
Gilma Jimenez, a local councilwoman who has had close contact with Nidia, has offered her financial assistance and has been speaking out against child abuse.
“One of the tragedies of this whole story, is that it seems that many different people in the community knew about this situation, but no one said anything,” Jimenez told CNN. “This is the indifference, the silence that encourages more child abuse.”
…
“This is not enough. … We have failed our children in Colombia,” she said.
Although I am the first to cry outrage at men/fathers/people in general raping little kids, much less grown adults, I have to wonder at why stories of abuse are suddenly flooding our media outlets. Is it really that the media cares so much–or is there something titillating about reporting these stories?
What are the ethical standards the media holds itself to when reporting about cases of abuse? As far as I can tell, the media agrees to withhold the name of the survivor. Other than that, there is no overall agreement on what will be reported (as in do all the disgusting details need to be revealed?), what words will be used to report on the case (Is it rape? Incest? “Sex”?), or even what role the media has in reporting on these cases (Unbiased “just the facts” sort of reporting? Supporters of the survivor? Community advocate against rape?)?
Intense media scrutiny of rape cases can be a good and a bad thing. It can give rape survivors courage to come forward and report their own abuse–but more often than not, it’s extremely destructive. It terrifies rape survivors from coming forward, it often biases juries so that accused don’t get fair trails, and triggers survivors into suicidal depressions that they often don’t come out of (see rates of suicide of indigenous peoples of Canada when news about boarding school violence began to surface).
I think that all these stories need to be exposed and reported on. But I think that there should be certain standards to reporting that center the health an safety of survivors and protects the accused, at least until there is a guilty verdict.
I don’t see the day coming when media adopts any standards like that, however. Which to me, is a tragedy in itself.
2:29 pm By Maegan La Mala · Argentina|children|crime|Latin America · Comments Off
22 May 2008
Some shocking news out of Buenos Aires, Argentina: two children, aged 7 and 9 have allegedly murdered a baby and declared to police that they did so “with pleasure”:
Argentine society is witness to the horror and confusion caused by the revelation of the details around the death of a 2 year old girl. It happened on Sunday…Milagros Belizán [pictured] was first beaten over the head, later hung on the wall and finally beaten relentlessly with wooden boards and suffocated little by little until she died. Medical examiners say she endured “long agony…
The crime was originally blamed on an adult, and authorities had to intervene to avoid the man being lynched by neighbors. Later the bizarre truth came out. Witnesses had seen two boys abusing the baby in the street, the police questioned them, and when they told the story of what they had done, they did so with pride and excitement.
The children accused of the crime reportedly come from a violent family environment. Police are looking to take the boys out of their homes because of death threats from neighbors.
Via / El PaÃs
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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