Slashdot Mirror


iPhone App Tracks Sex Offenders

The Narrative Fallacy writes "All 50 states in the US require the 50,000 people convicted of sexual offenses to sign a register so that their whereabouts can be tracked and monitored. The Telegraph reports that now users of the iPhone Offender Locator application can search for sex offenders living nearby a friend or colleague whose address is stored in their Apple iPhone address book, or they can type in a street address to generate a list of convicted sex offenders in the local area. 'Offender Locator gives everyone the ability to find out if registered sex offenders live in their area,' says the application developer, ThinAir Wireless, on its iTunes page. 'Knowledge equals safety. They know where you and your family are...now it's time to turn the tables so that you know where they live and can make better decisions about where to allow your kids to play.' Offender Locator uses the iPhone's built-in GPS to pinpoint the user's location, and then provide a map listing sex offenders in the local area. Tapping on one of the 'pins' dropped on to the map brings up a photograph of the offender, as well as their address, date of birth and list of convictions."

11 of 358 comments (clear)

  1. Tired of scare tactics. by thesolo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They know where you and your family are...now it's time to turn the tables so that you know where they live and can make better decisions about where to allow your kids to play.

    That's great for the very stereotypical creepy, mustachioed child molester, but ever-increasingly the phrase, "sex offender" has nothing to do with children at all. That same title now applies to people convicted of statutory rape, even if they were 17 & 18 at the time. It applies to people who streak, people who are caught skinny-dipping, people who are caught having sex in public (including in their car), and even people who happened to urinate behind a tree in some places. Yet they have the same social stigma & registration entries in the database as people who raped children.

    So yeah, it might help protect your children, or it might just show you the house of a guy who really needed to take a leak, and happened to get caught. But hey, feel free to use it and get extremely paranoid at the rapidly growing number of people it shows...

    1. Re:Tired of scare tactics. by Hammer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Lemme see.... A sex offender is anyone convicted of a sex based offense. I was under the impression that going to a hooker is an sex offense in some jurisdictions.

      And also... What happened to the idea that once you served your time your debt to society is paid?

      Make no mistake I want to keep my kids safe. But isn't this a perfect way of pushing an offender of the track again??

    2. Re:Tired of scare tactics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't expect the list of convictions to be meaningful. No way is the system going to be honest about their own bullshit. The guy busted for taking a leak will be convicted of public lewdness, just like the guy who waggled his weiner at the kids in the preschool playground.

      The kids busted for sexting will be convicted of manufacture and distribution of child porn and the 17 year old busted for fooling around with a 15 year old will be convicted of statutory rape and probably indecency involving a minor.

      All very much not helpful in evaluating the true nature of the people caught in the witch hunt.

    3. Re:Tired of scare tactics. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 5, Funny

      Impersonating an officer.

  2. Debt to society? by rotide · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Was their debt to society ever paid? What was the point of their prison sentence?

    How many more years until realtors no longer sell houses in certain areas to sex offenders? Or even more scary, how long until we only let them live in certain areas? Maybe even put up a fence around the area? Post guards at the gates?

    Ya, getting a little dramatic, but this BS where any soccer mom can pick up her iPhone and gawk with her friends at all the "criminals" in their neighborhood.. It's getting sickening..

    If these people are still dangerous, keep them locked up. If they are no longer dangerous, don't make public lists that they have to register on.

    Either you're guilty and you pay your debt, or you're paid your debt and are no longer guilty.

    Personally, if I had a daughter, I'd teach her to be aware of her surroundings and be wary of strangers, just like I was taught. List or no list, if a predator is out there, he's going to hunt. Some list that further punishes those that have paid their debt won't save my child, or yours.

    1. Re:Debt to society? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Has anyone read Les Miserables? The story of Jean Valjean sounds very similar - the label of 'Convict' was carried for life. The fact that he had committed a crime in his youth meant that he was a criminal forever, in the mind of society and the law - he could not hold a job, travel, or live without permission from the police.

      I don't think that specific knowledge as to former criminals who have served their time and are now living in your area is necessary. It would be not be helpful in any meaningful way to the public and would make it very difficult for the people on the list to live normal lives. The fact that the sex offender list is very loose as to who becomes assigned to it makes the situation worse.

    2. Re:Debt to society? by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Insightful

      any soccer mom can pick up her iPhone and gawk with her friends at all the "criminals" ... If these people are still dangerous, keep them locked up.

      There is a gigantic dose of frightening irony in all this: Sex offenders (and for the moment let's assume the very worst kinds of sex offenders such as kiddie molestors) are statistically much more likely to reoffend when exposed to high levels of stress ... for example the kind of stress that comes from having a bunch of iphone-wielding soccer moms tsk-tsking to their friends ans scowling every time they see you in public ... the kind of stress that comes from being socially isolated and shunned when a person is making a good faith effort to get well again, be part of a neighbourhood, and function in society.

      Stress is a known addiction trigger, and this app is a guaranteed stress generator.

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  3. Why Sex Offenders? by thisnamestoolong · · Score: 5, Informative

    What is with the excessive demonization of sex offenders today? What makes this class of crime the worst by such a large margin that we need a whole separate form of punishment? Why not a murderer registry? Certainly murder is a more serious crime, right?
    Furthermore, if the government can ascertain fully enough that these people are very dangerous and likely to commit their same crimes again, WTF are they doing free? Shouldn't they be in prison or a mental hospital if that is the case?

    BTW to the other posters -- only Class 2 and 3 sex offenders show up on the registry -- these are usually the nasty, malicious ones. The bush-pissers and streakers end up as Class 1. Still extremely odious, but not quite as bad, and their names are not made pubic, errr... public.

    --
    To the haters: You can't win. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
  4. Pure bullshit by MikeRT · · Score: 5, Informative

    'Knowledge equals safety. They know where you and your family are...now it's time to turn the tables so that you know where they live and can make better decisions about where to allow your kids to play.'

    Oh really? The US DoJ's Inspector General had some withering criticism of the utility of the information sources this guy is relying on.

    "We found that the registries that make up the national sex offender registration system - the FBI's National Sex Offender Registry (NSOR) and the state public sex offender registries accessed through OJP's National Sex Offender Public Registry Website (NSOPR) - are inaccurate and incomplete. As a result, neither law enforcement officials nor the public can rely on the registries for identifying registered sex offenders, particularly those who are fugitives."

  5. Re:Most child molesters are family by matria · · Score: 5, Informative

    Right... when he's got his hands around my neck telling me how easy it would be to break my neck, and how he'd have to kill me and my mother to "protect himself" if I ever told her or anyone else. Obviously you don't know how this works, so at least I am fairly sure you're not a child molester yourself. But you cannot imagine how sick and tired I am of this "blame the victim" of whatever crime. I was molested because my father is a sick slimeball, not because somehow I "allowed it" or "asked for it"; I have no problems with my own involvement or lack thereof in the matter.

  6. Re:Most child molesters are family by matria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As Tarzan of the Apes said to the beautiful young Countess de Coude, "One does not judge the gazelle by the lions that attack it." That book, with that line, read when I was about 14, literally saved my life. I wish all victims of abuse of all kinds could realize this. It's NOT YOUR FAULT!!!