Victims’ groups get high-tech to fight abuse in digital age
BY SHANNON PROUDFOOT, Ottawa Citizen
3 Aug 2009
Advocates teach women to avoid cyberstalkers
Technology has moved to the front lines in the fight against domestic violence.
Advocacy organizations are using increasingly sophisticated high-tech solutions in their efforts to keep victims safe, even as they struggle to keep pace with abusers using technology to control and threaten their victims.
“Worldwide, it’s an epidemic,” says Alexis A. Moore, an abuse survivor and founder of the California-based victim advocacy group Survivors in Action.
“Perpetrators are changing their information and their manoeuvres. Their road map changes by the hour, where our training and education and awareness programs happen on a yearly basis, if that. Laws take years to develop.”
GPS devices on vehicles or cellphones can be used to track a victim’s movement without their knowledge and abusers can hack into victims’ online accounts to track e-mails or instant-messages, says Cynthia Fraser, a technology safety specialist with the Washington-based National Network to End Domestic Violence.
Advocates first started hearing about high-tech abuse a decade ago, she says, but it’s becoming a bigger problem because the technology is so widely and cheaply available. Even abusers who are not tech-savvy can learn how to stalk their partner with the help of the Internet, Fraser says.
The consequences of leaving a digital trail can be deadly. Fraser recalls one case where an abused woman wrote an e-mail about her plans to leave but didn’t empty her computer trash bin after deleting the message. Her abuser found the message and killed her.
“Technology has just added another layer to the complexities of women’s safety,” says Erin LeeTodd, executive director of Lanark County Interval House, a shelter outside Ottawa.
“We just have to move with the times.”
In Canada, most shelter websites prominently display warnings to victims that their online activities may be monitored, and many have escape buttons that switch to an innocuous website if someone walks into the room.
Telecommunications companies have donated new cellphones and airtime to victims who fear their abusers may be tracking their communication or whereabouts with their regular phone.
E-Services, an online counselling program that allows shelters to provide live chat help to clients, is currently being rolled out across Canada by Shelternet, a Toronto-based organization that provides online resources to shelters and abuse victims.
Like those of many advocacy groups, the E-Services website has detailed instructions for clearing browser histories to help victims cover their online tracks, says project manager Tammy Falovo. But the widespread availability of spyware programs that can grab regular screen shots or log every keystroke on a computer and send the information to an abuser means that’s no longer enough, she says.
“What we try to do is remind people that no medium is 100-per-cent safe,” Falovo says.
BY SHANNON PROUDFOOT, Ottawa Citizen
3 Aug 2009
Advocates teach women to avoid cyberstalkers
Technology has moved to the front lines in the fight against domestic violence.
Advocacy organizations are using increasingly sophisticated high-tech solutions in their efforts to keep victims safe, even as they struggle to keep pace with abusers using technology to control and threaten their victims.
“Worldwide, it’s an epidemic,” says Alexis A. Moore, an abuse survivor and founder of the California-based victim advocacy group Survivors in Action.
“Perpetrators are changing their information and their manoeuvres. Their road map changes by the hour, where our training and education and awareness programs happen on a yearly basis, if that. Laws take years to develop.”
GPS devices on vehicles or cellphones can be used to track a victim’s movement without their knowledge and abusers can hack into victims’ online accounts to track e-mails or instant-messages, says Cynthia Fraser, a technology safety specialist with the Washington-based National Network to End Domestic Violence.
Advocates first started hearing about high-tech abuse a decade ago, she says, but it’s becoming a bigger problem because the technology is so widely and cheaply available. Even abusers who are not tech-savvy can learn how to stalk their partner with the help of the Internet, Fraser says.
The consequences of leaving a digital trail can be deadly. Fraser recalls one case where an abused woman wrote an e-mail about her plans to leave but didn’t empty her computer trash bin after deleting the message. Her abuser found the message and killed her.
“Technology has just added another layer to the complexities of women’s safety,” says Erin LeeTodd, executive director of Lanark County Interval House, a shelter outside Ottawa.
“We just have to move with the times.”
In Canada, most shelter websites prominently display warnings to victims that their online activities may be monitored, and many have escape buttons that switch to an innocuous website if someone walks into the room.
Telecommunications companies have donated new cellphones and airtime to victims who fear their abusers may be tracking their communication or whereabouts with their regular phone.
E-Services, an online counselling program that allows shelters to provide live chat help to clients, is currently being rolled out across Canada by Shelternet, a Toronto-based organization that provides online resources to shelters and abuse victims.
Like those of many advocacy groups, the E-Services website has detailed instructions for clearing browser histories to help victims cover their online tracks, says project manager Tammy Falovo. But the widespread availability of spyware programs that can grab regular screen shots or log every keystroke on a computer and send the information to an abuser means that’s no longer enough, she says.
“What we try to do is remind people that no medium is 100-per-cent safe,” Falovo says.