
Monday 9 February 2009
Great Depression 'skyscraper' heels back in fashion
Women are buying skyscraper heels last popular in the 1930s, providing further evidence of the parallels between the current economic crisis and the Great Depression.
Tall stilletos are one of the fashion trends of the year, thanks in part to celebrities including Victoria Beckham and Gwyneth Paltrow. The designer Christian Louboutin even plans to create "extreme" eight inch heels after the success of his six and seven inch pairs Heel heights are meant to fall during times of financial hardship – under the fashion industry's so-called "stiletto index" – but it seems women are instead dealing with the recession by buying big. The last time super-high heels were in vogue was during the Depression that followed the 1929 Wall Street Crash. Ali Hall, editor of fashion magazine Look, told The Sun: "All the main shoe trends are mega high – and even more death defying." Feminist academic Germaine Greer has predicted that the popularity of high heels will collapse as the recession worsens. "Now is the towering shoe moment of the Noughties, which will be followed by the inevitable fall," she wrote. Women may enjoy window-shopping for towering stilettos but "few of them will have the spare cash to invest in shoes that can be safely worn only in bed," she added. The historian Amanda Foreman blamed the growth of high heels on male fashion executives who want to restrain female rivals in the jobs market. "These shoes are obviously not for the working woman, they aren't designed for cobbled streets. They're not real life, but a little fantasy."

Facebook no safe haven

On Tuesday, February 3rd, it was reported that thousands of sex offenders (many of whom were previously booted from MySpace) were lurking on Facebook (they've since been removed). Ok so these might not have necessarily been MySpace 'refugees' in the sense that they migrated en masse from MySpace to Facebook - they likely maintain profiles on multiple social networks. But the fact remains that there were thousands of convicted sexual offenders on a social network that is generally perceived as safe. On Wednesday news broke of an elaborate and disturbing sex ring involving at least 31 high school students. An 18 year-old man named Anthony Stancl has allegedly been masquerading as high-school girls on Facebook, flirting with underaged male classmates and convincing them to send him nude photographs. He would then use the photographs to blackmail the boys into performing sexual acts with him, which he took pictures of using a cell phone. Stancl has been charged with 12 felony counts and up to 300 years of jail time. (In a somewhat bizarre twist, Facebook responded to news of the sex ring by stating that fewer than 1% of its 150 million users are affected by impersonation schemes. So, around 1.5 million people. Not exactly a confidence-inspiring statistic.)

The reality is that no matter what these social networks do, they'll never have the technology or the manpower to stop every threat. Which is why they need to stop pretending that they're safe. Facebook's (and MySpace's) goal is to connect as many people as possible, and the sad truth is that many people are very naive when it comes to online safety. These social networks need to step up their education and awareness efforts, perhaps even offering a 'safe mode' for users (even adults) who aren't adept at navigating the web's pitfalls. Because sharing is only fun until someone gets hurt.
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