Chatroulette

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Chatroulette is a video-conferencing website that spontaneously connects strangers from around the globe using web cameras and chat rooms. The site pairs users randomly in a chatroom in which you can do any number of things. The website has a "next" button where people can switch to another random person to talk to. They can keep clicking "next" to shuffle through different users until they are satisfied with their pairing. This is called being "nexted." There are no censors or filters in these chatrooms. No matter how vulgar or offensive, people will see each other unhindered.[1]

"Bandcamp Logo"
Chatroulette Logo

History

The website was first launched on November 2009 by a 17 year old student in high school in Moscow, Russia named Andrey Ternovsky [2].The source of his idea for Chatroulette came from the various video chats he had with his friends on the Skype platform. The name was picked after Ternovsky watched the "The Deer Hunter," a film that depicted prisoners of war being forced to play the game "Russian roulette [3]." When the site first launched in November 2009, it registered approximately 500 visitors per day [4]. One month later, this number jumped to 50,000 [5]. By the beginning of March, Chatroulette boasted a user-base of approximately 1.5 million users. 33% of them were from the United States and 5% from Germany. Ternovsky ran the site from his bedroom, working alongside four programmers who worked virtually. The site's main source of income came through advertising links to an online dating service [6].

Demographics

"Piechart by Gender"

In a study done by Tech Crunch done in March 2010, it showed that approximately 50% of all Chatroulette spins resulted in connecting a user with someone in the USA. The next most likely country was France with 15%. The study furthermore indicated that on average in sessions with only one person in the frame, 89% of the time these users were male and only 11% were female. 8% of the spins showed multiple people in the webcam frame. The likelihood of females appearing in a group is 1 in 3, but for males it is 1 in 12. A user was apparently more likely to come across a session that featured no person in the frame at all than a session with only one female. 1 in 8 chat sessions were found to have objectionable content. The study further broke down the "pervert rate" by country, and the United Kingdom outranks all other countries with a "pervert concentration" of 22%. [7]

Media appearances

  • The New York Times
  • The New Yorker
  • New York magazine
  • Good Morning America
  • Newsnight
  • Tosh.0
  • The Daily Show with Job Stewart

Criticism

"Bandcamp Logo"
Screenshot of a Chatroulette session

Because Chatroulette doesn't require user registration, there has been a lot of criticism surrounding the web-conferencing site. The site has developed a reputation for displaying lewd acts in chat sessions, and is often a platform for "cyber sex". This has especially drew a lot of attention in the media, because of the lack of enforcement on age restrictions. In CNET news, an article warns parents to be wary of Chatroulette's alarming images and indecent exposure. [8] Sam Anderson, a writer for New York Magazine, calls Chatroulette as "chaotic and untamed." He describes how some people he encountered were shamelessly engaging in sexual acts on camera, some displayed obscene images, and one even showed a picture of a man who had hanged himself. [9]

Chatroulette's attempts to improve

Because of all the attention around the site's pornographic content, the website has responded by encouraging users to be at least 18 years old, stating that they prohibit "pornographic" behavior. Users can also report other users for behavior that offends them. If that user gets three complaints, the user is temporarily banned from using Chatroulette. [10]In an effort to combat this problem, they tried applying an algorithm that screens users that violate their video chat policies. Then, to please these users, Chatroulette created a Safe Mode feature. However, in August 2012, the company took down the Safe Mode feature, and instead explicitly stated that nudity was not allowed in their terms and conditions. There is now a pop-up window describing all users of the site about it's new rules. [11]

See Also

External Links

References

  1. http://dialogues.rutgers.edu/all-journals/doc_download/2-dialogues-journal--volume-vii#page=206
  2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chatroulette
  3. http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/17-year-old-chatroulette-founder-mom-dad-the-site-is-expanding-a-681817.html
  4. http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/one-on-one-andrey-ternovskiy-creator-of-chatroulette/
  5. http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/one-on-one-andrey-ternovskiy-creator-of-chatroulette/
  6. http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/17-year-old-chatroulette-founder-mom-dad-the-site-is-expanding-a-681817.html
  7. http://techcrunch.com/2010/03/16/chatroulette-stats-male-perverts/
  8. http://news.cnet.com/8301-19518_3-10454519-238.html
  9. http://nymag.com/news/media/63663/index1.html
  10. http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/17-year-old-chatroulette-founder-mom-dad-the-site-is-expanding-a-681817.html
  11. http://www.roulettechatsites.com/2012/08/chatroulette-deletes-safe-mode-options.html