Faced with lurid newspaper headlines and the wrath of law enforcement officials, Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster has taken to the company's blog to argue that plenty of criminals have used print
classifieds to find crime victim.
In fact, he points out, the phenomenon is so well-known that there's even a Wikipedia entry for "Lonely Hearts Killer" -- which the site defines as a "want ad killer."
"When critics rush to tar craigslist as especially
dangerous, it's important to put things in perspective," he writes. "Craigslist users have posted more than 1.15
billion classified ads to date, easily 1000x the combined total ever posted to the print publications involved in all of these 'print ad murders.'"
Buckmaster has a point when he says that
some predators have found victims through print want ads, but it's not clear how the crime stats compare. For the most part, it's only the high-profile cases that receive national news attention,
which makes it somewhat difficult to figure out how many crimes in total have been linked to Craigslist.
Still, it seems like a general anti-Internet feeling is driving some of the backlash
against Craigslist. State attorneys general are pressuring the site to do away with its "erotic services" ads, and one official is threatening the site's management with criminal prosecution.
Craigslist appears to have an iron-clad
defense against either civil or criminal actions based on material uploaded by users. But that isn't even slowing down law enforcement officials from condemning the site.
In that regard,
Craigslist isn't alone. Consider, anti-MySpace sentiment also grew to a fevered pitch a few years ago, when some people tried to hold the company responsible for sex abuse by predators who found
victims on the site. MySpace eventually agreed to block sex offenders from creating profiles on the site -- even though the company had no legal obligation to do so.
It's fairly predictable
by now that any new technology will result in some form of backlash. But crime obviously won't disappear, even if Web sites do. Expending energy blaming companies like Craigslist and MySpace isn't
going to make anyone safer.