A school in Bloomfield Hills, MI has banned students from having MySpace accounts, even if they access them from home. St. Hugo of the Hills, a Catholic school, has outright forbade their students to partake in any MySpace account activity. According to the Indy News Channel, school officials as well as the parents in the community are fully supportive of the administrative decision. From now on, parents and students of St. Hugo of the Hills will have to agree to a written Internet policy, and students who have existing MySpace accounts will be required to delete them. The reason, as explained by a concerned parent at the school: "There's so many things going on on the Internet and there's so much vulnerability for children."
The question remains: how do the students feel about this policy? There is a lot of activity surrounding the ability of schools and government officials, like Ted Stevens, to ban the use of MySpace outside of the school's physical manifestation. While several schools may want to keep their students from using MySpace at home, there is no constitutional support for such regulation.