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Keep Your Kids Safe Online
by Colleen Moulding
Thousands of children and young people use the Internet
every day without any problems at all, but we've all heard about it's darker side and the danger they
could find themselves in.
Here are ten quick tips to make sure that your kids enjoy using this wonderful
resource without putting themselves at risk.
1. The most important thing you can do to ensure your child's safety on the
Internet is to be there when they are using it. Don't let children surf in their
bedrooms or in a separate room to the rest of the family. If this is unavoidable,
make sure that you are often in and out of the room that they are using,
keeping an eye on what is going on.
2. Have clear rules about what is and what is not allowed and stick to them.
This might be no e-mailing, no chat rooms, only chat rooms approved by you or
whatever you decide. Some people like to draw up a contract with their
children agreeing which types of site can be visited and which activities participated in.
3. Get involved in what your kids do online. Get them to show you their
favourite sites, tell you about their e-mail buddies and explain what they like
doing online. This will give you an insight into the possible pitfalls. If you want
to keep a check on which web sites they are visiting, click on History in your browser window.
4. Download some filtering software. There is software available that can stop
your child giving out personal information such as his/her name, address and
telephone number. Stress to them the importance of keeping such information
private. Even competitions and product offers are not always what they seem to
be and false sites have been discovered with just the intention of getting this
type of information from children.
5. For younger children consider using a site like Surf Monkey at http://www.surfmonkey.com where you
can download free tools to help children surf the web safely. There's the Surf Monkey Bar, which
incorporates safety features to ensure sites visited are kid friendly and there is the animated Surf
Monkey character which acts as a web guide to the surfing child.
Parents can use a password system to build in safety settings for the bar and browser and
for activities on the Surf Monkey Kids Channel. Parents can then sign
their children up for the Surf Monkey club if they want them to join in on the
community features such as chat rooms, message boards and e-mail. The bar
is easily turned off for adult use.
6. Older kids are just as vulnerable as young ones. Teenage girls, for example,
are at risk from men who lure them into face to face meetings after chatting to
them online for many weeks before suggesting that they get together. Make
sure children know never, ever to arrange a meeting with someone they get to
know online without your permission. If they really want to meet up with a friend
made in a chat room or similar, go with them and make sure that the parents of
the child/teen that they are meeting know about the arrangement too.
7. Make sure that children understand that not everything they read is
necessarily true. This can be difficult, but it's a life skill they need to learn. All
through life we have to make decisions about whether or not information is of
value. Discuss with your children how to evaluate the material they find and the difference between fact and opinion.
8. Teach them to stay out of trouble by not posting anything bad about another
person no matter how angry they may feel at the time. Once a comment is out
there it cannot be retracted, and many hurtful remarks have been posted in the
heat of the moment. It is much better to leave a chat area than to get
drawn into an argument.
9. See that they understand that taking pictures, writing or music from web
sites without the permission of the copyright holder can get them into trouble
as it is stealing someone else's work.
10. Tell them firmly never to pay money or agree to pay money for anything
without parental supervision and never to use your credit card details without
your knowledge and permission. Also make sure that they recognize mass
mailed money making schemes for what they are and are not foolish enough to
waste their money on them.
Copyright Colleen Moulding 2000
Colleen Moulding is a freelance writer from England where she has
had many features on parenting, childcare, travel, the Internet and many more subjects published in national
magazines and newspapers. She has also published a variety of women's and children's fiction.
Her work frequently appears at many sites on the Internet and at her own site for women and children
All That Women Want.com a magazine, web guide and resource for women everywhere.
http://www.allthatwomenwant.com
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