Safety Six Ways to Protect Your Kids on the Internet
By Steve Cross
Sep 26, 2006, 20:26
1. Take the computer out of the kids' rooms and place it in a common area in the house. Your kids are much less likely to do something if other people are around. Your kids will be more aware, and that's a good thing.
2. Talk to them. Sounds simple doesn't it? Just talk to them about personal security. It's just like reminding them to lock the door when you're out. Remind them to “lock” the Internet door. Here are two important things to tell them:
3. Don't give anybody your password. If anybody gets your password, they can find out all your personal data, and some people will use that.
4. Don't give strangers your address. You just don't want strange people showing up, or stalking you. And this may sound silly, but it's already happened. There are weirdoes on the Internet who use fake identities. And don't give your phone number to strangers either.
5. Look at their MySpace pages. A friend of ours found out that his daughter's 13-year-old friend had posted pictures of herself in her underwear on MySpace. Her parents never looked at her MySpace pages. Kids don't have adult judgment, that's why they're kids. There have been two confirmed abductions of girls who displayed confidential information on MySpace, including a girl abducted in a mall outside Boston this year.
6. Look into Internet Monitoring Software, low-cost products that invisibly monitor the activities of your kids, and privately emails you the results as often as you like. The best of these software products track internet sites visited, downloads, chat room conversations, and IM.
About
the Author(s) : Steve Cross, President of Guardian Software, is a columnist, author, and is the former President of family-friendly internet pioneer YourFreeStuff.com. Steve wrote the book "Changing Channels", and was a columnist for the Gartner Group's "Channel Media" newsletters for years. Based in the Las Vegas area, he currently writes about Las Vegas Real Estate, and Las Vegas Entertainment. Before purchasing Guardian Software with a couple old friends, he also had senior level executive positions with several software companies. For more information visit www.guardiansoftware.com.