 Protecting Children Online
Steps Toward Making Your Computer
"Weirdo-Proof"
It's an unfortunate fact of reality,
but children are the most victimized computer users on the
Internet today. The good news is that there are some practical
steps you can take to protect your children from sexual
predators, hackers, and other seedy individuals who want to
cause harm. This article will describe a few of
them.
The first step in protecting your
children at the computer is to prevent their access to
passwords. This will keep them from sharing passwords with
others and inadvertently enabling hacking into your system. If
you think about it, there's no reason why a five, seven, or
even twelve year old needs to know the passwords to sensitive
areas on the computer unless you've given them permission! In
fact, children don't need to know the password used to access
the Internet either. It may be a hassle to type it in each time
they want to get online, but it's better to know the times that
they connect than to have them sneak online without your
permission and knowledge of their activities.
The second step towards protecting
your children online is using the computer together. Sitting
next to your child while he or she peruses the Internet, you
can guide him or her to make safe and intelligent decisions.
You can approve websites and bookmark them together. You can
monitor the conversations your children have with their friends
and teach them appropriate online behavior at the same time.
You can make recommendations and create a private time for
quality time as well.
The third step involves blocking
access to inappropriate areas altogether. You and your children
may not always agree about what's appropriate, but as a
guardian, you're in control and you're ultimately responsible
for their safety. Take the time to investigate software tools
that put you in control and allow you to block access to
certain websites. If you use an online service like AOL
(America Online), you can use its internal Parental Control
settings to block access to various chat-rooms and websites. You
could even block instant messaging and email from anyone who
isn't a fellow AOL user.
Other tools available online operate similar to the way that
AOL's Parental Control settings work, however no collection of
tools could replace the reinforcement of mom and dad. Never let
your children speak with strangers and never leave them alone
at the computer unattended. Children just don't have the
experience that adults have and they don't have the skills
required to handle inappropriate conversations, emails, or
images found online.
NOTE: Some of these tools include
kid-specific web browsers that will visit pre-approved
websites. Others include browser plug-ins that won't allow
access to online areas that contain forbidden
keywords.
Another step requires teaching your
children to never ever volunteer personal information. Under no
circumstances, should children give their personal names, home
addresses, phone numbers, or school information to anyone over
the Internet regardless of the situation. In the even this
information is required to enter a contest of some sort, be
sure that you're the one who makes the decision to supply it
and that you're the one who does it.
Performing all of these steps won't be
easy. However you can help minimize resistance to your
monitoring efforts by explaining why you're taking these
precautions. Smaller children will probably enjoy the time you
spend together at the computer, but older children and
pre-teens may resent it. To help build a case for your concern,
you might want to show your older children a few news stories
that exemplify the dangers that unsupervised children are
exposed to. The newspaper is unfortunately full of examples but
with your help, we can reduce them world-wide.
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