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Security - Protect Your Children Online
During our everyday life, we concern ourselves mainly with home
security; enabling the security alarm, locking the door when we leave,
etc. However, there’s another menace out there that is creeping through
our society. This menace is Cyberstalking, the exploiting of our
children through the Internet.
In my professional role in the Cyber Security Industry, I preach the
values of the Internet, not only for us as adults and professionals, but
also for our children. Our children have almost immediate access to any
kind of information available throughout the world. Want to read "A Tale
Of Two Cities?" It’s on the Internet. Have a question about who the
third person to land on the moon was? It’s on the Internet. However,
want to be exposed to nudity, pedophiles, and thousands (if not
millions) of other social deviants? You bet it’s on the Internet and
just a key touch away from your child or grandchild. So, what do we do
about this?
First, we educate ourselves. Go to
The National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children website and review their
various resources and articles. They provide an eye-opening look at the
perils our children are under every time they access the Internet. They
also provide a telling survey on how parents deal with their children’s
use of the Internet. For example, over 85% of parents have talked with
their children about being careful talking to strangers on the Net, and
97% of those polled check every now and then on what is on their child’s
computer screen. But, only half the parents ever go back and actually
check history to ensure the child is indeed staying out of potential
problem sites, and only 39% set a limit on the amount of time their
child can be on the Internet. Though it appears that parents do realize
the potential exposure their children have on the Net, less than 1/2
play a truly diligent role in ensuring their child is protected.
Second, we educate others. Gather information from such sites as
The National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the many other child
advocacy sites (including
The National Parent Teacher Association), and speak to your fellow
parents in your school system about the dangers presented to our
children on the Internet. Stay tuned for future articles on ways to
prevent your children from being exposed to unsuitable material. Bottom
line: be involved with your child’s Internet experience. They now have
the world, literally, at their fingertips. Make the effort to have it at
yours also.
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