 Quick Facts
While social networking sites can increase a person's circle of
friends, they also can increase exposure to people with less than
friendly intentions. Here are tips for helping your kids use these sites
safely:
- In some circumstances, the Children's Online Privacy Protection
Act and Rule require social networking sites to get parental consent
before they collect, maintain, or use personal information from
children under age 13.
- Keep the computer in an open area, like the kitchen or family
room, and use the Internet with your kids.
- Talk to your kids about their online habits. Tell them why it's
important to keep their name, Social Security number, address, phone
number, and family financial information to themselves.
- Your kids should post only information that you and they are
comfortable with others seeing and knowing.
- Warn your kids about the dangers of flirting with strangers
online.
- Tell your children to trust their gut if they have suspicions. If they feel threatened
by someone or uncomfortable because of something online, they need
to tell you, and then report it to the police.
Social Networking Sites: A Parent's Guide
"It's 10 p.m. Do you know where your children are?"
Remember that phrase from your own childhood? It's still a valid
question, but now, it comes with a twist: "Do you know where your kids
are — and who they're talking to online?"
Social networking sites are the hippest "meet market" around,
especially among tweens, teens, and 20-somethings. These sites encourage
and allow people to exchange information about themselves, and use
blogs, chat rooms, email, or instant messaging to communicate with the
world-at-large. But while they can increase a person's circle of
friends, they also can increase exposure to people who have
less-than-friendly intentions, including sexual predators.
Help Your Kids Socialize Safely Online
OnGuard Online urges parents to talk to their tweens and teens about social
networking sites, and offers these tips for using these sites safely:
- In some circumstances, the Children's Online Privacy
Protection Act and Rule require social networking sites to get parental
consent before they collect, maintain, or use personal
information from children under age 13.
- Keep the computer in an open area, like the kitchen
or family room, so you can keep an eye on where your kids are online and
what they're doing.
- Use the Internet with your kids. Be open to
learning about the technology so you can keep up with them.
- Talk to your kids about their online habits. If
they use social networking sites, tell them why it's important to keep
information like their name, Social Security number, address, phone
number, and family financial information — like bank or
credit card account numbers — to themselves. Remind them that
they should not share that information about other people in the family
or about their friends, either.
Your children should be cautious about sharing other information too,
like the name of their school, sports teams, clubs, where they work or
hang out, or any other information that could be used to identify them
or locate them offline.
- Make sure your kids' screen names don't say too much about
them. Explain why it's inappropriate — even
dangerous — to use their full name, age, or hometown. Even if
your kids think their screen name makes them anonymous, it doesn't take
a genius to combine clues to figure out who your kids are and where they
can be found.
- Use privacy settings to restrict who can access and post on
your child's website. You may
approve of their friends from school, clubs, teams, community groups, or
your family being able to view your kids' website, but not strangers
from a neighboring town or school.
- Your kids should post only information that you —
and they — are comfortable
with others seeing — and
knowing. Many people can see their page, including
their teachers, the police, a college admissions officer, or a potential
employer.
- Remind your kids that once they post information online,
they can't take it back. Even
if they delete the information from a site, older versions exist on
other people's computers.
- Warn your kids about the dangers of flirting with strangers
online. Because some people lie online about who they really
are, no one ever really knows who they're dealing with.
- Tell your children to trust their gut if they have
suspicions. If they feel threatened by someone or uncomfortable
because of something online, they need to tell you and then report it to
the police and the social networking site. You could end up
preventing someone else from becoming a victim.
- If you're concerned that your child is engaging in risky
online behavior, you can search the
blog sites they visit to see what information they're posting.
Try searching by their name, nickname, school, hobbies, grade, or area
where you live.
- Check site privacy policies. Some sites may share
information like your child's email address with other companies, which
could generate spam and even spyware on the family computer. Sites'
privacy policies or other posted links for parents also may contain
contact information for you to ask about your child's personal
information.
For More Information
To learn more about staying safe online, visit the following organizations:
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and
unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information
to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to
get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC
enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related
complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available
to hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S.
and abroad.
The FTC manages OnGuardOnline.gov, which provides practical tips from
the federal government and the technology industry to help you be on
guard against Internet fraud, secure your computer, and protect your
personal information.
GetNetWise is a public service sponsored by Internet industry
corporations and public interest organizations to help ensure that
Internet users have safe, constructive, and educational or entertaining
online experiences. The GetNetWise coalition wants Internet users to be
just "one click away" from the resources they need to make informed
decisions about their and their family's use of the Internet.
iKeepSafe.org, home of Faux Paw the Techno Cat, is a coalition of 49
governors/first spouses, law enforcement, the American Medical
Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and other associations
dedicated to helping parents, educators, and caregivers by providing
tools and guidelines to teach children the safe and healthy use of
technology. The organization's vision is to see generations of children
worldwide grow up safely using technology and the Internet.
Founded in 1998 and endorsed by the U.S. Congress, i-SAFE is a
non-profit foundation dedicated to protecting the online experiences of
youth everywhere. i-SAFE incorporates classroom curriculum with dynamic
community outreach to empower students, teachers, parents, law
enforcement, and concerned adults to make the Internet a safer place.
Join them today in the fight to safeguard children's online
experience.
NCMEC is a private, non-profit organization that helps prevent child
abduction and sexual exploitation; helps find missing children; and
assists victims of child abduction and sexual exploitation, their
families, and the professionals who serve them.
The National Crime Prevention Council (NCPC) is a private, nonprofit
organization whose primary mission is to enable people to create safer
and more caring communities by addressing the causes of crime and
violence and reducing the opportunities for crime to occur. Among many
crime prevention issues, NCPC addresses Internet Safety with kids and
parents through www.mcgruff.org and public service advertising under the
National Citizens' Crime Prevention Campaign — symbolized by
McGruff the Crime Dog® and his "Take A Bite Out Of Crime®."
NCSA is a non-profit organization that provides tools and resources
to empower home users, small businesses, and schools, colleges, and
universities to stay safe online. A public-private partnership, NCSA
members include the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Trade
Commission, and many private-sector corporations and organizations.
staysafe.org is an educational site intended to help consumers
understand both the positive aspects of the Internet as well as how to
manage a variety of safety and security issues that exist online.
WiredSafety.org is an Internet safety and help group. Comprised of
unpaid volunteers around the world, WiredSafety.org provides education,
assistance, and awareness on all aspects of cybercrime and abuse,
privacy, security, and responsible technology use. It is also the parent
group of Teenangels.org, FBI-trained teens and preteens who promote
Internet safety.
Download this page in PDF format
Safe-T-Online.com is an A-to-Z web site
A to Z Communications Limited is based at:
#3, Hampton Villas,
Farmhill,
Douglas,
Isle of Man, IM2 2NH
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