5 ways to keep your kids
safe online
With the prolifera tion of new tech
nologies and social media apps, it seems these days as if our children are
almost constantly online, and as parentsguardians, we sometimes have a tough
time keeping pace. How can we ensure that we are as good parenting online, as
we are offline? Use these five tips to educate, empower and protect yourself,
as well as your children, to have safer and more meaningful online experiences.
1 USE TECHNOLOGY TOGETHER
This
is a good way to teach online safety, and it creates the opportunity for you to
address safety issues as they arise. Be involved in your child's online
life.Discuss also the importance of unplugging from their mobile device, and
establish phone-free times such as during class, at family dinners or after a
certain time on school nights.
2 USE PRIVACY SETTINGS PARENTAL
CONTROL ON DEVICES
There
are many sites for sharing ideas, photos, videos and more. Many of these
service providers offer privacy settings and controls that will determine who
can see your content before you post it. Talk with your family about what they
should and should not share publicly. Teach your family to communicate
responsibly: one good thumb rule is, if you would not say it in person, then do
not text it, email it, instant message it, or post it as a comment on someone's
page. Discuss how what you say online might make other people feel, and come up
with guidelines about what is appropriate communication. Help them respect the
privacy of others by keeping the personal details about family or friends
private, and by not identifying people by name in publicly shared social media.
This should include personal information such as phone numbers or home
addresses. Teach your family not to accept files or to open email attachments from
strangers. Write down the rules and keep them near the computer.
3 CHECK AGE RESTRICTIONS
Many
online services have age limits restricting who can use their services. For
example, for an email account, you would have to meet age requirements; some
email products are restricted to users who are 18 years and older. Always check
a website's terms of usage before allowing your childward to sign up for an
account, and be clear with them if you have rules on which websites and
services they can use.
4 SUPERVISE COMPUTER USE
If
possible, the family computer should be kept in a common area of the house. You
should also set reasonable limits on computer usage.Show your children the
value of privacy: encourage them to protect their passwords and personal information,
as they would with something like a diary. Children under eight should have
direct supervision while online. Tweens, those from eight to 12, should have
more freedom, but a parentguardian should still be close by, with privacy
settings at their highest level.Teens, due to smart phones, laptops and school
computers will have more Internet access, which is why it is important to set
the rules early and encourage ongoing conversations.
5 KEEP THE GOING CONVERSATION
Staying
safe is not a one-off event; technology evolves, and so will the needs of your
family . Make sure you keep up an ongoing dialogue.Check in on everyone's
progress, change the rules if necessary , and set aside time to chat at regular
intervals, for example, at family dinners. Encourage their questions. Invite
conversation.
Source | Times of India | 23
November 2015
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Khaitan
& Co
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