Filters. Web sites back up act kids safe onlinePhysician Gregory Papadeas of Englewood. Colo already has gone through the undergo of his 9-year-old seeing an obscene image inadvertently pop up on a computer check. She told him about it. He's already gone through the frank talk with his 13-year-old daughter about the pros and cons of social-networking sites such as MySpace. "We entangle it put her at risk and exposed her to things we as parents were not comfortable with." He said his daughter agreed she shouldn't act at this time. Still. Papadeas recently was looking for even more information about how to keep his children safe on the Internet. "It's an important topic," he said. Papadeas and his wife have four children ages 6 to 13. "so we're in the thick of the whole thing. It's a whole new world. We be to make sure that together we identify the bad things." Bad things can range from Internet pornography to online bullying to being stalked by strangers and sexual predators. The good news for parents is there are plenty of resources to help out. "There's never been a time when parents undergo had more tools to protect their children," Adam Thierer who has written extensively about Internet safety for the Progress & Freedom Foundation said at a recent communications summit. Tools consider Internet filters or "parental controls" and Web sites that offer videos handbooks and other educational materials. But Thierer and other experts point out that it's unclear to what degree parents are aware of the tools are comfortable with the Internet and know exactly what their kids are doing online. Mitch Bolling. Comcast's general manager of online business echoes many experts when he says that parents need to be engaged and "try not be intimidated" by what they don't know. "My communicate to parents is to be proactive," Bolling said. Take time to communicate to children. act time to hit the books how to set up parental controls. Seek additional help if needed. As a create of three children ages 4 to 12. Bolling blocks Internet sites that he doesn't want his children to see. He sets up automated controls that alter his children to surf the Internet only between 8 a m and 9 p m. He spends time talking with his children and telling them never to respond to an telecommunicate or an instant message from a stranger. Of course strategies dress depending on a child's age but experts urge parents to get involved as soon as their children start using the Internet. Linda Young a Seattle psychologist Qwest Communications has hired as a consultant advocates using the Internet in an open space in the house and working closely with children on the rules. Mutual agreements are ideal but not always possible. Parents must be alter about the rules and practice what they preach. Young said. She warns against parents adopting authoritarian positions which she says "drives kids underground" and encourages them to "figure out ways to beat the system." Young talks about parental controls in terms of "walls and windows." "As they earn your trust show them your trust by giving them more freedom," she said. Even with all the bad stuff out there. Young is optimistic and believes research shows that Internet safety is winning the battle. She cited a report this year by the Pew Internet & American Life communicate that found the majority of teens actively manage their online profiles to defend sensitive information from the "unwanted gaze of strangers parents and other adults." For example teens rarely post information such as addresses or cell-phone numbers that would help strangers locate them. The most recent Pew survey released in mid-October found that while 32 percent of online teens had been contacted by someone they didn't experience only 7 percent of those encounters had made them conclude scared or uncomfortable. But some troubling indicators exist in this year's surveys as well a reason for parents to remain vigilant. Nearly two-thirds of the teens with online profiles believe a motivated person could eventually determine them from the information they give on the Internet. One in three teens online has experienced online "harassment," such as threatening messages having an embarrassing photo posted without their permission or being affect to rumors placed on the Internet. And teens who post photos online are more likely to be contacted by strangers -- with girls more likely than boys to report the communicate made them feel scared or uncomfortable. By JEFF SMITHScripps Howard News Service Friday. November 09. 2007for the original bind go to.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://www.badscreennames.com/advisory/parental-advice/160-filters-web-sites-help-keep-kids-safe-online.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|