May 10, 2006

Think Before Posting Your Info Online

Details Put On Sites Such As 'Facebook' Could Come Back To Haunt You

  • Play CBS Video Video Logging On, Trapped Forever

    In the last part of the "Too Much Info" series, Tracy Smith looks at the consequences of putting personal information on the Web. For example, once a photo is put online, it's permanently archived.

  • Video Falling Victim To MySpace

    A young MySpace.com user tells Tracy Smith her own horror story about what happened to her when she invited a man she met through the Web site to her home.

  • Video The Dangers Of MySpace

    Tracy Smith takes a look at myspace.com, the popular social networking Web site for teens that's also become a place for predators. Experts have advice on how to avoid being a victim.

  •  (CBS/The Early Show)

  • Interactive Protecting Children Online

    What to say to your child about Web porn and online predators, and how to look for signs of porn on your PC. Plus: warning signs that an adult may be communicating with your child.

(CBS)  TIPS TO STAY SAFE ONLINE
Provided by Parry Aftab of WiredSafety.org.

For Parents:

  • Don’t panic! Your kids can use social networks safely.
  • Talk to your kids. The more you go over what should and shouldn’t be shared online, the safer your kids will be.
  • Repeat after me: “I am the parent!” Don’t worry more about your kids' privacy than their safety. Set your rules and make your kids adhere to them. If they don’t, turn off the Internet. They'll come around fast!
  • It’s not reading their diary. A diary is between your kid and the paper diary stored in their sock drawer. An open MySpace profile is the equivalent of a billboard on the superhighway. The rule is not that everyone can see it but parents.
  • Don’t believe everything you see online, especially if your kids post it on MySpace. They say things designed to make them seem more cool or daring. Many post things that aren’t true.
  • Tell your kids you want to see their MySpace profile — tomorrow. The day’s notice will make this an educational experience for them, instead of a "gotcha" one. They will spend hours taking down anything they fear you will find objectionable, and they will learn from it. After the first warning, though, you are free to review it with them anytime.
  • It takes a village: Wok with your school and other parents to help keep them all safer online.

    Also, be aware that their friends frequently put them at risk unknowingly by posting too much of your kids' personal information on their own profiles.

    Remove it: If you decide that your child’s profile needs to come down, but they used a fake e-mail address when they set it up, you need a special process that MySpace worked out with WiredSafety.org. This procedure is needed because MySpace sends the codes you need to remove a profile to the e-mail address the kids used when they set up the account, many of which are faked by the kids.

    For Teens:

  • Don’t post anything on MySpace that your parents, principal and a predator shouldn’t see. And check over your friends’ profiles to make sure they're safe, too.
  • Password protect everything and guard your password. MySpace gives special privacy controls to kids 14 and 15. Give your correct age, so you can be protected.
  • Colleges and grad schools, and some scholarship committees and employers are searching for their applicants on sites such as MySpace. Are you really putting your best foot forward? Think of it as if you’re attaching your MySpace to your college application.
  • Morph or blur your pictures so a cyber-bully or predator can’t misuse them. And get your friends' OK before posting their images on MySpace.
  • Don’t do or say anything online that you wouldn’t offline. Nothing is anonymous on MySpace. They can trace all comments and posts to your computer.
  • What you post online stays online forever! Playing the drunken slut or posing with five bottles of beer in your mouth at the same time might have been a good idea at the time, but you never know who copied your post, cloned it, printed it out, or archived it. If you post it, you will have to live with it.
  • That cute 14-year-old boy may not be cute, may not be 14 and may not be a boy! You never really know. ThinkB4uClick! And never go alone to an offline meeting.
  • Think about joining TeenAngels.org and becoming part of the solution.


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