A short, easy guide for parents who are
worried about the dangers the Internet
poses to their children.
When the computer enters the house, place it in the living
room. The last place a computer with Internet access should
be is in a bedroom with a door that closes and locks.
The child should become accustomed to the Internet being a
'public' place. This will send a psychologic message that
anything one does on a computer is no different from doing
it in the living room.
The parent or a friend should be there teaching the child
how to open an email account.
Although some are secure, such as
goowy.com
, which asks
nothing but a user name and password, many collect a
entire biography.
If your child is snowflake@goowy.com, all the hackers in
the world can never uncover her real name or address because
goowy doesn't have her name or address.
Yahoo.com, for example will reveal;
snowflake@yahoo.com, and a bit of hacking can
easily unearth a lot of information about Jane Smith.
I.P. catching is an option on many sites; it was placed for
the protection of the owner of the site, it can be used for
other purposes.
There are many I.P. catchers, which can translate the
I.P. number which one connects to the Internet to the
provider.
It is simplicity to learn from where one connects, so
that a
Zabasearch.com
can find a number of Jane Smiths
but since we know she is in New York City at the least
and Brooklyn at the best, we know that the Jane Smith
at 123 Green Street, Brooklyn, New York, tel: (212) 5434445.
Is that snowflake.
The first thing is to get an email address which is
safe. Hence, there would be no way to connect snowflake
who uses goowy to anyone anywhere in the world.
Catching the I.P. number might only reveal that it is a
service provider in New York City, but said provider has
a million customers.
On children's sites as well as porn sites, the birthday is
important. But even children's sites can host pederasts so
'chat' should be carefully monitored.
Cams should never be used. If you have one, hide it, and
it only comes out when you are there. Messenger services
are not to be encouraged.
There are many sites for children, so you can introduce
them to your kids, as well as other educational sites.
Give your child some privacy so that after a time you
go away and leave your child alone with the computer.
Every so often, ask a question; "Can you find out what is
the capital of Mongolia?" Or, "Can you get me a recipe
for..." so that the ability to gain information is always
primary.
Warn your child not to download anything, open attachments,
or believe they won any prize, no matter how many times the
pop up flashes.
When your child is in bed, check the "history" section of
the browser to see where your child went. Sometimes there
may be an accident. Typing Whitehouse.com is a porn site.
Many sites are harmless, some are not. Check them, but keep this information to yourself. If you
find anything particularly bad you can do the sneaky thing;
change the password.
Firefox keeps a comfortable list of passwords. You can
learn the password, go to the site as snowflake and change
the password into hkjhklhjj and when you are prompted to
save, say no. In this way, she can not get back on the site, and doesn't
know what happened. Yes, it is sneaky, but better than going through a long
discussion about "privacy" and "rights".
A day or so later you can bring up examples of children
who had bad things happen to them on various sites. You
discuss this with your child using the cited examples. "What would you do if....?" You aren't making up stories or telling lies, you are
showing her real life examples that happened to others
just like her. Even if you don't find any "bad" sites in the history,
this conversation should take place at least every six
months.
Teenagers are more difficult. Many know a great deal
about hacking and so it will be more difficult to stop
them or protect them.
When your kid lives on the computer, and has moved the
computer to his room, or has his own laptop, interrupt
him. Force him to go outside, to meet people in real
time, to play sports. Check his history when he's at school. If he's deleted his history, you know you have a situation.
Find out what he does on the computer. Going from site
to site is not a problem. Playing games endlessly is.
Looking at porn constantly, is. Playing games, glancing
at porn, doing homework, is not a major problem, as kids
will do this. The question is how much time is spent
on each activity.
Taking away the computer sends him to someone else's house.
The Internet is not the problem. The child could have a
problem.
Before the Internet, children had problems. No body likes
me, I don't like anyone, I hate the way I look, I hate
where I live; 1940/1960/1980/2000; the same problem.
Many times what is necessary is to have outside activities,
sports, for example, where the family goes somewhere
together. It could be the movies, it could be a restaurant, it could
be a museum, anywhere away from the computer, anywhere the
family can be a family.
It is not impossible to keep your children safe, it just
requires your time and interest.
For anyone who has children and cares about their safety, this is a great guide. There are still some families where the child knows more about computers than their parents. These parent need to know they can still be in control. You have given them the guide lines they need.
Good job and welcome to Triond.
#3 by a fool, Sep 25, 2007
Public sites often have specific blocking software to prevent
a child from visiting X rated sites. In the case of your sister's
kids, she should speak to the mother of those friends. However,
one of the most important lessons; "My mother doesn't let me..."
All of us learned what we couldn't do in the house or in the presence of our mother. The mere fact those children know that
their mother does not tolerate this stuff, and they have to sneak
around to view it is the lesson.