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‘How to be safe on line’

Anonymous
Not applicable

Dear All,

 

I wonder what everyone would think about starting a conversation/an educational thread on ‘how to be safe on line’? (I browsed the forum and it’s not a topic I have came across yet, hence my suggestion to you all).

 

This is of interest for me and my reasoning is from a parent point of view, as we cannot stop our children from accessing the evolving technology, (e.g. smartphones, Facebook, BBM, etc.), yet, we (the parents) should keep up with the technology in order to have a better understanding of it and do our best to ensure that our kids are safe/protected on line and enjoying the benefits of it...

 

However, for less tech minded people like me, but willing to learn, I would benefit from a simple 'user friendly' guide and support, where you can ask any basic questions without being uncomfortable for been so simple...

 

Just a thought....  please let us know yours.

 

Kind regards...    D

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adamtemp64
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have a look here http://www.o2.co.uk/thinkbig/people/childprotection and http://www.o2.co.uk/parents

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adamtemp64
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have a look here http://www.o2.co.uk/thinkbig/people/childprotection and http://www.o2.co.uk/parents

iPhone 11 Pro 256gb on unlimited data
iPad Pro 12.9” 2020 256gb refresh o2 family discount
Apple Watch series 4
My first mobile was in 1995 a CM-R111 from sony on Cellnet.
Wincanton South Somerset (Full 4g 3G 2g indoor coverage) Remember we are all customers here not customer services

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Toby
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I really like this idea. Nicely done New2Smartphones slight_smile

It would be great if anyone has a any more tips or other articles that could potentially be added to the pages linked above (thanks Adam)

It's a shame that it is such a prevalent issue these days. Do you think it is over or under played?

It would be interesting to see if the crime figures elicited from online communication reflect the increase in awareness.

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Liquid
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Interesting idea:)

Unfortunately children seem to be much more tech savy than the older generations. So a topic like this could go a long way to helping create a more secure environment for parents letting their children online.

I'd be willing to participate:)
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong. So Ive been told wink
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Anonymous
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@Liquid wrote:
Interesting idea:)

Unfortunately children seem to be much more tech savy than the older generations. So a topic like this could go a long way to helping create a more secure environment for parents letting their children online.

I'd be willing to participate:)

 

I remember when I was in school and it was easy to do what you wanted on the computer and cover your tracks from your parents!

 

The only real edge parents have with their children's contracts is that they have access to see the bill! wink

 

But yeah, this thread seems like a good idea. Concerned parents could ask for advice on specific issues that could be worrying them.

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Liquid
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Haha yes I used to love how unsecured school computers were:) they would try everything possible to lock us out of websites. However my school stupidly didn't prevent us from downloading alternative browsers which were not locked by filtering software:D.

Also not locking dos prompt was an abysmal fail haha. Spent more time in ICT lessons working out how to get around things and still walked out with an A:)
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong. So Ive been told wink
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jonsie
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Any responsible parent would rightly be worried about this and anything that helps to ensure our youngsters are safe would be very worthwhile. There are so many hidden dangers so protection is of paramount importance. There are also many of the older generation still coming to terms with the internet and many of them should also be aware of the safeguards needed to protect themselves.

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Liquid
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Start this off with a selection of free easy to use parental control software.

 

 

K9 parental guardian

 

my favourite one incredibally simple interface available for both;

 

mac;

 

http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/downloads/12/k9-web-protection-40296/2451/

 

and windows;

 

http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/downloads/12/k9-web-protection-40296/2450/

 

 

 

OpenDNS

 

 

this one is great so simple to use and very difficult to bypass;

https://store.opendns.com/get/home-free

 

Easily the best choice you can select specific addresses to block different levels of filtering. Best of all because it works at the base level it works for any device connected to your home network.

Norton

 

Or if you only trust the big name brands then norton has its own version.

i find it not as easy to use and does come with pop ups asking you to upgrade to their full Internet security suit.

 

https://account.norton.com/sso/register?

detectAgent=1&noemail=1&service=https://onlinefamily.norton.com/familysafety/casRegister.fs&locale=en&parent=https%3A//onlinefamily....

 

these two program's provide a good basis for blocking specific content access. It will stop a fair amount of children in their tracks in the course for unsavoury content.

 

theres much more that can be done but it all depends on technical levels.

 

 

main one I can think of is giving your child their own username with limited privileges. While password protecting both yours and the administrator accounts.

 

 

Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong. So Ive been told wink
Message 8 of 26
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Anonymous
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Thank you, great links indeed; there is a lot to take on board...
best regards
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Anonymous
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Thank you Toby; I don't think 'it's over or under played issue'; from what I heard cyber bullying is on the increase and it's becoming an overwhelming issue to deal with in many schools for example. If us, the parents would proactively get involved in preventing this, there is less likelihood risk of offending related behaviours, I believe.
Best regards, D
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