Internet can be dangerous
While the internet contains a wealth of educational and social opportunities for kids, the Texas Cable Industry has teamed up with the Attorney General’s office to educate parents and children about the dangers posed by internet predators.
The “On-Demand” Cyber Safety Video is part of cable’s continued commitment to help parents manage the media coming into their home—-whether over television or the internet— and to ensure its appropriateness for children.
Texas cable operators have made the video available to their subscribers through on-demand cable services across Texas. Texans with this service can access programs at their convenience and pause, rewind and fast forward them. Texas cable customers should check their local listings or call their cable provider for more details. In addition to being accessible through cable networks’ ondemand services, the video is available on the attorney general’s website, located at www.texasattorneygeneral. gov.
Since 2003 the attorney general’s Fugitive Unit and the Cyber Crimes Unit, which protects children from online sexual exploitation, have arrested 33 men for using the internet and maintaining online social networking accounts in violation of their parole.
Three main risks associated with all connected technology are:
Inappropriate Contact: Teach kids how to recognize and protect themselves
against contact with cyber-bullies, hackers, phishers and predators. People aren’t always who they say they are. Teach kids to keep away from internet strangers: the internet is a place to enhance existing relationships, not a place to meet new people.
Inappropriate Content: This includes both content that is viewed and content that is uploaded by kids. Help kids understand that the internet is forever: everything they post online is tracked and stored and will follow them to future job interviews and college entrance interviews.
Inappropriate Conduct: Because the web environ- ment can feel anonymous, some youth become disinhibited. Teach kids that the internet is a public forum: anonymity is a myth. Help them be the good person online that they are when they’re offline.
Once children understand these core risks, three simple guidelines will help parents provide a safe and healthy experience online:
Keep current with technology: You don’t have to be an expert, but a little understanding goes a long way toward keeping your child safe online. Get basic technical training and learn about new products as they’re released.
Keep checking your children’s internet activity. Know where they go online. Let them know that you’ll keep checking because you want them to understand that the internet is a public forum and never truly private.
Keep communicating with your children about everything they experience on the internet. Know their lingo, and ask when you don’t understand something. Work to keep communication lines open.


Best of Freestone





