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Sexual Predators
· Tuesday, March 2, 2010
It used to be that a parent's greatest worry was the guy in the trench coat lurking on the edge of the school playground. Now, thanks to the internet, that creep often hangs out with your son in his bedroom.
Pedophiles prowl wherever children go, and cyberspace is their newest playground. Strangers anonymously scan the internet and quietly spy in chat room conversations in search of prey. They cunningly study how to masquerade as "friends" to your children and know just how to manipulate their emotions.
Recent surveys show that sixty-nine percent of teens who are online receive messages from people they don't know. Fifty percent of teens who enter chat rooms say they have shared personal information with strangers including their phone numbers, addresses, and where they go to school. And 73 percent of sexual solicitation online happens while youth are using their home computers. In the worst cases, the cyber-stalkers lure kids to secret meetings where they are sexually abused and even murdered. According to the Center for Missing and Exploited Children, two out of every five missing teens ages 15 to 17 are abducted in connection with Internet activity.
Parents, you are the first line of defense. With the proliferation of online pornography and perverts seeking their next victim in cyberspace, the job of protecting your kids in the vast internet can seem overwhelming.
Thankfully, the Internet Safety 101 www.internetsafety101.com comprehensive DVD teaching series can help.
Developed by the Enough is Enough organization, Internet Safety 101 equips parents with both technical and non-technical tips. Their "Rules 'N Tools" enables children and families to enjoy all the benefits and wonders of the internet while teaching children how to avoid danger and make wise choices.
There are a few basic steps you should take right now to protect your child - before he makes another keystroke.
- secure a reliable internet filter (check out the one coming soon at www.MyMpowerBox.com
- move the computer into a public space in your home
- tell your child about the dangers and remind her to never talk to strangers
- order Internet Safety 101 (www.InternetSafety101)
As I mentioned in this column last week, it is my privilege to serve as a pro-bono member of the Enough is Enough Advisory Board. EIE president, Donna Rice Hughes has committed some 15 years of her life fighting pornography and sexual predators, studying internet usage and technologies and assembling the most effective ways to protect your children in cyberspace. It took three intense years to develop, produce and pilot Internet Safety 101. The program includes parental control tutorials; cyber-security resources; compelling video vignettes from law enforcement, victims clinicians; and a frightening interview with a convicted sex offender.
The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, US Department of Justice, supports efforts to protect your kids through Enough is Enough and Internet Safety 101 - shouldn't you?
Third-party content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Patriot Post.
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Oliver
Independent researchers have debunked the 'Internet predator' scare. Almost all of the articles warning families that the Internet is a dangerous place have something to gain from frightened parents whether it is by selling software, or raising funds. Studies published by the Crimes against Children Research Center (CCRC) at the University of New Hampshire, The Berkman Center for Internet & Society (Harvard), and the Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee are all sources of good info about online threats. Risk factors don't change because the Internet is thrown into the mix, kids at risk online are the same kids at risk in the community. Fear mongering does nothing to help them.
Posted March 3, 2010 at 9:15:39 AM
Sarah
Although I agree with Oliver that people should not profit from this there are also enough stats out there to suggest to me that I should protect my kids when they are both on and off the internet. Not only that but I feel as a parent it is my duty to not only protect them but to educate them as well. Don’t talk to strangers in the street – don’t talk to them over the internet... it is really very straight forward. I use Brightfilter on my families computer and it protects us all, not just the children as I have no desire to stumble across inappropriate websites either.
Posted March 4, 2010 at 6:26:49 AM
Oliver
"I should protect my kids when they are both on and off the internet." --Sarah
Absolutely! I agree completely - keep doing what you're doing!
I have been speaking to students & families since 2003 about personal safety (strangers, internet, home alone, & cyberbullying) and there is no better safety tool than an involved parent. I am not a big fan of filters because most 13-year-olds can defeat them or simply log on away from home if they really want to surf unfiltered but if entrepreneurs want to hawk them online, more power to them. In families where communication isn't the norm, spying on kids is often the only option. But again, if these kids are at risk, software isn't going to change that, these families have got other fish to fry.
Posted March 4, 2010 at 9:05:08 AM