Results (
Thai) 1:
[Copy]Copied!
When talking about online privacy, it’s easy to get overwhelmed by the jargon, especially with so much attention on Google lately. Terms such as cookies, tracking and geotagging are worth learning about for educational purposes, but the guts of the issue, especially as it relates to your child, really comes down to what your child is sharing online with others.Are they casually giving out their home address? Are they posting the name of their school on Facebook? Are they announcing to everyone that they recently changed their cell phone number? Because Facebook is a social network for adults where open networking is encouraged, questions like these are integrated right into the sign up process. As you can imagine, this is where a child’s privacy and safety become jeopardized.The important thing to realize here is that children will willingly give out this information, though it’s not required of them, just because they were asked. Why do children do this? Well, I have to believe that, at the core, children don’t know the actual value of their online privacy, nor do they know that they shouldn’t provide this information because, frankly, no one has educated them about the fact that it’s not a good idea. Most children aren’t aware that what they put out there on the Internet leaves a trail; that employers and colleges now have access to seven years worth of public social media activity, and that what they do online now can haunt them for a really long time.
Being translated, please wait..