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How to Protect Your Child from Internet Sexting
Expert Advice for Parents from Lightlogger Keylogger
- Graphic pornography,
sexual predators, cyber bullies, sexting, addictive online gaming
all—make the internet a dangerous place for children. No
safeguard stands between the internet and your child except your
involved, informed parenting. This article from Lightlogger
keylogger
presents effective, practical steps you can take to protect your
child from one of those threats, internet sexting.
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- Sexting is sending,
exchanging, or posting on websites nude or sexually provocative
images of oneself or others using either a cell phone or a computer
connected to a web camera. In the US, one in five teens report
having sent, received, or forwarded nude or sexually suggestive
content. Further, in much of the US sexting of an image of a minor,
even an image of the sender, is considered distribution of child
pornography and is illegal.
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- To protect your child
from internet sexting, first implement a comprehensive internet
protection plan. Use the free resources offered online at Internet
Safety 101,
including the written rules, software tools, youth pledge, and
appropriate age-based guidelines for your child. Experts on internet
safety recommend parents of children 18 and under both establish
clear, written rules for their kids’ online behavior and
use software tools to filter and monitor their kids’ activity.
Both should be appropriate to your child’s age. When
installing software, include an activity monitor like Lightlogger
keylogger,
a website filter, and a child-safe browser for younger children.
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- Now take these additional
steps to protect your child:
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- Make sure your child
understands the legal and personal dangers of sexting. Teach him or
her that images sent electronically are rarely anonymous, can be
forwarded to anyone anywhere, and can never be retrieved.
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Require that your child gets
your permission before sending his or her picture or a family
member’s picture to others online or using a cell phone.
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Teach your child to delete
any sexually suggestive images or messages he or she receives on his
or her cell phone or computer.
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Keep your child’s
internet-connected computer in an open area out of the child’s
bedroom.
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Set strict rules for your
child’s use of a web camera.
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Spot check your child’s
online activity occasionally with your monitoring software.
Lightlogger
keylogger,
an inexpensive, easy-to-use monitoring tool, is ideal for this
purpose, since it records many types of activity, including images
taken periodically of your monitor’s content.
- Remember that being
actively involved and interested in your child’s online life
is the most important tool you have.
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- Read all the articles
on internet safety from keylogger.