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How to Protect Your Child from the Dangers of Online Gaming
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, online gaming.
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- Online gaming is playing
games online with other players who are also online. Online gaming
typically includes text, audio, or video communication among
players. Content of online games is often violent as well as
remarkably sexualized, even to the point of simulating sex, and
content can evolve beyond a child’s age range as a game is
played. Further, the unsupervised communication among players, often
strangers, can be abusive and sexualized, and, like talk in chat
rooms, can be a venue for predators. Finally, games can have an
addictive quality that causes payers to spend an unhealthy amount of
time playing.
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- To protect your child
from the dangers of online gaming, 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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- Require that you approve
any online game your child wants to play.
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Whenever possible, play
online games along with your child to evaluate each game.
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Look for professional reviews
of the online games you are considering for your child. For example,
visit common
sense media,
an online source of reliable, developmentally appropriate reviews,
select your child’s age, and then search for appropriate
online games.
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Make sure your child
disguises his or her identity using an appropriate screen name
(gamer tag) when playing games online.
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Disallow web camera use when
your child plays online games.
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Set reasonable limits on when
and how long your child can play any game.
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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.