A few months ago I attended
a workshop on internet safety. I was very impressed with this speaker and learned
a lot more than I thought I would. I grew up during a time where computers were
first coming out and was not until well after I graduated High School that they started to show up in everyone’s home. The internet was only starting to be used by universities and colleges. Internet was not something everyone had or even wanted. Now
it’s pretty much in most people’s homes, schools and businesses. Internet is something we take for granted. It’s like TV remote controls are now.
Yep, most of us my age can remember when we were the remote control for our parent’s TV’s!
Since now my profession
is working with children I have seen many of them, including my own, not only very adapt at the internet, and computers but
also their cell phones. Most cell phones now come with internet access. And if you aren’t aware of it by now you soon will be. The social world as many of us parents and now grandparents grew up in is long gone. It’s different now and we can’t change it. We
can only learn to accept it and grow with it. But we need to learn how to keep ourselves and our children safe.
Anyway, my thoughts on that workshop
was that if someone like me who tries to keep up with internet and social media safety did not know some of this stuff, many
others do not either. Simple things such as reading the 100 pages or more of
“user agreement” stuff when you sign up for any social network (SN) such as facebook, myspace, twitter, etc. need
to be read or at least looked at. Just because over a million people are using
it doesn’t mean it’s safe. And those User Agreements change way too
often. Things I learned that really opened my eyes were that these SN’s
keep everything, forever, and can always access them. When you close something
or delete it, it’s not gone. In speaking with the children I work
with the majority of them do not believe this. We tell them over and over but
unless it’s told in a way that will affect them in some way, such as future jobs or college, they are not going to believe
it. When several HS students were told that the new trend for “head hunters”,
human resources in business, and even some colleges can and do hire someone to search prospective employees you should have
seen their faces. They were disbelieving.
Yes, there is now a new nitch out there in the job world: find and research
prospective college student, possible scholarship recipient, and job applicant.
These people find all those “hidden” & previously thought “deleted” pictures of them which
were once posted on their favorite SN and that they might not want their parents to see, or comments they have made can be
found. These days in this vast world of information, prospective employers
and colleges want to know the applicant and what better way than searching those social networking sites?
There is so much about
the internet that we take for granted. It can be a positive experience; keeping
up with family far away, locating employment, research, finding the best prices on the newest items we want for home, and
of course shopping. But we need to learn to be safe as well.