Why Monitor Your Children’s Internet Activity?
Does your child have a laptop or personal computer in their bedroom? If they are above a certain age I’d be surprised if you said no. It seems that in current times children see it as their right to be able to go on the web in the privacy of their own space away from parents and away from any supervision. As computers have come down in price I guess that we as parents are just as responsible, it’s oh so easy just to let them get on with it in their bedroom leaving us with time to ourselves. Most children start with the “look what I can do” stage where they want to show you everything they can do on a computer and then at around age 11 or 12 they move onto the “ALT+TAB” stage where everything online becomes secret or hidden. It’s then they “need” their own computer. So the question is do you know what your children are doing online?
I know my daughter completely loves 2 things about the internet. Only 2. Bebo and MSN Messenger. If you have a girl aged around 13 years old I imagine your daughter is similar. The trouble is that these 2 things are possibly some of the most dangerous internet activities that our children could enjoy. Bebo is well known as being the child’s preferred social network (despite having an age limit that should stop this from happening). If I know that, children know that, you can be sure as hell that there are large numbers of paedophiles that know that as well! If your child has an open profile on Bebo, then they are giving away a lot of personal information to all and sundry. Birthdays, pictures, likes, dislike all open to everybody. An open profile means that the world can see it, not just their invited friends. Do you know whether your child’s Bebo profile is open or private, do you know what information they are even putting on their profile?
What usually starts as some mutual comment leaving on Bebo and “sharing the luv” over time develops into a swapping of Messenger ID’s and then instant chat. I know this because I’ve seen it happen so many times. Of course 99.9% of the time it’s just normal casual chat amongst real friends but then there’s the time when it isn’t. I had my daughter down as somebody with oodles of common sense, well beyond her age. That was until the time I came across the report that showed a chat she’d been having with an 18 year old lad that she’d never met. She’s 12 by the way. What seems like harmless conversation to her flags every possible warning sign to me as an adult. She was told in no uncertain terms to remove that contact and never ever chat with them again. This is just one real world example that I know about because I monitor my daughter’s computer usage. I could go on and on about the number of her friends who are as young as 9 and have open Bebo profiles with names like sexygalxx etc etc I wonder if their parents know? This all sounds very alarmist but I don’t see it that way, I just see it as being a responsible parent. If my daughter was playing out in the street I’d like to know who she was playing with, when she is using the computer I see it as part of my duty of responsibility to her to know who she is talking to and more importantly who is trying to talk to her. Leave them to it with the blind faith that all will be OK or monitor, what do you do?
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