Archive for the ‘House Rules’ Category
Internet Safety Contract
If your children are using the Internet, it’s good to set rules so they know what’s acceptable when they are online. Bsecure Online has developed an Internet Safety Contract for you.
Download the Internet Safety Contract, read over with your children explaining why it’s important they obey the rules, then post the contract in a visible place as a reminder.
TV and Video Games or Relationships and Memories?
The Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics released a report where 1,323 middle childhood participants were studied over a 13-month period to see the difference between children who limited their TV and Video Game time to 2 hour or less per day versus those who did not limit their time.
The results concluded that those who did not limit their time had increased attention problems. As a parent, it’s easy to want to let our children veg in front of the TV or play video games. Heck, it’s easy to get them to do, occupies their time and we can get a lot of “me time” and other things done. However, we all know that the easy thing isn’t always the right thing!
Instead of doing the easy thing, get involved in your children’s lives. Set in place time limits for media. Use parent control software to help enforce time limits online. Replace that time with activities where you can grow as a family. One day when your children and grown and out of the house, you’ll look back and be thankful that you did the right thing and built those memories and strong relationships with your children versus remembering them vegging in front of a TV or video game hours on end.
Is your child sneaking onto the Internet at night?
I was talking to a mom the other day about her 10 year old son, whom she was very concerned. The other evening when she woke up in the middle of the night, she found her son in the living room on the family computer at 2:00 am. At 9:00 pm, she had tucked him in for the evening. She didn’t know how long he had been up or what he was looking at on the computer. She went to browse the history, and he had already deleted it (yes, a 10 year old).
She isn’t very computer savvy, and is already trying to catch up with her son’s computer knowledge. However, she knew that something had to be done and that her 10 year old on a computer with no supervision was out of the question.
I’m sure this parent is not the only one that has had to deal with this issue. Whether you are computer savvy or not, there are simple, effective tools out there that can help us in keeping our kids safe when they are on the Internet and keep them off the computer when they should be sleeping.
A great solution is parental controls software will that will allow you to set the time of day when each family member is allowed on the computer. Sleep better at night knowing your children are safely tucked in their beds and not sneaking on the computer “after hours”.
Playing in Traffic - Basic Browsing
When my son first started understanding how the Internet could be used to help him find things he wanted to research, such as Spiderman, new toys, and Spongebob, I quickly saw that he needed to be taught some very basic safety rules. These rules can be helpful no matter your age.
Use a search engine to help locate the website. My son’s instinct was to just type into the browser address bar www. + whatever he wanted to look up + .com. As you can imagine, depending on what you typed in as the web address, you didn’t know what might pop up! One safety rule is to use a search engine like www.google.com to type in what you are looking for, then carefully read the descrptions to make sure you then choose the appropriate website to browse. Once you are on the website, you can then click various links in the site to go to different pages and see all the information the company has written about on its site.
Clicking on pop-up ads can be dangerous. As you start to feel more comfortable browsing the Internet and go to more and more sites, some might have pop-up advertisements that try to entice you to “click here” for a chance to win something, or to make sure your computer is running as efficiently as possible. My rule of thumb, is that if I’m looking for something, I will Google it and make sure I am on a legitimate website before I will ever click on a pop-up ad that might then place spyware or malware on my computer. Teach yourself and your kids that no matter how enticing the ad looks, ignore the pop-up, and go back to the basics of using Google or another search engine to make sure you choose a legitimate site.
Not all downloadable files are safe. My son loves gaming on his computer. He also loves finding cheat codes to unlock all the cars and tracks in a racing game. The other day, he found a blog post where someone was talking about how you could unlock all the features of a specific racing game by downloading and installing a certain file onto the computer. It even had additional posts from other people saying how awesome the cheats off that file were. My son knows to always ask me or his dad to check out a file before he downloads something and we will stop what we are doing and take the time to help him out. I saved the file that he was wanting to my hard drive, then told my Anti-Virus software to scan it. Sure enough, that file was a virus! Had my son downloaded and installed the file, our computer could have been infected with a nasty trojan virus that we would have spent hours trying to clean.
Add peace of mind to your computer with an Internet filter. Installing an Internet filter is a great way to help protect your family from stumbling upon inappropriate content. Internet filters like Bsecure Online provides this peace of mind by blocking inappropriate sites based on the categories you choose, allows you to see what sites have been visited, set the hours that each family member can be online, and many other features. It also provides anti-virus protection with the full security suite. As an added bonuses, customer support is more than glad to help walk you through installing the software and setting it up to best meet your needs if you are new at computers and want assurance.
Begin your path of learning today! Like I said the other day, you don’t have to know everything, but get a grasp on the basics and how to protect your family online. If your children seem “savvy”, let them know you want to learn and you’d like them to help show you the ropes, go to a local community hands-on class, or ask a good friend to teach you. Us parents have no quams when it comes to learning about keeping our physical homes safe for our family, so lets use that same zeal and confidence to learn how to keep our family safe online!
Be in the know!
3,500 registered sex offenders in New York were recently kicked off of MySpace and Facebook. This purging was able to happen due to the Electronic Securing and Targeting of Online Predators Act (“E-STOP”) that was authored by Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.
At a Manhattan news conference, Cuomo said:
“Beware of the danger of the Internet. It is a great tool…but the most dangerous place can be a young person in their own bedroom on their laptop…You don’t really know where they are and you don’t really know who they are talking to.”
With the proper tools in place, the Internet can be a safer place, and you can know where your kids are going online and who they are talking to.
Internet monitoring software, like Bsecure, can offer real solutions for your family including:
- Customizable filtering levels for each computer user
- Categories to allow or restrict access to gambling, porn, R-rated, etc. websites
- Instant Messaging and Chat room monitoring
- Detailed reporting showing when the Internet was accessed, sites that were visited, and sites that were blocked
- Time of Day feature to control Internet activities for specific times of the day
We as parents have the privilege of helping to create a safe, loving environment for our children. Take an active role in your child’s life and become aware and involved in providing safety in their online and offline lives.
Interesting Post on Yahoo! Answers
Saw this humorous post the other day…
Question: I have Bsafe security system and it blocks proxy site so i cant get a proxy can anyone help me bypass this sec?
Answer: Sorry, it’s doing what it’s supposed to do. Which is more than I can say for you.
Where’s the humor? On the surface, it looks like this customer is having a problem with his Bsafe (now Bsecure) filter. In reality, proxy sites are commonly used to bypass filters by first connecting to their proxy server, which then allows a tech savvy teen to type a porn site request, which in turn serves up the normally blocked content. Bsecure blocks proxy servers and the Yahoo Answer person knows this - the teen is trying to bypass his filter without Mom and Dad knowing. Sometimes, customer satisfaction means making kids unhappy:-(





Hoal is the founder of