It's National Cyber-Safety Awareness Month
The social media heyday shows no signs of slowing down any time soon,
and likely will just continue to gain speed and momentum as it appeals
to younger and younger audiences; however it can’t go unnoticed that the
values it’s teaching our children are less than ideal, especially in
regards to unsafe internet habits. As social media becomes more
prevalent, so do our kids apparent lack of regard to what is considered
over-sharing and what isn’t. Social media has made it completely
acceptable to engage in the following less-than-safe behaviors:
1. Checking into places – It’s
become commonplace to check into places once you get there; whether it’s
the gym, a restaurant, or even a different city or state from the one
you reside in, you’re now able to post onto your social media sites
where you are, and are even rewarded with badges for checking into
places regularly. However while the badges and upgrades to “mayor of the
city” may make kids feel cool, it’s also alerting anyone and everyone
that they’re not at home and where you can find them, something that
seems less than stellar from a safety standpoint.
2. Posting provocative and risqué photos
– Scantily clad pictures, pictures showing drug and alcohol use, and
pictures of people in risqué circumstances routinely grace Facebook
walls, get uploaded to Instagram, and find their way onto Twitter. All
this does, however, is encourage risky behavior, prompting teens to
engage in it and even challenging them to outdo their friends,as well as
appealing to predators with questionable motives, making it easy for
them to identify easy targets.
3. Putting your address, phone number, and email address online
– While this type of information may be posted innocently for friends
and family to easily find, kids tend to forget that the internet is not a
private forum, it’s very public. Posting this information makes it easy
for scammers, spammers, and predators to prey on unsuspecting victims,
which is why this information should never be made publicon the various
social media websites.
4. Demeaning others – Bullying
others online has become the new social norm. This kind of
cyber-bullying has had an overwhelming effect on kids, leaving them
feeling depressed and hopeless. When kids are unable to achieve any
respite from the constant demeaning of their peers the effects can be
monumental, with self-mutilation, uncontrollable anger or depression,
and even suicide or harming their peers being the fallout.
5. Encouraging hazardous games –
Remember the choking game that encouraged kids to hang themselves to
get high? These types of dangerous games are a result of social media
allowing them to spread like wildfire, and the results are often tragic
because kids don’t realize how dangerous they really are until it’s too
late.
Social media, while it is many wonderful things, has its drawbacks as
well. The younger the audience allowed to interact on it, the more
unsafe it becomes, especially because they don’t yet understand that for
every action there can also be a tragic reaction. This is why it’s
imperative for parents to be vigilant in teaching their kids safe
internet habits and to monitor what their kids are doing online.
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