8 community june14 2011 Kids and the Internet: Why We’re Really Going to Miss Facebook By Diane K. Danielson Life changes quickly online. It’s not easy to keep up, but here’s the first of a series of articles about what parents need to know about kids and the Internet in 2011. Facebook With 500 million users, Facebook is not going away anytime soon. But, remember MySpace? Yeah, kids thought that was cool once, too. Now that parents are flocking to Facebook, the kids are already starting to head elsewhere. What we will miss most about Facebook when it comes to kids are the privacy controls; the requirement to use real pictures (which prevents anonymous trolling); the ability to block/report people; and that it is basically a closed network. While some are moving on, most kids will maintain a presence on Facebook. This means we still need to worry about kids cyberbullying, inviting strangers into their networks and posting inappropriate content and pictures. But, for now, it is the safest alternative provided you do the following. Parental Tasks: • Find out if your child is on Facebook. Almost all teenagers and nearly 1/3 of children under the age of 13 have profiles (many without their parents’ knowledge). • Have your child “friend” you or a trusted adult on Facebook. You bought the computer and/or smartphone, so you get to make the rules. • Make sure that they don’t block you or put you in a “friend list” from which they can hide information. I personally have a “friend list” called “See Nothing” that I use so certain people can still be my “friend” but literally see nothing that I post. They probably assume I never use Facebook. I also block others so that even if they look for me, they will never find me. Kids know how to do this, too. • Check the Facebook account on your child’s smartphone. Some kids have resorted to creating duplicate accounts. The one on their smartphone is likely the one they use most. • If they use Facebook on their smartphone, encourage them to password protect their phone. Other kids can grab the phone and send out inappropriate messages from your child’s account. Mandate that they tell you the password! Twitter Last weekend, as I was searching Twitter with regard to some town politics, I inadvertently discovered that the local high school students have adopted Twitter as a form of communication. Unfortunately, Twitter is much more problematic than Facebook when it comes to kids. • Twitter can be accessed from a normal cell phone as well as a smartphone and/or a computer. This makes it easier for everyone to use. • As we’ve seen, kids send some really bad messages by text: inappropriate photos, messages intent on bullying, and dumb things that would cause a college admissions officer to take pause. Now imagine that your kids are making these texts public to the world; and, that the world can comment, forward them, print them out and even start “following” your child. • Kids can create accounts with false names and hide behind avatars and icons. • It’s even more public than you think. Google indexes tweets so they end up in Google search results. Facebook does not do this for personal profiles. Missing Facebook yet? No? Then keep reading. While doing the town meeting research, I noticed a tweet from a local teen that was offensive enough to question that child’s college potential. Yep. Hope it’s not your kid. Now in this teen’s defense, they had attempted to use Twitter’s privacy settings (unlike some of their friends). Unfortunately, due to a glitch that I’ve been working to sort out with Twitter, that tweet is still publicly viewable on certain search engines. Even with a protected account that is set up properly, a child’s name and picture, where they live as well as the names and pictures of the kids in their network are all public information. A quick Google search of the teen who authored the offensive tweet revealed their age, home address, more pictures, interests and the fact that a sibling has some disturbing URLs registered to the parents’ home address. users. Justin Beiber and Lady Gaga have 9 million+ followers each. Sports stars are all over it. Where the celebrities go, the kids will follow. • Explain that whatever they send out on Twitter can be taken out of context and made public even if they use privacy controls. All it takes is a technical glitch, an easy hack, or, more likely, one angry friend taking a screen capture of a tweet and publishing it to the world. • Discuss the importance of not putting information with regard to their geographic location. Twitter is not meant to be a closed network. Strangers can see everything. • Join Twitter and follow them. While you can and should do all of the above, the best way to approach kids about the Internet is always to talk with your child about using common sense online. This means that you have to educate yourself about what’s out there. That’s part of your job as a parent. Sure, we all did dumb things as teenagers, but we never wrote it down in public or videotaped it and uploaded it to YouTube. It’s time for parents to take back control. • You bought the computers and phones. • You pay for the ISPs and wireless services. • You have the power to limit access and develop boundaries. Coming up next: How smartphones can lead to dumb moves by even the brightest children and what you can do to prevent it. Reprinted courtesy of the Cohasset Mariner. Diane K. Danielson is a new media marketing consultant who specializes in helping companies build social media strategies into their business plans. For more about Diane visit http:// dkdnewmedia.com. Parental tasks: • Find out if your child is on Twitter. Twitter has 100 million R PAY OLL PLUS LLC Full Service Payroll Bookkeeping QuickBooks Assistance Income Tax Preparation (Individual & Small Business) N VER ONIA, OR Edi Sheldon 503-429-1819 LTC#29629-C edisheldon@gmail.com Four Vernonia Girls Selected for Sate Softball Tournament Four Vernonia girls have been selected to play on a girls 12 and under state tournament softball team based out of St. Helens. The girls went through a try out on May 21 in St. Helens and were chosen to be on the team, along with 9 girls from St. Helens. The girls are Pearl Cook, Paige and Sarah Smith, and Cassidy Whitton. The state tournament is set for June 24 through June 26 in Albany. Vernonia’s Voice is published twice each month on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday. Look for our next issue June 28th.