2IV]IZa-);<-:67:-/768):-6< Keep kids cyber-safe and monitor online activities By JENNIFER COLTON If you have a child old enough to see, they’ve probably connected with the Internet. Whether it’s watching YouTube videos or posing for Facebook photos, children are growing up with the Internet all around them. Keeping children safe online and making them responsible ci zens of the digital world is now a part of the parent’s handbook. How you monitor your children may depend on what age they are, but at all ages, children need to know you are aware and interested in what they do online. Protec on so ware One way to control what your children see online is to purchase parental so ware, or programs that set up fi lters for what your child can and cannot access, such as adult content, gambling, pornography and illegal drugs. Net Nanny, a subscrip on-based service, is the highest rated parental control so ware, primarily based on its fi ltering and blocking and ease of use scores. Other programs include Norton Family, McAfee’s Safe Eyes, Circle with Disney and Mobicip. Many programs also include built- in me limit se ngs – a plus if you have a child prone to sneaking extra screen me. Cost: Variable. Net Nanny starts around $40 per computer and $20 per phone. Site-specifi c monitoring If your child is only interested in a few sites, you can change the se ngs and monitor each applica on individually. Facebook and Twi er, for example, allow privacy controls that limit your child’s interac on with others as well as who can see his or her informa on. There’s a fi ne line between monitoring and invading privacy, but your child should give through once a week and make sure your child hasn’t wandered into any of the more ques onable sectors of the online world. Make sure your children know that you will be doing this – but don’t tell you access to his or her accounts on all online forums and websites. If your child has his or her own Facebook account, for example, they can par cipate in private Facebook messages. Cost: Time. Check the history If your child browses the Internet, set aside me to periodically check where they’ve been stopping along the way. Checking the history of the web browser on a PC or tablet will give you an idea of the kinds of site your child is visi ng. This also works for YouTube, where you can scroll through a list of what they have been watching. Skim them exactly when. This opens communica on and, as in the case of security cameras, may help deter some curious clicking. Cost: Time. Watch the loca on – and the me If a computer is set up in a com- mon room of the house, children are less likely to violate any house rules with what they’re doing online. A child with a computer or tablet in his or her bedroom may be more willing to head to sites they know they shouldn’t when a watch- ful eye is not nearby. The same goes for the mes your children are going online. While they may not be breaking the rules at 4 o’clock in the a ernoon with a whole fam- ily around, what are they doing at night while you’re asleep? Set clear rules The one form of parental monitoring that might not fi rst come to mind should be one of the fi rst steps – communica on. Make sure you discuss with your child what they can and cannot do online. If they’re se ng up a profi le, make sure they know what informa on can be shared and what can’t. It’s the same discussion you have for se ng any family rules. While being online is a li le more general than where a child can go on the way to/from school, it’s s ll an important piece to make sure everyone understands where the lines are. This can also include “making friends” online. Make sure you know who your children are talking to. Cost: Communica on. Keep communica on lines open Just because you’ve set rules doesn’t mean your children will always follow them. Check in with your kids about what they’re doing online and who they’re talking to – just like you do with their friends at school and ac vi es. Children have wider access through the Internet than ever before, and parents need to keep communica on lines open. This goes both ways – good and bad. If children have posi ve experiences, try to share their enthusiasm, even if you’ve never played the game or spent much me on their site/app of choice. And, if your child has a bad experience, make sure they know they can come to you, no ma er what it is. Cost: Communica on. ________ Jennifer Colton is news director of KOHU and KQFM, and mother of three, based in Pendleton.