Cyber Tips
- Report cyberbulling to the proper authorities.
- Use a combination of letters, numbers, and special characters when creating a password.
- Never meet someone you have met online or while gaming in person.
- Install and maintain antivirus software on your computer.
- Avoid keeping multiple tabs in your web browser open for long periods of time to prevent “tabnabbing.”
- Set the privacy settings on your social-networking page to the most-restrictive setting.
- If you have children who use a home computer, keep the computer in a main area of the house.
- Use an avatar, rather than an actual picture of yourself, on your social-networking page.
- Secure the wireless connection in your home or business with a unique password.
- Do not use your primary email address for online submissions.
- Monitor your children’s online activity, including which websites they visit and with whom they interact in blogs, chat rooms, or social-networking sites.
- Disable Bluetooth technology when you are not using it.
- Limit the use of cookies in your web browser.
- Keep gaming consoles in an area that is easy to supervise.
- Regularly scan your computer for spyware.
- Set your web browser to block pop-ups.
- Install parental controls on your web browser.
- Configure your operating system to update automatically.
- Use strong passwords that cannot be easily guessed.
- Use caution in deciding which third-party applications to enable on your social- networking page.
- Set your privacy settings on your social-networking page to require a last name or email address for all friend requests.
- Limit the amount of information third-party applications can access on your social-networking page.
- Limit the amount of personal information, such as your address, your school, or your schedule or routine, you post online.
- Use email filters to reduce the amount of SPAM you receive.
- Pay attention to a website’s URL to ensure it is authentic before transmitting personal information.
- Use the Bcc: function in your email software when sending an email to a large group to protect your recipients’ email addresses.
- Use different passwords on different computer systems.
- Establish a secondary email address to use when shopping online, subscribing to online services, or posting to a web forum, blog, or social-networking site.
- Disable the automatic downloading of graphics in HTML mail.
- Save and scan attachments for malware before opening them, particularly if you cannot readily identify the attachment’s source.
- Encrypt data transferred via a wireless network.
- Uninstall any unused software programs from your computer.
- Devote one credit card with a minimum credit line to online purchases.
- Talk to your children about Internet safety and let them know they can come to you about any questions or concerns about behaviors or problems they encounter online.
- Know that, once you hit “send” on an email or text message, you cannot control where it may travel.
- Do not advertise that you are away from home online.
- Do not use a word that can be found in a dictionary of any language as your password.
- Do not follow links in SPAM messages.
- Exercise caution in deciding which websites to visit.
- Know that, once you publish something online, it is there forever.
- Place a privacy screen on your mobile device to prevent onlookers from reading information over your shoulder.
- Install a firewall on your computer and wireless devices.
- When using Bluetooth technology, ensure that it is in “hidden” mode.
- Do not plug an unknown USB drive into your computer.
- Do not leave your laptop or mobile device unattended in public or easily accessible areas.
- Document cyberbullying by keeping electronic or hard copies of any text messages, websites, or emails conveying threatening or harassing language.
- Consider storing important data on recordable media other than your laptop or mobile device.
- Be wary of emails requesting personal information.
- Prevent identity theft by doing business only with reputable companies, protecting your personal information, and staying aware of your account activity.
- Never give out personal information while gaming.
- Become a “friend” of your child’s social-networking page.