| A Parent's Guide to
Internet Safety
Dear
Parent:
Our children are our Nation's most
valuable asset. They represent the bright future of our country and hold
our hopes for a better Nation. Our children are also the most vulnerable
members of society. Protecting our children against the fear of crime
and from becoming victims of crime must be a national priority.
Unfortunately the same advances in
computer and telecommunication technology that allow our children to
reach out to new sources of knowledge and cultural experiences are also
leaving them vulnerable to exploitation and harm by computer-sex
offenders.
I hope that this information helps
you to begin to understand the complexities of on-line child
exploitation. For further information, please contact your local Police
Department or the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children at 1-800-843-5678.
Introduction
While on-line computer exploration opens
a world of possibilities for children, expanding their horizons and
exposing them to different cultures and ways of life, they can be
exposed to dangers as they hit the road exploring the information
highway. There are individuals who attempt to sexually exploit children
through the use of on-line services and the Internet. Some of these
individuals gradually seduce their targets through the use of attention,
affection, kindness, and even gifts. These individuals are often willing
to devote considerable amounts of time, money, and energy in this
process. They listen to and empathize with the problems of children.
They will be aware of the latest music, hobbies, and interests of
children. These individuals attempt to gradually lower children's
inhibitions by slowly introducing sexual context and content into their
conversations.
There are other individuals, however,
who immediately engage in sexually explicit conversation with children.
Some offenders primarily collect and trade child-pornographic images,
while others seek face-to-face meetings with children via on-line
contacts. It is important for parents to understand that children can be
indirectly victimized through conversation, i.e. "chat," as
well as the transfer of sexually explicit information and material.
Computer-sex offenders may also be evaluating children they come in
contact with on-line for future face-to-face contact and direct
victimization. Parents and children should remember that a computer-sex
offender can be any age or sex the person does not have to fit the
caricature of a dirty, unkempt, older man wearing a raincoat to be
someone who could harm a child.
Children, especially adolescents, are
sometimes interested in and curious about sexuality and sexually
explicit material. They may be moving away from the total control of
parents and seeking to establish new relationships outside their family.
Because they may be curious, children/adolescents sometimes use their
on-line access to actively seek out such materials and individuals. Sex
offenders targeting children will use and exploit these characteristics
and needs. Some adolescent children may also be attracted to and lured
by on-line offenders closer to their age who, although not technically
child molesters, may be dangerous. Nevertheless, they have been seduced
and manipulated by a clever offender and do not fully understand or
recognize the potential danger of these contacts.
This guide was prepared from actual
investigations involving child victims, as well as investigations where
law enforcement officers posed as children. Further information on
protecting your child on-line may be found in the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children's Child Safety on the
Information Highway and Teen Safety on the Information Highway
pamphlets.
What Are Signs That Your Child Might Be At
Risk On-line?
Your child spends large amounts
of time on-line, especially at night.
Most children that fall victim to
computer-sex offenders spend large amounts of time on-line, particularly
in chat rooms. They may go on-line after dinner and on the weekends.
They may be latchkey kids whose parents have told them to stay at home
after school. They go on-line to chat with friends, make new friends,
pass time, and sometimes look for sexually explicit information. While
much of the knowledge and experience gained may be valuable, parents
should consider monitoring the amount of time spent on-line.
Children on-line are at the greatest
risk during the evening hours. While offenders are on-line around the
clock, most work during the day and spend their evenings on-line trying
to locate and lure children or seeking pornography.
You find pornography on your
child's computer.
Pornography is often used in the sexual
victimization of children. Sex offenders often supply their potential
victims with pornography as a means of opening sexual discussions and
for seduction. Child pornography may be used to show the child victim
that sex between children and adults is "normal." Parents
should be conscious of the fact that a child may hide the pornographic
files on diskettes from them. This may be especially true if the
computer is used by other family members.
Your child receives phone calls
from men you don't know or is making calls, sometimes long distance, to
numbers you don't recognize.
While talking to a child victim on-line
is a thrill for a computer-sex offender, it can be very cumbersome. Most
want to talk to the children on the telephone. They often engage in
"phone sex" with the children and often seek to set up an
actual meeting for real sex.
While a child may be hesitant to give
out his/her home phone number, the computer-sex offenders will give out
theirs. With Caller ID, they can readily find out the child's phone
number. Some computer-sex offenders have even obtained toll-free 800
numbers, so that their potential victims can call them without their
parents finding out. Others will tell the child to call collect. Both of
these methods result in the computer-sex offender being able to find out
the child's phone number.
Your child receives mail, gifts,
or packages from someone you don't know.
As part of the seduction process, it is
common for offenders to send letters, photographs, and all manner of
gifts to their potential victims. Computer-sex offenders have even sent
plane tickets in order for the child to travel across the country to
meet them.
Your child turns the computer
monitor off or quickly changes the screen on the monitor when you come
into the room.
A child looking at pornographic images
or having sexually explicit conversations does not want you to see it on
the screen.
Your child becomes withdrawn
from the family.
Computer-sex offenders will work very
hard at driving a wedge between a child and their family or at
exploiting their relationship. They will accentuate any minor problems
at home that the child might have. Children may also become withdrawn
after sexual victimization.
Your child is using an on-line
account belonging to someone else.
Even if you don't subscribe to an
on-line service or Internet service, your child may meet an offender
while on-line at a friend's house or the library. Most computers come
preloaded with on-line and/or Internet software. Computer-sex offenders
will sometimes provide potential victims with a computer account for
communications with them.
What Should You Do If You Suspect Your
Child Is Communicating With A Sexual Predator On-line?
- Consider talking openly with your
child about your suspicions. Tell them about the dangers of
computer-sex offenders.
- Review what is on your child's
computer. If you don't know how, ask a friend, coworker, relative,
or other knowledgeable person. Pornography or any kind of sexual
communication can be a warning sign.
- Use the Caller ID service to
determine who is calling your child. Most telephone companies that
offer Caller ID also offer a service that allows you to block your
number from appearing on someone else's Caller ID. Telephone
companies also offer an additional service feature that rejects
incoming calls that you block. This rejection feature prevents
computer-sex offenders or anyone else from calling your home
anonymously.
- Devices can be purchased that show
telephone numbers that have been dialed from your home phone.
Additionally, the last number called from your home phone can be
retrieved provided that the telephone is equipped with a redial
feature. You will also need a telephone pager to complete this
retrieval.
- This is done using a numeric-display
pager and another phone that is on the same line as the first phone
with the redial feature. Using the two phones and the pager, a call
is placed from the second phone to the pager. When the paging
terminal beeps for you to enter a telephone number, you press the
redial button on the first (or suspect) phone. The last number
called from that phone will then be displayed on the pager.
- Monitor your child's access to all
types of live electronic communications (i.e., chat rooms, instant
messages, Internet Relay Chat, etc.), and monitor your child's
e-mail. Computer-sex offenders almost always meet potential victims
via chat rooms. After meeting a child on-line, they will continue to
communicate electronically often via e-mail.
Should any of the following situations
arise in your household, via the Internet or on-line service, you should
immediately contact your local or state law enforcement agency, the FBI,
and the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children:
- Your child or anyone in the household
has received child pornography;
- Your child has been sexually
solicited by someone who knows that your child is under 18 years of
age;
- Your child has received sexually
explicit images from someone that knows your child is under the age
of 18.
If one of these scenarios occurs, keep
the computer turned off in order to preserve any evidence for future law
enforcement use. Unless directed to do so by the law enforcement agency,
you should not attempt to copy any of the images and/or text found on
the computer.
What Can You Do To Minimize The Chances Of
An On-line Exploiter Victimizing Your Child?
- Communicate, and talk to your child
about sexual victimization and potential on-line danger.
- Spend time with your children
on-line. Have them teach you about their favorite on-line
destinations.
- Keep the computer in a common room in
the house, not in your child's bedroom. It is much more difficult
for a computer-sex offender to communicate with a child when the
computer screen is visible to a parent or another member of the
household.
- Utilize parental controls provided by
your service provider and/or blocking software. While electronic
chat can be a great place for children to make new friends and
discuss various topics of interest, it is also prowled by
computer-sex offenders. Use of chat rooms, in particular, should be
heavily monitored. While parents should utilize these mechanisms,
they should not totally rely on them.
- Always maintain access to your
child's on-line account and randomly check his/her e-mail. Be aware
that your child could be contacted through the U.S. Mail. Be up
front with your child about your access and reasons why.
- Teach your child the responsible use
of the resources on-line. There is much more to the on-line
experience than chat rooms.
- Find out what computer safeguards are
utilized by your child's school, the public library, and at the
homes of your child's friends. These are all places, outside your
normal supervision, where your child could encounter an on-line
predator.
- Understand, even if your child was a
willing participant in any form of sexual exploitation, that he/she
is not at fault and is the victim. The offender always bears the
complete responsibility for his or her actions.
- Instruct your children:
- to never arrange a face-to-face
meeting with someone they met on- line;
- to never upload (post) pictures
of themselves onto the Internet or on-line service to people
they do not personally know;
- to never give out identifying
information such as their name, home address, school name, or
telephone number;
- to never download pictures from
an unknown source, as there is a good chance there could be
sexually explicit images;
- to never respond to messages or
bulletin board postings that are suggestive, obscene,
belligerent, or harassing;
- that whatever they are told
on-line may or may not be true.
Frequently Asked Questions:
My child has received an e-mail
advertising for a pornographic website, what should I do?
Generally, advertising for an adult,
pornographic website that is sent to an e-mail address does not violate
federal law or the current laws of most states. In some states it may be
a violation of law if the sender knows the recipient is under the age of
18. Such advertising can be reported to your service provider and, if
known, the service provider of the originator. It can also be reported
to your state and federal legislators, so they can be made aware of the
extent of the problem.
Is any service safer than the
others?
Sex offenders have contacted children
via most of the major on-line services and the Internet. The most
important factors in keeping your child safe on-line are the utilization
of appropriate blocking software and/or parental controls, along with
open, honest discussions with your child, monitoring his/her on-line
activity, and following the tips in this pamphlet.
Should I just forbid my child from
going on-line?
There are dangers in every part of our
society. By educating your children to these dangers and taking
appropriate steps to protect them, they can benefit from the wealth of
information now available on-line.
Helpful Definitions:
Internet
- An immense, global network that connects computers via telephone lines
and/or fiber networks to storehouses of electronic information. With only
a computer, a modem, a telephone line and a service provider, people from
all over the world can communicate and share information with little more
than a few keystrokes.
Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs)
- Electronic networks of computers that are connected by a central
computer setup and operated by a system administrator or operator and are
distinguishable from the Internet by their "dial-up"
accessibility. BBS users link their individual computers to the central
BBS computer by a modem which allows them to post messages, read messages
left by others, trade information, or hold direct conversations. Access to
a BBS can, and often is, privileged and limited to those users who have
access privileges granted by the systems operator.
Commercial On-line Service (COS)
- Examples of COSs are America Online, Prodigy, CompuServe and Microsoft
Network, which provide access to their service for a fee. COSs generally
offer limited access to the Internet as part of their total service
package.
Internet Service Provider (ISP)
- Examples of ISPs are Erols, Concentric and Netcom. These services offer
direct, full access to the Internet at a flat, monthly rate and often
provide electronic-mail service for their customers. ISPs often provide
space on their servers for their customers to maintain World Wide Web
(WWW) sites. Not all ISPs are commercial enterprises. Educational,
governmental and nonprofit organizations also provide Internet access to
their members.
Public Chat Rooms
- Created, maintained, listed and monitored by the COS and other public
domain systems such as Internet Relay Chat. A number of customers can be
in the public chat rooms at any given time, which are monitored for
illegal activity and even appropriate language by systems operators
(SYSOP). Some public chat rooms are monitored more frequently than others,
depending on the COS and the type of chat room. Violators can be reported
to the administrators of the system (at America On-line they are referred
to as terms of service [TOS]) which can revoke user privileges. The public
chat rooms usually cover a broad range of topics such as entertainment,
sports, game rooms, children only, etc.
Electronic Mail (E-Mail)
- A function of BBSs, COSs and ISPs which provides for the transmission of
messages and files between computers over a communications network similar
to mailing a letter via the postal service. E-mail is stored on a server,
where it will remain until the addressee retrieves it. Anonymity can be
maintained by the sender by predetermining what the receiver will see as
the "from" address. Another way to conceal one's identity is to
use an "anonymous remailer," which is a service that allows the
user to send an e-mail message repackaged under the remailer's own header,
stripping off the originator's name completely.
Chat
- Real-time text conversation between users in a chat room with no
expectation of privacy. All chat conversation is accessible by all
individuals in the chat room while the conversation is taking place.
Instant Messages
- Private, real-time text conversation between two users in a chat room.
Internet Relay Chat (IRC)
- Real-time text conversation similar to public and/or private chat rooms
on COS.
Usenet (Newsgroups)
- Like a giant, cork bulletin board where users post messages and
information. Each posting is like an open letter and is capable of having
attachments, such as graphic image files (GIFs). Anyone accessing the
newsgroup can read the postings, take copies of posted items, or post
responses. Each newsgroup can hold thousands of postings. Currently, there
are over 29,000 public newsgroups and that number is growing daily.
Newsgroups are both public and/or private. There is no listing of private
newsgroups. A user of private newsgroups has to be invited into the
newsgroup and be provided with the newsgroup's address.
BACK TO SAFETY
|