Online safety for kids: Your school holiday guide

School holidays are here and there's no better time to review the safeguards you have in place to protect your children from online predators and sexploitation. Here, we give you some handy tips, resources and links to help keep your family safe these holidays.

Knowing the risks

When children are online, they're at risk. They can be 

  • exposed to pornographic and other harmful content (harmful content is anything your child is not developmentally ready to see. This can include exposure to violence, misleading information, terrorism, hate speech or any other offensive material.) 
  • targeted by predators on social media, chat sites and gaming apps/platforms (online grooming takes place when an adult uses online spaces in a predatory fashion in an attempt to gain the child’s trust or heighten their curiosity about sex.  Online grooming is often carried out with the aim of eventually meeting the child in person in order to sexually abuse them.)
  • victimised through image-based abuse (when an intimate image or video is shared without the consent of the person pictured)

Improving online safety

There's no single solution to keeping kids safe online. Parents are up against a multi-billion dollar porn industry which has a vested interest in reaching children. And the risk of exploitation by online predators has increased dramatically in recent COVID months.

We've called for an age-verification system to help protect children from exposure to online porn, and also for big tech corporates to be held accountable for the sexual exploitation which occurs on their platforms. 

While we wait for changes, here are some steps you can take to help protect your children:

1. Invest in filtering software to block harmful content

We recommend Family Zone - learn more at their website here

2. Stay informed

  • Follow cyber safety expert (and our very own ambassador) Susan McLean on Facebook here, and visit Cyber Safety Solutions for resources which will help you navigate the issues children and adolescents face in the digital space. Susan covers vital topics such as sexting, image-based abuse and online grooming.
  • Visit eSafety - With an array of free resources including a guide to popular apps, tips for managing screen time and starting online safety discussions with children, eSafety is helping parents learn about the digital environment and stay up-to-date on children’s technology use

Click here for eSafety's guide on tech gifts for children and young people 

  • Think U Know - This Australian Federal Police-led program is tailored to educating and increasing awareness about online child sexual exploitation including avoiding unwanted contact, online grooming, self generated content, sexual extortion and how to get help

  • Generation Next FREE online course* - This course offers practical strategies to use to teach young people how to make safer choices online. Speaker: Brett Lee, Founder, Internet Safe Education + former police officer. *Enrol for free until January 31, 2021

Reporting abuse

Australia

  • If a child is in immediate danger, call ‘000’
  • Report abuse of children to the Australian Centre to Counter Online Child Exploitation here
  • Report online child sexual exploitation material, image-based abuse and cyberbullying to eSafety here
  • Make an anonymous report to CrimeStoppers here, or phone 1800 333 000

Outside Australia

  • Report abuse to the Virtual Global Taskforce here
  • Report online child sexual exploitation to US-based National Center for Missing and Exploited Children here

Video: Susan McLean, Grooming and Online Predators

Watch the full Keeping Safe in Cyberspace Education Series here

See also

Tips for Parents and Carers

Parents Vs The Porn Industry Isn't A Fair Fight

School girl’s Instagram ‘live’ post becomes sex predator webcam

A day of the girl on Instagram: posed, exposed and at risk

“Australians should be outraged by this offending”: Massive leap in sharing of child sexual exploitation material


Add your comment

  • Lyn Kennedy
    published this page in News 2020-12-23 13:07:01 +1100

You can defend their right to childhood

A world free of sexploitation is possible!

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