Tips for Protecting Your Children’s Privacy Information Online

This has been a record-setting year for hacking incidents. People are getting smarter with their personal security and identity with technology but there remains a huge gap between what parents think dangers are to kids digital safety and reality. Many parents have recently been looking for ways to keep their children safe online. One way to do this is by using a proxy from free-proxy-list.net. This will hide the IP address of the computer, ensuring that hackers are unable to track the location of your children through their internet searches. Hopefully, this will keep more children safe online. Additionally, learning about the top cybersecurity facts and figures can help close this gap, as well as taking measures to protect them online.

What do you need to do as a parent for protecting your children’s privacy online?

Smart parents do the following to protect their kids digital security:

1) Be skeptical with everything bombarding your kids in the digital world. It’s not just online content that you ought to be wary of, you should act to keep children safe when watching TV too as there are plenty of risks that they could be exposed to from seemingly innocuous show such as violence, sexual content, and more.
2) Teach your kids to ask if what they are about to launch, download, upload and engage is safe.
3) Take the time to scour the privacy and security policies of apps and sites before your children use them.
4) Ask educators how they are choosing to keep your kids safe when they use technology at school.

CyberGuy Action Plan for Parents:

1) Keep devices like computers, tablets, smartphones, gaming consoles in family areas that have high traffic and are out in the open of the family.
2) Look into the top 5 residential proxy providers to help hide your IP address from sites.
3) Disable location tracking on all phones and cameras.
4) Tell your kids to keep personal info private. Don’t share name, birthdate, home address, school address especially with online profiles.
5) Set your kids online social networks settings to share with ‘close friends’ only.

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