FROM: The NT Parent (School) Council Executive:

During our Parent (School) Council meeting on April 11, there was great 
interest in finding out more about how to protect your student's security and 
privacy while using Facebook. Our speaker Chris Vollum has sent us a list of 
tips which he has written and asked us to share it with the entire parent 
community. It is written in such a way that even those who were not at the 
meeting should find it easy to follow. We hope you will find this helpful.


Excerpt from Facebook's Terms of Use: WE TRY TO KEEP FACEBOOK UP, BUG-FREE, AND 
SAFE, BUT YOU USE
IT AT YOUR OWN RISK. WE DO NOT GUARANTEE THAT FACEBOOK WILL BE SAFE OR SECURE.

1. Your Facebook experience begins with "Adding a Friend." Before adding a 
friend, however, ask yourself; "Knowing
that, for the most part, the person I am adding will have access to my 
information and content, would I trust them alone
in my own home with access to all of my possessions and information." If they 
don't pass this test, consider not adding
them. If you choose to add them, apply your privacy settings so as to limit 
their access to certain areas of your profile.
2. What you post on Facebook is backed up and archived on Facebook servers, 
indefinitely. If what you post is shared
by others (your Friends), it in turn can be shared even further and is beyond 
your control to retrieve.
3. It's a fact that most employers, colleges and universities, and really 
anyone considering hiring you or having you on
their team, will look to your Facebook profile to arrive at a decision, based 
on the quality of what you post and the nature
and tone of your profile, your "Like" pages, and in some cases, your Friend 
List.
4. While we all want to be social and open, to a degree, "less is better" when 
it comes to filling out details about
yourself and family members, and the quality of the content that you post 
(photos, opinions, videos, etc).
5. Consider not posting content (embarrassing photos or videos, personal 
details, cell or BlackBerry PIN numbers) that
can be used against you, or shared with others beyond your Friend list. Also, 
tagging Friends in photos is immediately
shared with their Friends, and, depending on their privacy settings, their 
Friends of Friends.
6. On your Timeline page, view how your profile appears to the Public (people 
not on your Facebook Friends List). In
the right centre of your Timeline, click the GEAR icon and "View As." Scroll 
down the page and if privacy is set properly,
NO information should appear within any year. If details appear, adjust your 
settings and posts in Activity Log.
7. To View how each of your Facebook Friends sees you, on the View As page, 
enter their name at the top in the
"Enter a friend's name" box. Make privacy adjustments for specific Friends by 
creating Friends Lists (next point).
8. Creating Friend Lists allows you to customize the level of exposure to your 
content that you want each Friend, or
groups of Friends, to have into your profile. To create Friend Lists, on your 
Home (News Feed) page, click Friends on
the left side to reveal existing default lists, and at the top, the ability to 
"+Create List." As lists are unlimited, create as
many lists as you wish to separate your different Friends and Interests.
9. On your Timeline Page, click "Update Info" to begin setting privacy for a 
variety of categories. Click "Edit" to expand
each category's settings and adjust each setting to a maximum of Friends, or 
less. From here, click "About" at the top of
the page to reveal additional categories to set privacy in. While all settings 
are important, the "Friends" setting is critical.
Click Friends, which reveals your friend list, then click the "Edit" box at the 
top and change the setting to "Only Me."
Because many of our Friends have minimal or no privacy, we want to limit access 
to our Friends List. To make your
photos private, click "About" and then photos. Adjust each photo album to 
Friends or less.
10. Now the real work begins. On your Timeline page click "Activity Log." This 
is visible only to you and contains every
post you've made on yours and your Friends profiles since the day you created 
your Facebook account. It is critical to
go through each post and either Hide it, Delete it or reassign its privacy by 
going to the right-side and making
adjustments. Depending on how long you've had Facebook, this will take some 
time. As well, you can click on the right
side to a particular year, then at the top click "Highlights" > "All Stories" 
and go through the same process.
11. Click the blue down arrow icon in the upper right of any page and choose 
"Privacy Settings." Set the three large
graphic icons to Friends or Custom as these icons control updates you make from 
your mobile devices, including
tablets.

Privacy Tips
12. Click "Edit Settings" on "How You Connect." Gauge your own level of comfort 
in each setting, however, the
recommended maximum is, again, "Friends," or as close as possible to Friends. 
Many people do want to be
discovered by old friends and family members. If this is your preference, 
choose "Everyone."
13. In "Timeline and Tagging" set the choices to Friends > Friends > On > 
Friends > On. By having your tag settings
on, you instruct Facebook to notify you in the event that you've been tagged 
BEFORE that tagged item appears on
your Timeline.
14. Based on the above "On" tag settings, inside the "Activity Log" box on your 
Timeline page an orange-coloured
number reflecting the number of tags you have to review will appear. Click 
Activity Log and rather than choosing
"Approve All" (not recommended), consider whether you want to be tagged and 
click the check box; "Approve".

IMPORTANT: If you click the "X" (Ignore), this actually keeps you tagged in the 
photo but does not post it to your
Timeline, which is a very misleading option and one that should not exist. The 
best way to remove a tag of yourself is
to click the actual picture, mouse over the picture to reveal "Options," click 
it and choose "Report/Remove Tag."
15. On "Limit the Audience for Past Posts," click "Manage Past Post Visibility" 
and then "Limit Old Posts." This
brings the privacy setting of everything you've ever posted to your own profile 
to "Friends." A critical setting.
16. In the "Apps and Websites" choices, click "How people bring your info to 
apps they use" and deselect ALL
boxes. Otherwise, the developers of the apps your friends use, even if you 
don't use them, can access your
information in each of the categories.
16. Also on the "Apps and Websites" page, deselect the "Instant 
Personalization" and "Public Search" boxes. you
can view a short video inside of the Instant Personalization page to learn what 
occurs when the box is selected.
17. Consider not posting status updates that reveal your location or intentions 
(vacation, dates, who you're with,
your emotional state, your "opinion-of-the-day") as, depending on your privacy 
settings and the settings of your
Friends, these can be shared with others.
18. What you write on your Friend's Timelines is viewable to their Friends, and 
beyond. Consider using the
"Message" function on your Friend's Timeline pages. This is a private, 
email-like function between you and them.
19. If you choose to remove Friends from your list, know that Facebook will 
never notify that person that you've
removed them. It's important from time to time to re-evaluate the quality and 
relativity of our Friends, and it's natural
to trim the list to reflect current real-world friendships and relationships.
20. Facebook can be a valuable communication tool on many levels, both 
personally and professionally - in keeping
in touch with friends and family to staying abreast of companies and other 
organizations and entities that interest us
in the world. But recognize that nothing is ever truly private on Facebook, or 
on any site.



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