I'm like that with my church youth group that knows the kind of work I do.. I just let them know that they should probably think twice about sharing anything that may embarrass or hurt them or another should it be spread; and that it is like telephone person 1 has an entirely different story than person 20. On Jul 22, 2011 5:52 PM, "Mike Patterson" <[email protected]> wrote: > On 2011/07/20 6:00 PM, CP Constantine wrote: >> A good exercise for kids is sort of a re-work of the 1980's >> dont-talk-to-strangers campaign. (which was basically, no matter how >> much info they have that indicates they actually know you, still deny >> trust). is getting kids to ask themselves, how much info about them >> would a stranger have to know about them, before they might think this >> person was actually a trusted family friend:- now put much less than >> that online. > > One thing to be cautious of when trying to educate kids is the same > thing that campaign tripped over. Turns out that kids aren't actually > all that much endangered by strangers; parental kidnappings are far more > common, as is abuse. Whoops. > > Something I see a lot (and this is a general comment inspired by yours, > not an attack on yours) is ITSec folks getting *really* strident about > OMG DO NOT SHARE ANYTHING EVER IT IS UNSAFE AND YOU WILL BE RAPED AND > KILLED. > > Kids get messages like that a lot. About everything. They get > overloaded, and tune you out. Hell, they tune you out anyway, but > there's no reason to give them a real reason to do it. :-) So be > moderate in how you present things. > > Mike > _______________________________________________ > Pauldotcom mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom > Main Web Site: http://pauldotcom.com
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