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My Cause !

"MY STORY"
"The Great Sign In Heaven"
About the Eclips On Sept. 26. 2017
Go to my favorite movies.
1. Learn about these technologies first hand. There is simply no better way than to have a profile yourself. It will also enable you to "friend" your kids and monitor them on line.
2. Let them know that their use of technology is something you want and need to know about.
* For kids of all ages, ask daily: “Have you used the computer and the Internet today?”
* Technology use will vary by age. Twins are likely to be using more instant messaging and texting, while teens use those technologies and also networking sites such as Facebook. (These tools often are referred to as “platforms” for social networking.) Ask daily how your family used those tools with questions such as: “What did you write on Facebook today?” “Any new chats recently?” “Anyone text you today?”
* Share a bit about your daily social media use as a way to facilitate daily conversation about your kids’online habits.
* Get your kids talking about their social media lives if you can just so you know what they are doing.
3. Keep the computer in a public part of your home, such as the family room or kitchen, so that you can check on what your kids are doing online and how much time they are spending there.
4. Talk with other parents about what their kids of similar ages are using for social media. Ask your kids about those technologies as a starting point for discussion. If they are in the same peer group, there is a good chance they are all using the same platforms together. For example:
* For teens: “Mrs. Smith told me Jennifer uses Face-book. Is that something you’ve thought of doing? Do you already have a profile? If so, I’d like to see it.”
* For twins and older elementary school kids: “Are you planning on meeting up with kids on Club Penguin today? I’d love to see how that works.” Or, “Let’s look at your text log today together. I’d like to see who’s been texting you.”
5. For all ages, emphasize that everything sent over the Internet or a cell phone can be shared with the entire world, so it is important they use good judgment in sending messages and pictures and set privacy settings on social media sites appropriately.
* Discuss with kids of every age what “good judgment” means and the consequences of poor judgment, ranging form minor punishment to possible legal action in the case of “sexting” (see below) or bullying.
* Remember to make a point of discouraging kids from gossiping, spreading rumors, bullying or damaging someone’s reputation using texting or other tools.
* To keep kids safe, have your kids and teens show you where the privacy features are for every social media venue they are using. The more private, the less likely inappropriate material will be received by your child, or sent to their circle of acquaintances.
* Be aware of the ages of use for sites your tweens and older elementary school kids want to use. Many sites are for age 13 and older, and the sites for younger kids do require parental consent to use.
6. Be sure you are where your kids are online: IM, Facebook, Twitter, etc. Have a policy requiring that you and your child “friend” each other. This is one way of showing your child you are there, too, and will provide a check and balance system by having an adult within arm’s reach of their profile. This is important for kids of all ages, including teens.
7. Show your kids you know how to use what they are using, and are willing to learn what you may not know how to do.
8. Create a strategy for monitoring your kids’ online social media use, and be sure you follow through. Some families may check once a week and others more sporadically. You may want to say “Today I’ll be checking your computer and cell phone.” The older your kids are, the more often you may need to check.
9. Consider formal monitoring systems to track your child’s email, chat, IM and image content. Parental controls on your computer or from your Internet service provider, Google Desktop or commercial programs are all reasonable alternatives.
10. Set time limits for Internet and cell phone use. Learn the warning signs of trouble: skipping activities, meals and homework for social media; weight loss or gain; a drop in grades. If these issues are occurring due to your child being online when they should be eating, sleeping, participating in school or social activities, your child may have a problem with Internet or social media addiction. Contact your pediatrician for advice if any of these symptoms are occurring.
11. Check chat logs, emails, files and social networking profiles for inappropriate content, friends, messages, and images periodically. Be transparent and let your kids know what you are doing.
12. Multitasking can be dangerous--even deadly. Be sure to stress to teens the importance of not texting, Facebooking, using the phone, listening to ear buds or earphones, or engaging in similarly distracting activities while driving. These forms of distracted driving are illegal in many states because they are so dangerous. And caution kids of all ages about using mobile devices while walking, biking, babysitting or doing other things that require their full attention.
The Problem of “Sexting”
“Sexting” refers to sending a text message with pictures of children or teens that are inappropriate, naked or engaged in sex acts. According to a recent survey, about 20 percent of teen boys and girls have sent such messages. The emotional pain it causes can be enormous for the child in the picture as well as the sender and receiver--often with legal implications. Parents must begin the difficult conversation about sexting before there is a problem and introduce the issue as soon as a child is old enough to have a cell phone. Here are some tips for how to begin these conversations with your children.
* Talk to your kids, even if the issue hasn’t directly impacted your community. “Have you heard of sexting?” “Tell me what you think it is.” For the initial part of the conversation, it is important to first learn what your child’s understanding is of the issue and then add to it an age appropriate explanation (see next bullet).
* Use examples appropriate for your child’s age. For younger children with cell phones who do not yet know about sex, alert them that text messages should never contain pictures of people--kids or adults--without their clothes on, kissing or touching each other in ways that they’ve never seen before. For older children, use the term “sexting” and give more specifics about sex acts they may know about. For teens, be very specific than “sexting” often involves pictures of a sexual nature and is considered pornography.
* Make sure kids of all ages understand that sexting is serious and considered a crime in many jurisdictions. In all communities, if they “sext”, there will be serious consequences, quite possibly involving the police, suspension from school, and notes on the sexter’s permanent record that could hurt their chances of getting into college or getting a job.
* Experts have noted that peer pressure can play a major role in the sending of texts, with parties being a major contributing factor. Collecting cell phones at gatherings of tweens and teens is one way to reduce this temptation.
* Monitor headlines and the news for stories about “sexting” that illustrate the very real consequences for both senders and receivers of these images. “Have you seen this story?” “What did you think about it?” “What would you do if you were this child?” Rehearse ways they can respond if asked to participate in inappropriate texting.
* Encourage school and town assemblies to educate parents, teachers and students.
Resources:
Safe Connects http://www.netliteracy.org/safe-connects
Connect Safely http://www.connectsafely.org/
Safety Net http://safetynet.aap.org/
Remember, "Looks Are Deceiving", it may look like fun to do sexting, but in the long run
it will come back some day to hurt or even get you kill.
Suffer The Little Children
Looks Are Deceiving
sexting is dangerous
& against the law!
Why Is Sexting So Dangerous?
1. Sexting can ruin a child's reputation and cause serious emotional and psychological problems. Once a photo is electronically uploaded, it's forever out of your teen’s control. An angry ex boyfriend or ex girlfriend can post it publicly for all to see, which could have long-term consequences. There have been some recent cases of teens committing suicide because they were so distressed over images that were sent out that embarrassed and humiliated them.
2. Sexting is prohibited under child pornography laws. Your child could be arrested and convicted of child pornography trafficking for sending and/or receiving sexually-oriented text messages regardless of how unintentional and innocent the sexting may have been.
3. Sexting can open the door to pedophiles. Pedophiles have been known to use photos to blackmail children into having sex with them to prevent further distribution.


Teens and pre-teens may be more up to date on technology than their parents and more digitally savvy than their parents, however their lack of maturity and life experience can quickly get them into trouble with
these new social venues. For this reason, it is imperative that parents talk with their children of all ages about social media and monitor their online social media use to help them navigate this new online social world. How parents talk with their kids a nd teens will vary slightly by age depending on the topic being discussed. These tips will help you start that journey with your family.
(Corinthians-13:11) When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, Ithough as a child, but when I became a man, I put away childish things.)

Suffer The Little Children
Parents, Talk To Your Children
About Sexting & Social Media
Students might face felony charges for sexting
It could be a few weeks before more than 30 Rochester Community Schools students learn whether they'll face felony charges for sending and sharing inappropriate pictures of themselves or other minors.
It's one of two sexting cases that have hit the news recently. A defense attorney says her client is among about 6-10 students in Romeo being investigated for sexting.
The case involves 30 students at Rochester Adams High School and one student at nearby Van Hoosen Middle School, Johnson said. Shannon Smith, a Bloomfield Hills attorney who specializes in sex crimes cases, is representing one of the Rochester students and one of the Romeo students.
The case unfolded in Rochester, she said, "because some of the boys were collecting photos."
"They were asking girls to text them nude photos. The girls were cooperating and then the boys were trading the pictures — giving them to other people," she said. "There were a lot of girls that were sending photos and it just got out of control."
Michigan teen cyberstalked for 5 years for nude pics;
She was just 13 when the cyber-stalking started.
The Michigan teen had sent naked pictures of herself to a man named Bruce in Florida, records show.
What followed was a hellish nightmare: For the next five years, the girl received nonstop text messages and emails from strangers, demanding she send them nude pictures of herself – or they would post the explicit pictures they already had of her on the Internet.
Scared and intimidated, she complied – but suffered silently.
Twice, she attempted suicide. She pleaded with the stalkers to stop.
They refused.
In a cautionary tale that's unfolding in U.S. District Court, the FBI says it has arrested a Florida man who was part of a years-long extortion scheme that involved taunting and blackmailing a teenage girl in St. Clair County. Her identity and hometown have not been disclosed.
According to a criminal complaint unsealed, the girl spent five years living in fear before she finally went to the authorities last month. She had reached a breaking point, as she noted in one of her emails to a man described as Suspect No. 5:
"I don't understand why you can't leave me alone. I'm already in therapy, I've gone to psych hospital twice now for trying to commit suicide. Are you trying to kill me," the girl wrote in a March 8 email, which was disclosed in court documents.
Within weeks of going to the authorities, an electronic paper trail led the FBI to a Tallahassee, Fla. man.
At 10:35 p.m. Tuesday, an FBI agent spotted Powell outside his Tallahassee apartment. He was arrested and charged with cyberstalking and child pornography.
His arrest, records show, came three days after he allegedly sent what is presumably his last threatening email to the Michigan girl.
"This is literally your last chance to answer me," Powell allegedly wrote in an email to the girl. " You have 24 hours. I know where you are, I know where your family is, all will be exposed unless you answer."
According to the U.S. Attorneys Office in Detroit, Powell was ordered detained in Florida and was awaiting extradition to Michigan. During his detention hearing, authorities said, Powell admitted he was the stranger sending all the threatening texts and emails to the Michigan girl.
A lawyer for Powell has not yet been assigned in the case.
The case should serve as a wake-up call for parents, said U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade.
Sexting Is Dangerous
Cell phones and other mobile technology provide convenient ways for parents and kids to stay in touch. However, with technology, comes responsibility. Sexting, text messages that contain inappropriate sexual content, has become more prevalent in recent years as teenagers increase their use of mobile technology.
What is Sexting?
Sexting occurs when a person takes a picture that's nude, seminude, or flirtatious and sends it to another person over the phone. Sexting can also be defined as sending texts, photos, or a combination of text and photos that are sexual in nature. If you don't think your teen is sexting, you might want to think again. Cyber bullying statistics reveal that one in five teens have either sent or received a sexting message. Teens often view sexting as silly, but they need to understand how inappropriate it is and how dangerous it can be.
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