It is hard to describe how amazing the features of SeeNoEvil are in words so I decided to post these videos. Check them out!
Safe Web Browsing
Monitoring and Reporting
Program Controls
Time Limits
It is hard to describe how amazing the features of SeeNoEvil are in words so I decided to post these videos. Check them out!
Safe Web Browsing
Monitoring and Reporting
Program Controls
Time Limits
Categories: Children · Cyber Bully · Family · Internet Safety · Porn · Pornography · Pornography Addiction · SeeNoEvil · Social Networking · Technology · Teens · Women
Tagged: Addiction, Children, Christianity, Cyberbulling, Family, Filters, Internet, Internet Pornography, Internet Protection, Internet Safety, Kids, Love, Marriage, Men, Online Safety, Parental Controls, Pornography, Pornography Addiction, Predator, Protection, Relationships, SeeNoEvil, Sex, Social Networking, Technology, Teen, Teens, Temptation
Heath Evans, fullback number 44 for the New Orleans Saints endorses Tribinium Corporation’s SeeNoEvil software. Check it out!
Categories: Children · Cyber Bully · Family · Internet Safety · Porn · Pornography · Pornography Addiction · SeeNoEvil · Technology
Tagged: Addiction, Family, Filters, Football, Heath Evans, Heath Evans Foundation, Hope, Internet, Internet Protection, Internet Safety, Kids, Love, Marriage, New Orleans Saints, New Technology, Parents, Predator, Protection, SeeNoEvl, Stop Pornography, Temptation, Tribinium Corporation
In case you missed our April newsletter on cyberbullying, we thought we would offer a recap on protecting your children from virtual abuse.
Virtual Abuse, also called cyber bullying, occurs when a person is bullied, harassed, humiliated, threatened, embarrassed, or targeted in some way by another person through use of the internet.
SeeNoEvil recommends the following steps to help protect your children from virtual abuse. SeeNoEvil has developed a list to help keep your child safe from virtual abuse, including a list of ways to use SeeNoEvil to prevent or watch for virtual abuse.
1. Talk to you children openly about the dangers of the Internet. Discuss appropriate and non-appropriate behaviors for the Internet. Then you and your child can create a list of things that are OK to do on the Internet and things that are not OK. Brainstorm and develop a list of Internet rules and post them by the computer.
2. Develop a procedure for what your child should do if he or she receives information that makes them uncomfortable. Perhaps, beneath the list of Internet rules you can post a list of produces to follow if inappropriate material is encountered: “what to do if I read or see something that makes me uncomfortable.” Make sure your child understands that anything he or she receives that makes them uncomfortable it is not their fault.
3. Talk to your child about what to do if they are contacted by a stranger through the Internet. Make sure your child understands that being contacted by a stranger through the Internet is no different than a stranger contacting them at the mall or park. Develop a list of producers on what to do if a stranger initiates conversation via the Internet.
SeeNoEvil recommends the following settings for your SeeNoEvil software to help prevent and monitor for virtual abuse.
1. Set time controls. It is recommended your child only be on the Internet while a parent is home and awake. To disable use of the computer while you are at work or sleeping, use See No Evil to set limits and restrictions. Open the SeeNoEvil control panel. Double click on the user whose time wish to edit, click on the Internet Time Restrictions Tab to choose the times the user is not allowed Internet access or click on the Computer Time Restrictions to choose the times the user is not allowed on the computer.
2. Monitor what your child is doing on the computer by taking screen shots of his or her computer session. Open the SeeNoEvil control panel. Double click on the user you wish to monitor. Click on the Monitor button at the bottom left of the SeeNoEvil window, click on the Screen Monitor tab. Click in the box to capture screen shots of the user’s desktop. Decide how often you want images captured and how many images you want stored at a time. Be sure to check your child’s stored images often.
3. Monitor what your child is communicating on the computer by monitoring their key strokes. Open the SeeNoEvil control panel. Double click on the user you wish to monitor. Click on the Monitor button at the bottom left for the SeeNoEvil window, click on the Keyboard Monitor tab. Click in the box to keep a log of the users key strokes. Be sure to check your child’s key stroke records often.
Categories: Cyber Bully
Tagged: Cyberbulling