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Watch this! 0 – 5mins only

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Presentation on theme: "Watch this! 0 – 5mins only"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Watch this! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hK5OeGeudBM&feature=channel 0 – 5mins only http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5WEnqnq1Hk http://www.ceop.police.uk/Media-Centre/Video-content/ http://viewpure.com/nOUu1fldBbI http://viewpure.com/aVT-HKZn_uI

3 What do you do online?

4 Online actions have offline consequences.

5 Music… In the real world would you: Be happy if the version of your favourite song was really bad quality ? Would it bother you if you played a song and as a result it caused expensive damage to your computer/CD player? Go into a shop and steal a CD? Be Ok if the music you played caused illegal content to appear on your computer? In the online world you are: Illegally downloading music covered by Copyright from peer to peer file sharing sites. Being fined a minimum of £1000 if you are caught. Often downloading viruses and illegal images onto your computers as a result of using these services. Able to discover and support new bands using sites like Myspace Able to legally listen to music for free on sites like Spotify, Last Fm and We7

6 Friends and Chat… In the real world: Would you just start talking to a random person on the street? You know who you are talking to It’s hard to pretend to be something you’re not. Its hard to say something nasty to someone's face. You can tell from body language and the tone of voice how people intend comments to be taken. In the online world you: Are more likely to start talking to someone you don’t know and add anyone to your friend lists. People aren’t always honest with who they are, their age or what they look like. 50%* young people find it easier being themselves on the internet than when they are face-to-face Are more likely to say hurtful and upsetting things – it’s not always clear when something's a joke. Can break down boundaries of place, time and cost. (*EU Kids Online Survey – S Livingstone 2010)

7 What you share… In the real world would you: Tell a complete stranger where you live, your full name, mobile number etc? Would you want over 500 million people to see a photo of you and your friends? Be happy if your friend shared a particularly unattractive photo of you with the whole school? Want your employer/ university/ teacher/ family to see everything you get up to on the weekend? In the online world you are: Often sharing personal information with people you don’t know. Posting photo’s and videos onto the biggest online billboards in the world Rarely asking permission to upload pictures of your friends – what if they don’t want the image online? If you don’t set your privacy settings – you never know who could see your content. Able to be creative and share content with friends and family across the world.

8 Check List…  Look at where you go to get free music legally at www.pro-music.org www.pro-music.org  Check your friends list – do you know everyone?  Delete any ‘random’ friend adds you may have  If you wouldn’t say it to someone's face, don’t say it online  Search yourself online  Make sure you set your privacy settings to friends only  Think before you post! Visit: wwwsaferinternet.org.uk or www.childnet.com

9 Follow the S MART rules Keep your personal information safe! If you wouldn’t say it to a stranger on the street, don’t share it with strangers on the internet…

10 Follow the S M ART rules Don’t meet up! Online games can be a great place for chatting to your friends. Always know who you are talking to. If an adult who you don’t know ever asks you to meet up, say no and report it…

11 Follow the SM A RT rules Accepting Think before you accept something from someone online e.g. a file, a download, a picture etc. It may contain a virus. If you don’t know who it’s from, and it has an attachment… DELETE IT!

12 Follow the SMA R T rules Reliable Not everyone online is trustworthy. Somebody may be lying about their age and who they are. Make sure you know who you are talking to and use reputable sites and services to protect you and your computer.

13 Follow the SMAR T rules Tell Tell a parent, carer or trusted adult if someone, or something makes you feel worried or uncomfortable online. Also, tell someone if a friend of yours needs help online too.

14 Report Abuse

15 Your Rights / School Rules Education Bill - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-12365292http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-12365292 4 th Feb 2011 Education Bill published 27.1.11. This makes it the law

16 Your Rights & School Rules THIS SCHOOLYOU Law: Headteachers can ‘delete’ data from your phone with your consent. You have a right to go to school without being bullied Law: Senior Teachers ‘can’ search your mobile phone without consent in a bid to combat cyber-bullying. Parents have the right to expect their children to be safe Law: Phones can be confiscated if they are used to commit an offence; record; film; text message; phonecall or photograph If you bring a phone into school, it is at your risk. Rules say NO phones. Law: Any inappropriate information about our school, online or about another student can be deemed an offence. This Is known as ‘brining the school into disrepute’ (The state of being held in low esteem by the public) If you lose your phone, you cannot expect the school to support you for an item that should not be brought into school. Schools play an important part in keeping ALL students safe – including eSafety We know you have mobile phones! Keep them off & in your school bag. Teachers DO NOT want to confiscate your phones – so please know right from wrong and DO THE RIGHT THING! Phones can still be confiscated, even if mobile phones are allowed in ‘a’ school. Education Bill - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-12365292http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-12365292

17 Thank you - Mr. McGill - end


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