DUBAI / Emirates Business
With schools closed over the summer, young children and teenagers will spend most of their time on their devices — increasing their average online activity to eight hours per day. Children spend the majority of their time on their devices, which may include gaming devices, smartphones, laptops, desktops, virtual assistants, etc. According to a study commissioned by McAfee, 1 in 5 parents (18%) never monitor what their children are doing online. Also, 86 percent of parents allow their children to play online games recommended for older children.
I-LIFE Digital Technology, a developer for innovative technologies recently partnered McAfee’s security software to provide children of this digital age a safer digital experience; advises parents 10 ‘must-do’ cyber safety tips to protect their kids this summer, which include: Start conversations early and discuss how hackers steal and misuse data using infected links and phishing emails and what they can do with the data.
Routinely scrolling, liking, and commenting on social sites such as Snapchat and Instagram can give kids a false sense of security (and power).
Remind tweens and teens to share responsibly. Oversharing can damage a reputation and words or images shared callously can damage other people.
Cybercriminals can use the popularity of video games to entice gamers to click on potentially malicious links. Remind them not to open email attachments or video/ message links. Try to limit or have anonymous profiles when playing online.
Be suspicious of emails that have their name wrong. Use 2-factor authentication to make their account security stronger and change passwords regularly.
Be suspicious of duplicate/ fake friend requests on social media. Unplug and control how much time they spend on their device. Establish tech-free family activities this summer.
Always protect and upgrade the software security.