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 Lisa Durff

29 Steps to Internet Safety for Kids « Ask a Tech Teacher - 4 views

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    Found this resource on Edmodo.
Julie Lindsay

Passport to Digital Citizenship - 2 views

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    Article in L&L ISTE 2008 by Mike Ribble
 Lisa Durff

Digital Etiquette for the 21st Century - CBS News - 1 views

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    How Emily Post Would Treat E-Mails, E-Cards and Facebook
Paula Costas Alonso

Digital Access - 1 views

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    A lesson plan to work with studenst about this touchpoint.
Nolan C

Netiquette - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by Nolan C on 02 Oct 09 - Cached
  • Netiquette (a compound formed from "net etiquette") is a set of social conventions that facilitate interaction over networks, ranging from Usenet and mailing lists to blogs and forums. These rules were described in IETF RFC 1855.[1] However, like many Internet phenomena, the concept and its application remain in a state of flux, and vary from community to community. The points most strongly emphasized about USENET netiquette often include using simple electronic signatures, and avoiding multiposting, cross-posting, off-topic posting, hijacking a discussion thread, and other techniques used to minimize the effort required to read a post or a thread. Netiquette guidelines posted by IBM for employees utilizing Second Life in an official capacity, however, focus on basic professionalism, maintaining a tenable work environment, and protecting IBM's intellectual property.[2] Similarly, some Usenet guidelines call for use of unabbreviated English[3][4] while users of online chat protocols like IRC and instant messaging protocols like SMS often encourage just the opposite, bolstering use of SMS language.
  • Common rules for e-mail[7] and USENET such as avoiding flamewars and spam are constant across most mediums and communities. Another rule is to avoid typing in all caps, which is considered to be the equivalent of shouting or yelling. Other commonly shared points, such as remembering that one's posts are (or can easily be made) public, are generally intuitively understood by publishers of web pages and posters to USENET, although this rule is somewhat flexible depending on the environment. On more private protocols, however, such as email and SMS, some users take the privacy of their posts for granted. One-on-one communications, such as private messages on chat forums and direct SMSes, may be considered more private than other such protocols, but infamous breaches surround even these relatively private media. For example, Paris Hilton's Sidekick PDA was cracked in 2005, resulting in the publication of her private photos, SMS history, address book, etc.[8]
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    Netiquette project
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    the definition of netiquette
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    Wikipedia definition of Netiquette
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    Netiquette (short for "network etiquette" or "Internet etiquette") is a set of social conventions that facilitate interaction over networks, ranging from Usenet and mailing lists to blogs and forums. These rules were described in IETF RFC 1855. However, like many Internet phenomena, the concept and its application remain in a state of flux, and vary from community to community.
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    Netiquette (short for "network etiquette" or "Internet etiquette") is a set of social conventions that facilitate interaction over networks, ranging from Usenet and mailing lists to blogs and forums. These rules were described in IETF RFC 1855. However, like many Internet phenomena, the concept and its application remain in a state of flux, and vary from community to community.
Julie Lindsay

Cool Cat Teacher Blog: 5 Steps to Online Safety - 2 views

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    Great blog post by Vicki David (Coolcatteacher) re online safety free poster (or purchase a glossy one online)
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