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in title, tags, annotations or urlRaising Digital Citizens - 0 views
Classroom Resources - E2BN - 0 views
Why Teachers Need Digital Citizenship « coal cracker classroom - 0 views
Privacy Tips - 0 views
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Not all websites are trust worthy. Here are some tips to help be a little more safe with your privacy online. "TIP #1: Do Some New Year's (Data) House Cleaning Get New Passwords: Use different, strong passwords for each of your online accounts so if one is compromised the rest are safe. Strong passwords contains letters, numbers, different cases, and symbols. Check your password's strength here. Close Old Online Accounts: Unused online accounts are a liability. Hackers could use them to infiltrate your more important accounts . Get rid of them. If you can't remember where you have old accounts search your email inbox with queries like "registered", "confirm" or "your account" to find email records of old accounts. Cull Your Friends List: You put a lot of information about yourself on social networks. Would you want that friend of a friend you met once, two years ago to be carrying around a physical copy of all that information? Probably not. Keep the people you know and trust. Delete the rest. Go Paperless: Still receiving bank statements and doctors' invoices by mail? You don't need your Social Security number floating around in your trash can on the curb outside. Call your bank, doctor, credit card company etc. to find out if you can go paperless and manage your records via a secure online portal. You'll save a tree and protect your privacy. Shred Sensitive Documents: Those credit card and health savings account statements you don't need that have been sitting in that folder in your desk? They're a privacy liability. Get rid of them (securely, using a shredder). Privacy Tips Browser Privacy Back to top Web browsers have evolved into highly customizable software platforms capable of controlling and protecting much of the information that flows between you and the parties you interact with online. Modern browsers have an impressive array of privacy enhancing capabilities and options. They can, for example, warn you before you visit suspicious or fraudul
Online Privacy: Using the Internet Safely | Privacy Rights Clearinghouse - 0 views
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Knowing how to use the internet will help us be a little more private and keep our identity a little more safety. "The Internet enables us to improve communication, erase physical barriers, and expand our education. Its absorption into our society has been extraordinary. It touches nearly every part of our lives from how we apply for jobs and where we get our news, to how we find friends. A few Web sites have virtually replaced some things, like the encyclopedia and the phone book. But with acceptance comes a decrease in skepticism. You may assume that the same laws or societal rules that protect your privacy in the physical world apply to the digital world as well. But the Internet remains largely unregulated and the policies governing it underdeveloped. Laws concerning online privacy are still being developed. To date, the U.S. Supreme Court largely has taken a hands-off approach to regulating the Internet and online privacy in favor of free speech. However, the federal government is increasingly interested in regulating the Internet, for example through child pornography and gambling laws. One important thing to keep in mind when relying on the law to protect you is that if U.S. law is broken in another country, prosecuting the criminal may prove difficult or impossible. "
Miles J. Feldman: Is Privacy Dead? - 0 views
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Whatever you look up or plan on the internet people can see it. If the government pays for it they can see what you are looking at. People can stalk you on the internet. "Are you planning a trip? A wedding? Have you been searching your medical symptoms on WebMD, or Google stalking your high school crush? Did all of your friends wish you a Happy Birthday on your Facebook page? If so, your financial status, religious beliefs, medical history, birth date and hometown have all been exposed, recorded and compiled into a virtual database that functions as your digital alter ego, a sort of online avatar. That critical mass of information may be accessible to the government or to anyone else who asks (or pays) for it."
Copyright, Plagiarism, and Digital Literacy (by Sue Lyon-Jones) - Teaching Village - 2 views
digiteacher - Digital Citizenship Perspectives asb2012 Teachers - 1 views
Showing results for "Digital Citezenship Perspectives on Teachers" | Common Sense Media - 1 views
Home | digitalliteracy.gov - 0 views
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In today's 21st century digital economy, libraries play a critical role in providing access to high-speed internet and training to help more Americans compete in today's... > Read more
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In today's 21st century digital economy, libraries play a critical role in providing access to high-speed internet and training to help more Americans compete in today's... > Read more
Facebook Increasingly Becomes a Helpful Tool for Employers in Job Interviews | Moneyland | TIME.com - 6 views
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It is legal for a prospective employer during a job interview to ask you to log into your facebook page and click through your friends only posts, photos, and messages. This is a very important topic for digital citizens to understand.
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I think its a good video to watch because it definitely made me think. The video also scared me even thought i don't have a Facebook. I now know how to stay safe if i get one.
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I think that the post is mean. I don't really like the post because it makes the person look bad.
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