The security company has a list of safety tips, as well as a free 14-page handbook with safety tips, best practices, and a glossary of common acronyms and abbreviations that are often used in text messaging and instant messaging so parents can stay "in the know" with their kids' lingo and communications.
In May, Webroot released a study that showed that what parents think their kids are doing online and what kids say they're doing online are often two different things. More than 70% of the surveyed children, ages 11 to 17, said their parents ask them about their online activities, but they may not be getting accurate answers.
According to Webroot, more than half of the teens surveyed said they buy things online, but 71% of parents said their children never buy anything over the Internet. Forty percent of the kids said they use instant messaging and social networking Web sites, like MySpace and Facebook every day, while only 30% of the parents said their children participate in these sites.
And according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, the spring and summer seasons are when the majority of child abductions take place. As summer gets underway and school-age children log more time on home computers -- leaving them open to predators -- Webroot's researchers are urging parents to play an active role in regularly monitoring their kids' online activities.
Webroot offered these safety tips:
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