From Publishers Weekly
Johnson cofounded one of Australia's first IT companies and is an expert on Internet security. When he became a father in 2002, he realized his young daughter would soon be tooling around online and would inevitably encounter inappropriate spam messages, among other hazards. He promptly founded an information Web site for parents to keep their kids safe online, which then begot this comprehensive guide. The Web is still a "wild, undiscovered, and unregulated frontier," Johnson says, a tool pedophiles use to look for victims. Nearly 90% of kids encounter pornography online while doing their homework, he warns. The good news is parents can take steps to protect their children so they may safely and effectively use the Internet, which Johnson presents—in spite of the dangers—as essential for contemporary learning. Most importantly, Johnson asserts, parents should educate their children (e.g., tell them not to give out personal information online), monitor computer use (place the computer in a shared place, not in a child's bedroom) and buy computer software to filter and protect. He suggests five programs that parents should install and walks readers through individual products, explaining the pros and cons and making recommendations. Rather than offering a diatribe on the dangers of the Web, Johnson offers a practical, well-researched guide to help parents minimize the Web's potential drawbacks.
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Review
A useful overview of the options available for improving the online safety of children. --
Australian Personal Computer Magazine, September 2004Covers all the most common aspects
essential guide for parents whose kids know more about PCs than they do. --
PC Utilities Magazine (UK), September 2004For parents of computer-savvy kids, this book is a must read. --
Miami Herald, September 18, 2004Gives parents a guide to what kids are finding on the Internet and how to protect them from bad sites. --
NEA (National Education Association) Today, October 2004Handy is the word that sums up this book. --
Computer Times (Singapore), July 2004Very much up-to-date
provides lots of information about the real threats to children, and what you can do about them. --
City Parent, September 1, 2004
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