Online Safety

 

Keep your children safe online.  Download software to protect your children from online sexual predators. Free Trials available...

 

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Byron Review

Dr Tanya Byron heads up an Independent UK Review to protect children from harmful content. 

 

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NSPCC opens first UK advice line

The NSPCC announced the opening of the first advice line to help combat child trafficking. 

 

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On the Net

Place the family computer in a common area, rather than a child's bedroom. Also, monitor their time spent online and the websites they've visited.

 

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Web Filtering

Learn more about Web Filtering and how it can protect your children.

 

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Cyber Bullying

Cyber Bullying is on the rise, using email, mobiles, text and instant messaging. Read the signs and stop it.

 

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Social Networking

The rise of MySpace, Bebo, Faceparty and other social networking sites has created a paradise for predators intent  on online grooming.

 

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People you Know

2/3 children are abused by people they know.

 

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Online Grooming

Online solicitation and 'grooming' are the most common forms of online child sexual abuse. 

 

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Alarming Statistics

Of the estimated 35 million children now surfing the Internet, one in five has received an online sexual solicitation in the last year. That's 7,000,000 (million) children

 

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Latest Downing Street Opinion on Megans Law - June 2006

 

Downing Street says there are "genuine difficulties" in allowing the public to have more information about the whereabouts of paedophiles.

The admission follows a warning against rushing to introduce a version of the Megan's Law system that deals with child sex offenders.

 

Ex-chief constable Paul Whitehouse says the move could divert attention from people who pose an even greater risk. Megan's Law allows parents to know about paedophiles living in their area.

 

'Starting point'

 

It is known as Sarah's Law in this country, after Sarah Payne who was murdered six years ago. Home Office Minister Gerry Sutcliffe is going to the US to see how the system works and if a UK version could be introduced. John Reid also decided that paedophiles should be moved out of probation hostels next to schools.

 

 

 

 

  Who are your kids chatting to online?

 

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This decision comes after the News of the World, which has led the campaign for a UK version of Megan's Law, found 60 had been housed, with government approval, at sites near schools. In a statement, Mr Reid said his "starting point" was "that information should no longer remain the exclusive preserve of officialdom". "I'm sending my minister to America to discover the best way of ensuring the controlled release of information to the public," he said. Sarah Payne's mother, Sara, said: "After six years of campaigning this is a tremendous breakthrough. I'm delighted."

 

Support needed

 

But the prime minister's official spokesman said: "The difficult thing in this is to get the balance right between, on the one hand, protecting the public and giving the public as much information as possible, and on the other, making sure that you don't have vigilantes."

He said there were no plans to import US laws immediately, "but we do need to consider how these operate".

"There is genuine concern in communities about this kind of justice and it's right and proper that the home secretary takes account of these genuine concerns," he added.

 

But Mr Whitehouse, the former chief constable of Sussex Police and now vice president of Nacro, the charity which deals with the rehabilitation of criminals, says he is not confident Megan's Law would work in the UK. He urged caution against rushing to legislate on the measure, adding that children were at greater risk from people they know than complete strangers.

Sarah Payne, murdered by a known paedophile.
Campaigners want a UK version of Megan's Law, called Sarah's Law

"We need, therefore, to recognise that if we make it very public where particular well known sex offenders are that we divert attention from people who could pose a much greater risk," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. Offenders being released from prison needed support from programmes like the Quaker-run one called "Circles of Support", which is backed by the Home Office, he said.

Anyone on the sex offenders register has to notify the authorities where they live, and if they are too near a school, action is taken, he said.

Daniel Dodson, of the National Association of American Criminal Defence Lawyers, said Megan's Law in the US had led to incidents of vigilantism by people who discovered the whereabouts of sex offenders.

 

'Terrible thoughts'

 

"Generally it just makes it really hard for them to get along in life, really hard for them to have jobs and eventually can lead to a hopelessness that almost makes it more attractive for them to reoffend," he said. However, the mother of a three-year-old who was kidnapped and sexually abused by a paedophile says she backs calls for Megan's Law. Craig Sweeney, 24, who took the toddler from her Cardiff home, received life but can seek parole after five years. The youngster's mother said if she had known Sweeney "had these terrible thoughts in his mind, he wouldn't have stepped over my door".

 

Caution needed

As part of the US system a number of states list offenders' details on the internet, allowing parents to enter their zip code (post code) or a name, to check if anyone on the register has moved in nearby. Shadow home secretary David Davis told the BBC that ministers should adopt a very careful approach.

 

"We must almost make sure we don't end up with some lynch mob law. And bear in mind we've had the Criminal Records Bureau failures, with innocent people being given apparent criminal records." Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg said: "Of course every measure should be taken to protect children from paedophiles, but this should never topple into vigilantism." Ex-home secretary Jack Straw also urged caution and said lessons learned from other countries were "not necessarily immediately translatable into this country".

 

Adapted from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5093804.stm

 

 

 

 

   

Research shows up to one in 12 of the eight million British children with internet access have gone on to meet someone in reality after they first made contact on the internet.

 

A spokeswoman for the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre said: 'There is phenomenal growth in social networking sites, and young people have been putting personal information there which could easily identify them.

 

'We don't want them to put that kind of information online - because where young people go online, so do paedophiles. 'We will be seeking new safety features from the website operators. It's not a question of closing them down, we're just trying to stay one step ahead of those who are going online to exploit children.'

Source:  CEOPS

 

 

Join our community at the Kidshield Forum, we want to hear your views

 

Latest Polls: 

  • Should we know where Paedophiles live?
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Name and Shame illegal content

The Internet Watch Foundation  indicates that the USA and Russia between them appear to host the majority of illegal child images.

 

Let our Spies find Madeleine McCann

 

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Megans Law

How the US manages it's sex offenders.

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Are your children's photographs safe on the Internet?

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Nannies, Au Pairs and your children's safety...

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Child Tracking Tools

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Sex Offenders Register

How does it work? Do it's powers reach far enough?

 

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EU Guidelines to Prevent Sex Offenders from working with children.  

 

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Your children's safety on holiday.  Read the Australian report

 

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Child Sex Tourism.  Each year, more than one million children are exploited in the global commercial sex trade.

 

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Paedophile Ring uncovered in the UK

 

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Plan to list Paedophile Web Names

 

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