 | Site Safety Rules |  |
Boring, but VERY
important. This page has no background so it's easy to print
Safety on the Internet
My code for safety on the World Wide Web
I promise that
- I will agree with my parent(s)/guardian(s) "their rules" for me using a computer, and the World Wide Web.
- I will not give my address or telephone number without permission.
- I will not give my school's name and address without permission.
- I will say 'No' if anyone who I've met on the World Wide Web wants to meet me, unless my parent(s)/guardian(s) have agreed and will go with me.
- I won't put my (identifiable) photograph on a web site.
- I will tell my parent(s)/guardian(s) or a teacher if I discover something on the World Wide Web which worries or upsets me.
With thanks to the Girl Scouts of America for the initial ideas contained in this warning for children
More information about safety on the Internet can be found on thisSafe Kids Online site.
Look at A Parent's Guide to the Internet on theNCH Action for Children site for more ideas.
You can make a report to the Internet Watch Foundation if you do see anything illegal posted on the Internet.
Guidelines for Members
- Information which should / should not be included on the site.
Individuals, both adults and girls, should not be identified and where it is essential to give a contact name, only the job title should be used.
Pictures of named individuals should not be 'posted'
Information about meeting times and places should not be given, but should be made available only on request - to control the information that is given out.
If camps and special events are being advertised, give enough detail to whet the appetite but not enough to alert anyone who might cause a nuisance. For example, for a big camp, give the County,
month and year and the age range expected with a taster of the programme, plus an e-mail, fax or office address.
Activity ideas should only be ones which are permitted and any instructions must follow our safe practice rules, as set out inThe Guiding Manual and The Guider Handbook.
Activity ideas on any other WWW sites should be checked carefully before use - remember our usual safety rules still apply!
- When encouraging girls to access information from the World Wide Web:
Ensure that their parents/carers are aware of what the girls are doing and have given permission.
Give guidance about protecting the girls' identities as outlined in the general guidelines.
Encourage them to check activity ideas with parents, Guiders or other adults to ensure that the ideas are practical and safe.
Never encourage the girls to develop their Internet friends into face-to-face friendships without first obtaining parental consent. And never go alone to the first of any such meetings you choose to
arrange for yourself.
This information is from an article published inGuiding magazine, April 1998. Brownie magazine in May 1998 carried a list of guidelines specially drawn up for our young members (see top of page).