Helping Children To Surf The Net In
Safety
The
Virtual Global
Taskforce website detailed in the article below contains information
for both parents and children on how to stay safe online and how
they can report suspicious activity to the authorities.
The site also has a number of links to
other sites relating to safety on the net for children and
adults including some games which can be used as learning aids to
show how to stay safe online, how the
safe surfing rules can help and that you do not know who
you are really talking to online, in chat rooms or via email.
Below is the text of an
article from ©
The Register.
which is a daily online computer industry
newsletter.
By Lucy Sherriff
Published Thursday
27th January 2005 08:49 GMT
|
An international police taskforce has
launched a website where children can report possible online
paedophile activity. The site's logo will appear on AOL BT,
Vodafone and Microsoft websites, providing a hotlink to the home
page of
Virtual
Global Taskforce.

Virtual Global Taskforce aims to
make the internet a safer place for children and a more
hostile place for paedophiles. It is the result of
international collaboration between the National Crime
Squad and its counterparts in Canada, the US and
Australia.
Children who are worried that they might
be chatting online with a paedophile, or that they are being
tricked into a meeting, can use the site to learn how to get the
person's IP address and user name.
They can also use the site to record the
details of any conversations with the suspected paedophile,
which can be used as evidence if authorities decide to
prosecute. The information can also be used to warn offenders.
The site contains links to other sources
of information on online abuse, and child safety agencies.
Jim Gamble, deputy director general of the
National Crime Squad, said that clicking on the logo was like
walking through the police station door. He is quoted in
The Daily Mail as saying:
"If you are a child online, and you are
approached by someone in a chatroom, you now have access to law
enforcement. It is a reminder that the internet is no longer
anonymous. For potential offenders, this is the equivalent of a
speed camera, telling them to slow down, and think again."
But what is to stop someon making
malicious allegations against a person who is entirely innocent?
"We are aware that it could be abused, but
then anyone can walk into a police station and make
allegations," said a spokeswoman for the NCS. "We have very
thorough checking procedures. We look at what is given, how it
is collated. Nothing is acted upon until it is investigated by
the proper authorities, until the police are involved."
The taskforce explained that the ultimate
goal is to have a 24 hour online presence so that any child
online who felt threatened will have someone to talk to. The
police also outlined proposals to seize the credit cards of
anyone found to be using one to access child pornography online.
The contact section of the site is yet to
go live but the NCS says it expects it to be up and running in
the next couple of days.®