Here’s really good New Year’s advice from MySpace’s (and its parent Fox Interactive’s) chief safety officer Hemu Nigam. I’m biased in saying this – I like what he’s posting because it’s what we’ve been saying to parents asking about safety on the social Web for years – in NetFamilyNews.org, ConnectSafely.org, email, speaking engagements, and our book, MySpace Unraveled. Here’s the best part: Whether we’re talking about MySpace, Facebook, LiveJournal, YouTube, or any other site, safety on the social Web is not about technology; it’s about behavior, human relationships – civility, consideration, and common sense. These are things parents and kids have been talking about since long before the telephone even, long before anything we think of as technology. “Too often it seems too complicated to talk to your teens about online safety,” Nigam writes. “After all, it’s the online world and they know it better than you do. But is it? Did you know how a car engine works, what the transmission does, or how an airbag gets deployed when the car bumps something at 30 mph? Yet, you got right in there and taught your teen how to drive. Correction, you taught your teen how to drive safely…. You’ve done it all your life – these lessons on safety…. The world may have changed, but the lessons are still the same. Don’t stop the dialogue.”
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