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Controlling Your Social Networking Privacy Settings

Controlling Your Social Networking Privacy Settings. Stay safe online!. Facebook Privacy Settings. Click on “Settings” Then on “Privacy Settings”. Use these options to control the information people see about you!. “Only friends” is the BEST option to limit who sees your info.

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Controlling Your Social Networking Privacy Settings

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  1. Controlling Your Social Networking Privacy Settings Stay safe online!

  2. Facebook Privacy Settings

  3. Click on “Settings” Then on “Privacy Settings”

  4. Use these options to control the information people see about you!

  5. “Only friends” is the BEST option to limit who sees your info.

  6. Check to see what your friends can see about you. If you don’t like what they are able to see, change it!

  7. Do you want your cousin to know that you watch Judge Judy? If not, you can restrict that information!

  8. You can choose what can be seen about you through the sites applications! Choose your games and applications wisely!

  9. This is the most secure setting for applications (uncheck all)

  10. Twitter Privacy Settings

  11. Search for your username on the Twitter homepage to find out what other people are saying about you! Hopefully it’s all good. If not, you can block those people from following you or direct messaging you! (or talk to Twitter owners)

  12. You can control your privacy on Twitter by clicking on “Settings.”

  13. Click on “Notices” so that you find out when people are following you or direct messaging you. This way you can remove the people you don’t want following you. Or better: protect your tweets!

  14. Do not reveal your location. Your real friends know where you are. Protect your “tweets” so that only trusted friends can follow you.

  15. The Lock means you’ve “protected your tweets.” This is a great Twitter privacy setting.

  16. If you’ve “Protected Your Tweets,” people will have to request to follow you. Block people you don’t know in person.

  17. If you see followers on your profile that you do not want following you, you can remove them by “Blocking” them. Block people you don’t know.

  18. MySpace Privacy Settings

  19. In MySpace, click on “My Account” to maintain your privacy settings.

  20. Click on the “Privacy” tab to fix your privacy settings. Your birthday and location are sensitive pieces of information. It’s nice for your friends to wish you an online “Happy Birthday,” but it’s nicer to be safe!

  21. Adjust your settings so that only your friends can see your info!

  22. Remember to customize your MySpace Instant Messaging (IM) settings as well!

  23. Hi5 Privacy Settings

  24. Rating people is a type of cyber-bullying! Don’t do it!

  25. This person is a male named Sonia with a sunset for a picture. Seems nice (or a little strange), but it could be dangerous! Don’t ever try to “meet” someone unless you know them in person.

  26. Again, don’t give your email address book information to social networks. Your email contacts should remain private. It will be embarrassing when your grandmother gets an email invitation from you to join you on “Hi5.”

  27. In General…

  28. Anyone can use whatever picture they want on the Internet, so beware! A nice picture can hide a not-so-nice person! • It’s best not to use your full name on any social networking site – especially until you’re 18. • If you are too young to use a social network, don’t lie, but your true age (teen-aged) may invite cyber-predators, so be careful. Hide your age if you can!

  29. Many social networks have a feature that will go through your email address book looking for “friends” or invite all of your address book to be a part of the social network. • Do you really want to invite your rabbi, priest, English teacher or librarian (or whoever else is in your email address book) to be your friend on MySpace?

  30. If you feel harrassed or bullied on a social network: • Ask the operators of the network for help • Let them know you are a minor • Or confide in a trusted adult

  31. When on a social network: • Only post things you wouldn’t mind an adult seeing • Make sure you have a trusted adult as a “friend” or as a “follower.” • This will remind you to be on your best online behavior!

  32. Look to the future • Future employers may see what you have posted • Colleges and scholarship organizations will look at what you’ve posted

  33. It may be the best 10 minutes you spend on the Internet! Set Up Your Privacy Settings

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