eSafety Resources
e-safety Commissioner
eSafety Resources
e-safety Commissioner
With Children’s Week around the corner (19-27 October 2024), we're encouraging parents, carers and other trusted adults to talk to your children about how to create, connect and explore the wonders of technology in a safe and appropriate way.
Here’s some ideas to get you started!
Some topics are hard to talk about, even with other adults. Discussing online safety and sexual abuse online with your child can be daunting and difficult. eSafety has published a suite of new resources to help guide conversations with your children about online safety.
Having conversations early and often is important. Talking regularly and openly with children about what they’re doing online, how it makes them feel and who they’re connecting with is one of the most effective ways to help protect them.
eSafety’s live webinars give parents and carers the knowledge, skills and tools to support their children to have safe online experiences.
Our Term 4 webinar dates are now online.
Supporting healthy tech use as your child transitions into high school
eSafety 101: How eSafety can help
There’s been a lot of discussion in the media lately about children’s use of social media and how age restrictions on digital platforms might work. As Australia’s online safety educator and regulator, we know that any approach needs to be evidence-based and nationally cohesive. We will continue working with stakeholders across government and the community to further refine Australia’s approach to online harms.
Instagram has introduced new rules for teenagers meaning children under 17 now automatically have their accounts set to private and can’t be messaged or tagged by people they don’t follow.
Some of the other changes include:
The new Teen Accounts are a step in the right direction, but they still put the onus on parents and carers to understand parental supervision settings. Tech companies must take responsibility for safety on their platforms and services – the burden should never fall solely on the user. And that’s particularly true when it comes to younger users. Take the opportunity to have a conversation with the young people in your home about how they feel about the changes, and if they notice a difference to their online experience.
Grandparents Day is 27 October! If you know a grandparent wanting to increase their online knowledge, including how to spot scams and download useful apps, eSafety has a number of programs to support older Australians. Digital skills can help bridge generational divides so help the grandparents in your family stay safe online with eSafety’s Be Connected program.