Townsville Bulletin

EYES PEELED ONLINE

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IWAS a parent who preferred to trust children raised with common sense and a strong moral compass to steer themselves online and on social media, rather than inserting myself into their friendship groups.

I believed that looking over my kids’ shoulders into their accounts violated their trust and could stop them sharing with me.

I didn’t let my three children have social media accounts until the age most platforms allow – 13 – and I followed the guidelines offered by cyber- safety experts.

How naive I was. I even wrote a column strongly criticisin­g a parent who created a fake profile of a girl so she could get inside her children’s circles unnoticed.

I thought if you teach kids they can’t trust a parent, who can they trust? Also, I didn’t and still don’t want them being unnecessar­ily wary of men they don’t know and I didn’t want to “cotton wool” them. But I was wrong. Having read the terrifying story of Alicia Kozakiewic­z, I realise how stupid I was. Kozakiewic­z is the US online safety advocate who was groomed online as a trusting 13- yearold.

She was picked up at her home not by a boy but by a 40- year- old sex predator who drove her across several states before she was horribly sexually abused and beaten in a basement for four days.

The man streamed her ordeal online for other predators, a mistake Kozakiewic­z believes saved her life as it allowed the FBI to find her.

No parent could be unaffected by her story, or be complacent about their children’s online activities and contacts.

Kozakiewic­z told her story at a national online safety conference and hearing it made me feel witless.

I thank dumb luck that my sons, 19 and 17, have not had negative online experience­s and I’m changing my approach with my 13- year- old daughter entirely.

The sophistica­tion with which predators target children has increased exponentia­lly since the first mobile device- owning kids went online. Now kids have devices put in their hands so young that there is such a thing as an iPotty toilet trainer you can connect to an iPad. Parents thrust devices at tiny kids to get a couple of minutes of peace and that’s a fact of modern parenting life – it probably buys many of them a bit of sanity. But with it comes responsibi­lity to engage with what children are watching, and that’s something many parents don’t fully understand.

Kozakiewic­z is right when she says parents must demand passwords and snoop on their kids whenever they like.

She has exploded my idea that kids deserve some privacy – her stark warning that no child is immune from grooming means their right to privacy goes out of the window.

Sadly, she’s also right that we should teach young children that the “bogey man” does exist. An acquaintan­ce whose son was in the process of being groomed by a paedophile on a public Minecraft platform learned that the hard way when she overheard him asking the boy to remove his clothes.

But it’s not just that, or Kozakiewic­z’s story of being chained, dog- collared and abused that has smashed my cyber- parenting innocence.

It’s the number of mainstream public figures we thought were respectabl­e who have been charged with child porn offences in recent years. This week it was a star of the hit teen- focused series Glee, Mark Salling.

But closer to home, in recent years it has also been a smiling presenter of an ABC antiques show, Andy Muirhead, and a journalist on A Current Affair, Ben McCormack, who have faced court for child porn offences. Just in the last month a Victorian man was charged with possessing and transmitti­ng child porn and grooming a child and an ADF soldier based in Wodonga was charged with transmitti­ng, soliciting and producing child pornograph­y.

These are just the cases that long, painstakin­g investigat­ions by the Joint Child Exploitati­on Team have closed.

You have to admire brave and generous people such as Alicia Kozakiewic­z for going around the world and telling people the reality of what happened to her at the age of 13.

And if you have your own 13- yearold ( or any other kid) online then, like me, you should be demanding their passwords no later than tonight.

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 ?? BRAVE: Alicia Kozakiewic­z is in Australia to talk to parents and experts about internet safety for children. Picture: TROY SNOOK ??
BRAVE: Alicia Kozakiewic­z is in Australia to talk to parents and experts about internet safety for children. Picture: TROY SNOOK

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