Digital Citizenship - Digital-Footprint
High School
DC_Intro-Animation-Digital-Footprint
Brief description:
This video talks about the ideal mechanism of the internet world where nothing is hidden anymore. From www.commonsense.org it can be seen that this organization is the key role for this enlightening video. Search engines fulfill a crucial role as intermediaries on the Internet, allowing individuals to find and access content. Examples include Google, Bing, Ask.com, and Yahoo! Search.
Search engines typically collect a large amount of personal data including IP addresses, search requests, together with the time, date and location of the computer submitting the request. As to be highlighted at the video transcript, this information can be personally identifiable and can reveal particularly sensitive pieces of information such as a person?s political beliefs, sexual orientation, religious beliefs and medical issues.
Did you know?
Every time you log on to a website you leave a mark (I was here). What you do can be seen can be seen can be seen by everyone even by people you don?t know. What you do can be found, can be copied, can be passed on to anyone and can be permanent. All these pieces make up your digital footprint.
How will you express yourself? How will you protect your privacy? How will you respect other people?s privacy?
For more information about common sense media visit: www.commonsense.org
Common sense media digital citizenship program is developed with support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The Sherwood Foundation
Further addition: Understandings of solitude have long been formed by accessible technologies. At the most negotiable level privacy involves restricting invasions of corporal space, and the safety of home and personal belongings which is why early privacy protections focused upon the inviolability of the home and family life. Concerns about scheming what information is known about a person came with communication technologies. Concerns about the corrosion of privacy are not new in fact; it might be argued they are feature of the twentieth century.
The patterns of Internet and mobile phones has created a fast moving global digital communications environment. The risks concerning privacy and other human rights are all the more significant in countries with limited protections for human rights.
Some other things to note In as much as the privacy has been breach due to the rising use internet and many devices that can access the internet, some restrictions have been put in place to protect children. As a result, many Internet sites including Facebook choose to exclude individuals under 13 from their website. At the same time academic research suggests that many parents assist their children in getting around age restrictions in order to access Facebook. This clearly raises questions about the capacity of current legislation to protect the privacy of children and young people on the Internet.
Thanks for watching!
This video talks about the ideal mechanism of the internet world where nothing is hidden anymore. From www.commonsense.org it can be seen that this organization is the key role for this enlightening video. Search engines fulfill a crucial role as intermediaries on the Internet, allowing individuals to find and access content. Examples include Google, Bing, Ask.com, and Yahoo! Search.
Search engines typically collect a large amount of personal data including IP addresses, search requests, together with the time, date and location of the computer submitting the request. As to be highlighted at the video transcript, this information can be personally identifiable and can reveal particularly sensitive pieces of information such as a person?s political beliefs, sexual orientation, religious beliefs and medical issues.
Did you know?
Every time you log on to a website you leave a mark (I was here). What you do can be seen can be seen can be seen by everyone even by people you don?t know. What you do can be found, can be copied, can be passed on to anyone and can be permanent. All these pieces make up your digital footprint.
How will you express yourself? How will you protect your privacy? How will you respect other people?s privacy?
For more information about common sense media visit: www.commonsense.org
Common sense media digital citizenship program is developed with support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The Sherwood Foundation
Further addition: Understandings of solitude have long been formed by accessible technologies. At the most negotiable level privacy involves restricting invasions of corporal space, and the safety of home and personal belongings which is why early privacy protections focused upon the inviolability of the home and family life. Concerns about scheming what information is known about a person came with communication technologies. Concerns about the corrosion of privacy are not new in fact; it might be argued they are feature of the twentieth century.
The patterns of Internet and mobile phones has created a fast moving global digital communications environment. The risks concerning privacy and other human rights are all the more significant in countries with limited protections for human rights.
Some other things to note In as much as the privacy has been breach due to the rising use internet and many devices that can access the internet, some restrictions have been put in place to protect children. As a result, many Internet sites including Facebook choose to exclude individuals under 13 from their website. At the same time academic research suggests that many parents assist their children in getting around age restrictions in order to access Facebook. This clearly raises questions about the capacity of current legislation to protect the privacy of children and young people on the Internet.
Thanks for watching!