Using the Internet Safely For Seniors

(WallPaper) #1
➟ Location information:City, town, country, or region,
such as Northwest. Don’t give away your employer in
your personal e-mail alias.

➟ Sexual or physical suggestion:Certain words such
as hotor sexylet others know how you want to be
perceived, while words like snugglyor lonelysuggest
an interest in intimacy that criminals can take advan-
tage of.

➟ Work descriptor:Teacher, engineer, dentist, retired, or
a description of your place of employment.

➟ Emotional vulnerability:Words such as sad, grieving,
lost, suicide, and lonely place you at risk; there’s
always a criminal waiting to be your “best friend.”

➟ Risk behaviors:Names that speak, even in fun,
of drug use (littletokr), criminal activity
(carjacker), or violence (shootingspree) may
attract the wrong kind of person.

➟ Ethnic identifiers:May increase the risk of hate
crimes, or they may help identify you — for example,
Asiandoll, N8tive(native), or mxed(mixed).

➟ Hobbies or sports:An unusual sport such as polo
or barrel racing, sports that imply a specific socio-
economic bracket, or sports that are done in only a
few locations (skeet shooting or bull fighting, for
example) are more identifying than baseball or soccer.
Criminals can use such interests to make a personal
connection with a victim.

Employers may have defined domains (@company.
com) and assigned protocols for your name — even
using your full name. It’s important in these cases that
you limit the additional pieces of personal information

98

Part II: Using the Internet While Dodging the Risk

Free download pdf