Small knowledge of civilized internet access

Small knowledge of civilized internet access

In real life, there is a lot of information on the Internet, so we need to surf the Internet safely in peacetime to avoid being confused by some bad information. Here are some tips for sharing civilized internet access.

Civilized online knowledge 1 1, consciously abide by the law, advocate social morality, and promote the construction of green grid;

2. Advocate advanced culture, abandon negative decadence and promote the healthy development of network civilization;

3. Advocate independent innovation, abandon piracy and plagiarism, and promote the prosperity of network applications;

4. Advocate mutual respect, abandon rumors and slander, and promote network harmony;

5, advocate honesty and trustworthiness, abandon fraud, and promote network security and credibility;

6. Advocate social care, abandon vulgarity and addiction, and promote the healthy growth of teenagers;

7. Advocate fair competition, abandon intrigue, and promote the network to blossom;

8. Advocate everyone to benefit, bridge the digital divide and promote the sharing of information resources.

Every family and every parent has the responsibility to guide our teenagers to establish a good network civilization. Our students usually surf the Internet in their spare time. How to arrange our teenagers' spare time reasonably needs the attention of schools and families.

Requirements for parents:

1. Recommend healthy, civilized and beneficial websites to us and keep abreast of our online psychology and trends.

2. Positive guidance enables us to form healthy and civilized moral norms and occupy new positions in the network.

3. Actively participate in various online health activities, so as to have a sense of justice, responsibility and self-motivation, and form a civilized online atmosphere in the whole society.

4. Parents should install a series of network protection software on the computer at home to prevent browsing bad websites and build a yellow barrier to prevent us from being hurt by bad information on the network actively or passively.

Tips for civilized Internet surfing 2 1. Don't tell others the true information about yourself, your parents and family members, such as name, address, school, telephone number and photos, without your parents' consent.

2. If you see uncivilized information or pictures, you should inform your parents immediately.

3. Don't spread or repost the content that others violate the code of conduct of primary and secondary school students or even violate the law. Be a law-abiding citizen online and offline.

Try not to publish your e-mail address on the online forum or bulletin board. If you have more than one email address, try setting different passwords.

5. If you receive junk mail (mail of unknown origin), delete it immediately. Including emails with greetings, prizes, etc. If in doubt, immediately ask parents and teachers how to deal with it.

6. Don't browse websites or websites that are not suitable for children. Even if you accidentally enter, you should leave at once.

7. If someone injures himself online, tell his parents or teachers in time.

8. Properly control the online time, generally not exceeding 1 hour per day.

National Youth Network Civilization Conference

Be good at online learning and don't browse bad information.

Be honest and friendly, don't insult and deceive others.

To enhance self-protection awareness, don't date netizens at will.

It is necessary to maintain network security without disturbing network order.

Good for physical and mental health, not addicted to virtual time and space.

Ten suggestions for parents

1. Install the computer in an obvious place at home, not in the children's bedroom.

2. Control when and how children use computers or mobile phones.

3. Keep abreast of your child's online friends.

4. Go online with your children and read online content.

5. Install software on the computer that prohibits access to unhealthy websites.

6. Install software that can filter, detect and prohibit reading sensitive words.

7. Don't let children meet strangers they meet online without their parents' permission.

8. Keep children away from online chat rooms and live broadcast rooms.

9. Educate children not to easily post personal information online.

10, take the children online.

Ten rules for children

1. Don't give identifiable information online, including home address, school name, home phone number, password, parents' identity, family economic status, etc.

2. Don't meet the friends you met online alone. If you feel it is very necessary to meet, go to a public place and be accompanied by your parents or good friends.

If you encounter an offensive, obscene, threatening or violent letter or information that makes you feel uncomfortable, please don't answer or refute it, but immediately tell your parents or inform the service provider.

4. Don't post your photos online.

5. Understand that anyone can change their gender anonymously or online.

6. Remember that any information you read on the Internet is not necessarily true.

7. When you are alone at home, don't let friends you know online come to see you.

8. Communicate with parents frequently to let them know about their network usage.

9. Control the time you use the Internet, and use the Internet without affecting your normal life and study.

10, don't believe in rumors, don't spread rumors, don't publish online rumors, and don't regard the internet as a spiritual sustenance.

3 Etiquette 1: Remember that people exist.

The Internet has given people from all corners of the country a common gathering place, which is the advantage of high technology, but it often makes us forget that we are dealing with other people in front of the computer screen, so our behavior can easily become more rude. Therefore, the first article of "Network Etiquette" is "Remember the existence of people". If you can't say it in person, don't say it online.

Politeness 2: Online and offline behaviors are consistent.

In real life, most people are law-abiding, and so is the Internet. Morality and law on the Internet are the same as in real life. Don't think that trading with computers on the Internet can lower moral standards.

Etiquette 3: When in Rome, do as the Romans do

The same website, different forums have different rules. What can be done in one forum may not be easy to do in another. For example, having fun in chat rooms is different from spreading rumors in news forums. Best suggestion: climb the wall for a while before you speak, so that you can understand the atmosphere and acceptable behavior of the jar.

Politeness 4: Respect other people's time and bandwidth.

Before asking questions, take some time to study by yourself. Probably the same question has been asked many times before, and the ready-made answer is at your fingertips. Don't be self-centered, it takes time and resources for others to find answers for you.

Politeness 5: Make a good impression on the Internet.

Because of the anonymity of the internet, others can't judge you from your appearance, so your words become the only judgment of others' impression of you. If you are unfamiliar with something, find some books to read before you speak. If you don't know what to do, then you can only become the hat of the irrigation king. Similarly, check grammar and words carefully before posting. Don't deliberately provoke, use dirty words.

Etiquette 6: Share your knowledge.

In addition to answering questions, this also includes when you ask an interesting question and get many answers, especially after you get it by email, you should write a summary and share it with everyone.

Etiquette 7: argue calmly

Arguments and wars are normal phenomena. Persuade people with reason, not personal attacks.

Etiquette 8: Respect the privacy of others.

Records of emails or private chats (ICQ/QQ) between others and you should be part of privacy. If you know someone who goes online under a pseudonym, it is not a good behavior to disclose his real name on the forum without consent. If you accidentally see someone open an email or secret on your computer, you shouldn't spread it around.

Etiquette 9: Don't abuse your rights.

Administrators and moderators have more rights than other users, and they should cherish the use of these rights. The master in the game room should show mercy to the novice's gun.

Etiquette 10: tolerance

We are all novices, and we all make mistakes sometimes. Don't mind if you see others writing typos, using typos, asking low-level questions or writing unnecessary long speeches. If you really want to give him advice, you'd better send it by email. Everyone loves face.