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Stephen Miller asserts U.S. has right to take Greenland; Budget cuts loom as Kentucky general assembly session begins; Filling Colorado's labor gap through non degree credentials; New year, new minimum wage for Missouri workers.

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Nicolas Maduro pleads not guilty to federal drug-trafficking charges. US officials debate the value and future of the Venezuela operation and MN Gov. Tim Walz drops his re-election bid.

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From electric oyster farming in Maine, to Jewish descendants reviving a historic farming settlement in New Jersey and the resurgence of the Cherokee language in North Carolina, the Daily Yonder looks back at 2025.

Expert: Cyber Security Awareness Should Start Before Age 5

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Thursday, October 24, 2013   

PHOENIX, Ariz. - As the age of children with technology trends to younger and younger, it's said that privacy, bullying protection and online safety should be taught along with the ABCs and 1-2-3s. Ben Halpert is the founder of the nonprofit SavvyCyberKids.org. He said most safety education is focused on elementary to high school students, but it needs to start sooner because children these days start interacting with technology as toddlers.

"Five years old and younger is really the key point in a child's life," Halpert said. "What you teach them there becomes ingrained in their minds, so it becomes more of a reflex."

Halpert said there is an opportunity to raise a generation to understand online safety, security, ethics and appropriate responses to bullying. October is Cyber Security Awareness Month.

Halpert also has produced picture books for parents to read to children that provide strategies for safety. The books feature two children who teach each other.

"The kids create an online identity as a superhero, and they use that online identity to protect them. So, if anyone ever asks them 'What's your name?' or 'Where do you live?' as they grow up, they learn to respond only with their superhero identity that can't be traced back to them," he explained.

In addition to English, the books are also available for purchase in Spanish, French and German. There is also a toolkit available online to anyone, for free, at www.SavvyCyberKids.org.




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