🚨 Truth bomb: iPads are just big phones.
Just because there’s no call button doesn’t mean it’s safe.
🎮 Games, 📱 messaging apps, 🖼️ social media, and 🌐 internet access all still live there—along with the same risks.
So if you wouldn’t hand your 8-year-old a phone...
✋ Maybe think twice about the iPad too.
👨👩👧👦 Need help setting safe boundaries with tech?
Check out our resources at https://t.co/SA3o6bdKvc
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For schools, organizations, and families navigating the rapidly evolving digital threat landscape, Cyber Safety Cop Plus provides a comprehensive resource library:
- 150+ articles covering online safety, substance abuse, school safety, and AI threats
- Professional training
courses for educators, administrators, and parents
- Monthly live sessions with expert guidance and Q&A
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Membership starts at $5/month with a 7-day free trial.
School safety expert Guy Bliesner identifies two key trends shaping K-12 security in 2026: integrating mental health supports with safety measures, and balancing people with technology.
Key insights from recent data:
- 99% of school safety alerts are everyday emergencies (medica
Digital parenting research consistently points to five evidence-based strategies that reduce online risk for children:
1. Pre-configure devices before distribution -- expectations established early are easier to maintain
2.
Maintain ongoing dialogue -- single conversations are insufficient; regular check-ins build resilience
For schools distributing devices to students: these same principles apply to your 1:1 programs. Our free resources can help guide your parent communication strategy.
A UNICEF survey across 11 nations found that at least 1.2 million children had their images altered into sexually explicit deepfakes within the past year -- equivalent to 1 in 25 children.
cases surging from 4,700 (2023) to 67,000+ (2024)
For organizations serving children: understanding AI-enabled exploitation is no longer optional. It requires updated training, policy frameworks, and community education.
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Schools across the country are confronting a deadly reality: fentanyl-laced vape products on campus.
Recent incidents include a 12-year-old hospitalized in Georgia and multiple emergency Narcan administrations in New York and Washington state schools.
The data is alarming:
- 1.
Three months after Australia implemented the world's first social media ban for children under 16, the results offer important lessons for educators and policymakers.
Key findings:
- 4.
Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and YouTube for potential violations, with fines up to A$49.5 million.
For schools and organizations: technology restrictions alone are insufficient.