Learn from a situation about what could happen when someone reveals too much information online and it ends up in the wrong hands.
START A BIT > Cyber Health & Safety > This page
Privacy and personal information
Inappropriate or unwanted contact
Improper personal information exposed online could be troublesome, and even dangerous
There could be very serious consequence if bad hands start to hunt/treat/attack
Think twice about people you meet online, they could be something, or anything, or nothing
Who would you talk to if things go wrong and you feel scared
The whole session is timeboxed as 45 minutes, containing
5': Opening and introduction
30': Animation video "Cybersmart Detectives" with embedded questions
10': Reflection and closing
A short introduction of what we will do, and facilitate for discussion.
Use https://www.randomresult.com/ to random pair 2 persons as a team, tell them that they need to actively discuss and present what they think, for 3 pauses with questions.
Animation video "Cybersmart Detectives" with embedded questions for discussion. Play with 0.75x speed, if feeling too fast to follow.
When paused, 2 minutes for pair discussion, use post-it or white paper to help your notes, then 2 minute/pair for sharing.
Pause at 02:14: What could happen if you post personal details online?
Pause at 04:09: How would you help someone in this situation?
Pause at 06:02: Do you think Kel could be lying about who he is?
Pause the video at time 08:30, save later parts as tips
Video: 8.5 min (11.3 min in 0.75x speed)
Discussion & sharing: 18 min
Sum: 26.5 min -> 30 min
5 min: Discuss in pairs, raise 3-5 tips that you think we should bare in mind when exposing in internet
2 min per pair, share your points
1 min: The tutor summaries
2 min: Play the remaining video (1.5 minutes), then show this 7 tips again here
Raise the "Least Luck" questions as homework discussion
We are good hands, and we are most of the time with nice people around, yet it's meaningful to try playing as the "bad hands", challenge your imagination, find out whatever tricks or treats you know as far to "spy" a target person (your friend, or some well known person, or any random one)
Dig out detailed privacy information, as much as possible, of your target person
Based on your "spy" information, how easy can you attack him/her?
Hopefully we will be fine in most cases, but please keep in mind that anyone could be trapped in a "worst situation" than you ever expect!
What could be worse for the girl in the film, if she didn't get help in time?
What is the worst result can you imagine you might meet in your internet/online experience with low cautions and the least luck?
Optionally, we can ask each participant to pick 1-2 points, read and reflect, share what he/she thinks, what comments.
Check the following texts under each tip, think a bit more.
What to check? How? Discuss with your trusted ones to sort out more.
Make your list of who you trust and talk to.
What could make you difficult to do so? How to handle peer/social pressure?
Meeting anyone purely from internet without an actual real life connection with you before is highly tricky and even dangerous.
How much should I do? How to avoid getting into danger while helping out?
Think about who/how do you report.
"Cybersmart Detectives" from "Cybersmart Challenge" by eSafety
Random picking: https://www.randomresult.com/
Timer: https://e.ggtimer.com/
This learning session is successfully used by
Session 3 in LP2346: 3 Weeks Recap & Review, 23w46