Home  Contact  Disclaimer  Privacy  RSS 

SafetyWeb Review

Overview

SafetyWeb Reviews, Complaints & Testimonials

SafetyWeb Review

Overview

For parents who are looking to keep track of what their kids are doing online as they are doing it, SafetyWeb is meant for them. The service monitors the activities of children on the Internet and will tell the parents when a questionable activity is in progress. This could be anything from a borderline comment to the child being "friended" by a convicted sexual predator on a social networking site. At present, the service scans the largest social networking sights like MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter; however they intend to expand to all online activities including geolocation programs.

Safetyweb is a service that looks at all activities of a subscriber's child to provide the parents with updates and alerts based on what their child is doing at that time. This makes sure the parents know exactly what their kids are doing on the Internet and works to prevent dangerous situations from occurring.

Where to get SafetyWeb:

Official Website

Customer Reviews, Testimonials, and Complaints





Does SafetyWeb Inc Really Work?

comment

Our Research Suggests:

According to the online research that we have done from consumer reports on forums, websites, blogs, and wikis, customers appear satisified.

Large numbers of users have reported good results, especially compared with the effectiveness and ratings of other products in the market. This product is worth considering.

Product Details

Company Information

SafetyWeb LLC
2150 W 29th Ave Ste 310
Denver, CO 80211-3889
(720) 272-8420

Specifications

N/A

Ships to N/A
Scam Reports None Found
Where to buy http://www.safetyweb.com (official website)
About Cyberbullying

When a young person is approached by another young person online, over a cell phone, or by any other electronic means of communication, and is tortured emotionally by that person, this meets the definition of cyberbullying. The torturous behavior has to be from a minor to a minor, or must have been started by a minor. After people who are adults become involved, the behavior would then be considered cyberstalking or cyber-harassment.

Based upon a study done in 2005 by Tesco Mobile and The National Children's Home Charity, 20% of the 770 kids between 11 and 19 who were interviewed stated they had been targeted by bullies through their computers, cell phones, or other electronic forms of communication. 73% of the kids who said they were bullied knew the person, and 26% of them said they did not know the person. 10% of the kids who were interviewed said that they had their photo taken by an integrated cell phone camera, which made them scared, upset, or ashamed. The majority of kids do not want to tell adults about what is going on because they do not want to lose their computer or cell phone privileges. 28% of the interviewees said they did not let anyone know, 41% let a friend know, 24% let a parent know, and 14% let a teacher know.

Copyright © Healthy Me 123. All Rights Reserved