For various reasons, people tend to give out personal information more freely via social media than they do face-to-face.
While most people are harmless, social media predators rely on your posts, tweets, feeds, check-ins, and connections in order to attack you.
The more information that you post about yourself, the more susceptible you become to identity theft, financial fraud, and even more frightening crimes like stalking and assault.
Use common sense. Do not post anything that makes you uncomfortable. Posting vacation pictures or posting photos of yourself while you are out for the night, has been known to lead to home burglaries.
Limit the personal information you share, and don’t share business information at all. Disable Global Position System (GPS) or location tracking. Many digital cameras encode the GPS location of a photo when it is taken. If that photo is uploaded to a site, so are the GPS coordinates, which will let people know that exact location.
Public Wi-Fi is not secure. Â鶹ÊÓƵ provides secure Wi-Fi access and secure remote access through VPN for employees and students.
The Internet makes it easy to hide identities and motives. Be extremely cautious about giving information to strangers.
Strong passwords are your first line of defense. Create a password that is hard to guess. Do not use what you have posted on social media to create your password. For more tips see Password Security.
Take advantage of a site’s privacy settings, and review them often. Don’t post anything you wouldn't want the public to see.
Some sites may share your phone numbers and emails. So before you provide your information to them, read their privacy policy.
Anti-virus protection safeguards your computer against known viruses. Use it and keep it updated. Go here for more information on Cyber Security.