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Thank you for participating in this blog - what's next!A new version of Family Safety is now available! You can check out the details at in this post on the Windows Live Team blog at this location.
If you’d like to contact us about this post, you can use the Answers forums at this location. On Windows Live Wire: Keeping your family safer online
Quote Keeping your family safer online Safer surfing with new Internet Explorer 8
But even with all this great defensive planning, there are hackers out there working just as hard to find new ways to do their own end-run. Family Safety and Internet Explorer work great together because their always-evolving security features help me guard against these new hacker tactics. Today, the new Internet Explorer 8 is being released with some great new ways to protect against hackers. There’s SmartScreen that helps protect my family from socially-engineered attacks like malware and phishing, and other technologies that help protect my PC from drive-by attacks like cross-site scripting and ClickJacking.
Internet Explorer 8 works against ClickJacking and cross-site scripting technologies to prevent Junior from clicking on a picture of a Pokémon and being taken to another website without realizing it. When Junior thought he was clicking Pikachu, he may have actually clicked something else: buying something from another site, changing settings on your browser or computer, or being shown inappropriate advertisements. It’s complicated, but Internet Explorer 8 lets website developers protect their sites from these kinds of attacks by preventing their legitimate pages from being “framed.” If all this has made you curious about the new security features in Internet Explorer 8 and the new kinds of malicious software technologies that they guard against, you can also read this white paper for all the details. Oh, and by the way, I am also posting this on the Windows Live team blog, which has more great info about using Windows Live on the web. - Sylvia F., Mom and writer, Windows Live Family Safety
MSN study sparks online discussionIt was rewarding yesterday to see a discussion emerging from news articles on child safety. In Europe, MSN conducted a study of children’s habits online, and certain European companies also pledged to protect children online. The story is also active in the US. If you’re aware of this story in other places please provide that link in the comments here.
Microsoft can be a resource for parents who would like more information on the technical solutions that are available, as well as how to guide effective conversations with children. Over here on the Windows Live Family Safety team, we see the materials posted here as a companion to the technical solution we deliver with Windows Live Essentials. It’s incorrect to just install a Family Safety product and expect that to cover 100% of what your child does online. It’s also incorrect to just have a conversation with your child (even a good one) and expect that to cover 100% of what your child does online. Both approaches are needed.
If you have Windows Live Family Safety installed for your family, please use the comments here to describe what additional conversations you may have had with your children. Is there something more you’d expect to happen on the software side? Are there questions about educating kids that you’d like answered?
Thanks in advance for the discussion. - Elizabeth Grigg, Program Manager, Windows Live Family Safety Did you participate in the Family Safety Beta during Fall 08?Now that the newest version of Family Safety has released, the Beta will be shut down. If you’re still running the Beta version of the software, please access the released version at http://download.live.com/familysafety. If you’re not sure what version you’re running, here is how to check.
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