| A | B |
| best way to save battery | reduce screen brightness |
| Not allowed during school day | games, email, music, downloading, videos, Facebook |
| 3 key updates crucial for your computer | AVG/Anti-virus, Windows Updates and Lenovo System Updates |
| AVG | anti virus software, guys & girls! |
| Online crimes | crimes committed online are federal crimes because the Internet is a global community and crosses state lines |
| Save Your Work | You should save every few minutes when you are typing a document to prevent accidental erasure/deletion |
| cyberbullying | the use of technology to harass, bully, threaten or intimidate others |
| Vengeful Angel | a type of cyberbully who is righting a wrong; protecting themselves or others from a bully like Batman |
| Revenge of the Nerds | most dangerous of all cyberbullies; they are the ones that delete data, create computer viruses and do a lot of damage to other people’s computers |
| Mean Girls | bored/looking for entertainment; bullying as a means of entertainment! |
| Inadvertent Cyberbully | sends out electronic communication without understanding how and why others can take it the wrong way |
| DO FIRST | what you should do if you are a victim of cyberbulling |
| Private Information | information about yourself that you NEVER share with anyone; share as Need to Know basis only |
| Personal Information | information about yourself that is always okay to share with someone online |
| Strong Password | 8 or more characters with a combo of letters, numbers and symbols |
| Online Identity | how you present yourself on the internet |
| Offline Identity | how you present yourself in "REAL LIFE" |
| Magic number for internet searching | 3 |
| searching for a phrase | put in "quotation marks" |
| web browser | the vehicle you use to surf the internet |
| popular web browsers | Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox |
| Netiquette | online manners |
| Troll | someone who is posting Flame-Bait |
| Flame-Bait | comments made to purposely get people upset online |
| Lurk Before You Leap | Look and watch how people act in certain sites before you participate |
| Rules for Swearing online | never in public places; only in private messages with people who are okay with swearing |
| cell phone texting | against the law to text and drive in many counties in Ohio |
| first social network site | SixDegrees.com in 1997 (named after SixDegrees to Kevin Bacon Game) |
| Facebook | started as a social network for Harvard only in 2004 |
| Never post online if you are: | angry, upset, frustrated, overly emotional |
| Typing Your Password | it is good netiquette to ask people around you to turn their head to protect your password |
| Reverse phone number lookup | how someone can take your phone number to find your address |
| Facebook privacy settings | determines who sees what information on your Facebook Profile |
| A document storing your passwords | should never have the word PASSWORD in the filename |
| SPAM | junk e-mails |
| D - in DO FIRST | Do not retaliate |
| O - in DO FIRST | Off your buddy list |
| F - in DO FIRST | Find out who it is |
| I - in DO FIRST | Ignore |
| R - in DO FIRST | Respond after thinking |
| S - in DO FIRST | Save Evidence |
| T - in DO FIRST | Tell an adult |
| 6 types of Social Media | 1. Social Networks 2. Social Bookmarking 3. Social News 4. Media Sharing 5. Microblogs Blogs & Wikis 6. Comments Review and Forums |
| Social Networks must have: | 1) ability to create a user profile page & 2) be able to link to other people on network |
| Examples of Social Media Networks | Twitter, FaceBook, Minecraft, Steam, World of Warcraft, Google Docs, Google+, Youtube, Wikipedia, Blogger, Facebook, Instagram |
| Who sees your social network profile | DEPENDS on your privacy settings |
| WIKI | definition by collaboration website that has a collection of definitions made by a large group of people the idea is that the more people who contribute towards a definition, the better the definition will be like peer editing with a much larger group of editors |
| BLOG | online opinion of any topic in 2-10 paragraph format. anyone can create a blog |
| WIKI | definition by collaboration website that has a collection of definitions made by a large group of people the idea is that the more people who contribute towards a definition, the better the definition will be like peer editing with a much larger group of editors |
| MICROBLOG | short and concise blogs usually under 140 characters status updates/twitter updates 2-3 sentences at most |
| Podcast | A podcast, or non-streamed webcast, is a series of digital media files, either audio or video, that are released episodically and often downloaded through an RSS feed. |
| Stream: | List of updates in some sort of chronological or reverse chronological order |
| Avatar: | Your online persona which is a combination of your image or user name on a social network |
| Chat | One-to-one communication aka private messaging |
| Hashtag # | Used to annotate a message on a social network Allow a backchannel to be created with posts with the same hashtag |
| Friends | People you are connected with on a social network |
| Meme | a thought, idea, joke, or concept to be shared online. It is typically an image with text above and below it, but can also come in video and link form |
| Crowd Sourcing | When many people are working together online to complete a single tasks |
| Cloud Computing | when users access data remotely across an internet connection, rather than through working from a desktop |
| Tweet | A microblog made on Twitter |
| Retweet | when someone on Twitter sees your message and decides to re-share it with his/her followers |
| Follow | Following someone’s online activity i.e. Twitter |
| Tags | keywords attached to any blog post, image or video to help users search topics or media. |
| Tag Cloud/Word Cloud | A tag cloud is a visual depiction of user-generated tags, or simply the word content of a site, typically used to describe the content of web sites. |
| Dooced | a slang term for someone who is fired from their job because of controversial content they published online. |
| Social Media | Internet-based applications that allow the creation and exchange of user-generated content |
| Social Networks | Services that allow you to connect with other people of similar interests and background. Usually they consist of a profile, various ways to interact with other users, ability to setup groups, etc. (Facebook) |
| Social Bookmarking | Services that allow you to save, organize and manage links to various websites and resources around the internet. Most allow you to “tag” your links to make them easy to search and share. (Delicious and Diigo) |
| Social News | social news website features user-posted stories that are ranked based on popularity. Users can comment on these posts, and these comments may also be ranked (Slashdot, Digg, or Reddit) |
| Media Sharing | Services that allow you to upload and share various media such as pictures and video. Can also allow collaborative game play and file creation (Flickr, Youtube, Aviary, Minecraft, Steam,…) |
| Microblogging, Blogging & Wikis | Services that focus on short updates that are pushed out to anyone subscribed to receive the updates. Microblogging usually 140 characters or less (Twitter) or part of a larger social network as a “status updates” (Facebook, Myspace, Linkdn…) |
| Comments Reviews & Forums | Online forums allow members to hold conversations by posting messages. Blog comments are similar except they are attached to blogs and usually the discussion centers around the topic of the blog post. (Amazon, Blogger, Wikispaces, Amazon, Yelp, Edmunds.,…) Some services happen in real-time to allow conversations with members around a shared interest (GetGlued) |
| SixDegrees.com | first social network started in 1997 |
| Friendster | 2nd big social network for adults in 2002 |
| MySpace | became popular in 2004 when teens started using it to follow bands & musicians |
| Facebook | began in early 2004 as a Harvard-only network. Beginning in September 2005, Facebook expanded to include high school students, professionals inside corporate networks, and, eventually, everyone. |