Kidz Safety is a Non Profit Corporation.
tax-exempt as an organization Section 501(c)(3)
Secretary State Filing,Organization # 3001511
Welcome to
KIDZ SAFEY!
We provide your children with online safety materials and educational information about how to stay safe online.
We focus on youths ages 7 to 18.
Kidz safety's website will be fully functional and operational by December of 2007
About KidzSafety
WHO: Kidz Safety is a non-profit organization. Kidz Safety is a program dedicated to helping keep kids safe from online cyber bullying and exploitation. Kidz safety is working hard to help make the internet a great and safe place for children.
VISION: Our vision is to see generations of children worldwide grow up safely using technology and the Internet. .
MISSION: Our mission is to help parents, educators, and caregivers by providing guidelines and tools to teach children the safe and healthy use of technology and the Internet.
OUR GOAL: Our goal is to provide every child ,school, parent, educator, caretaker and organization with the informational material and products that our organization has to offer in order to help keep children safe.
By providing information and education about the dangers of the internet kidz safety helps reduce the amount of missing, exploited and bullied children online every day.
Recent studies show these alarming statistics:
• 84% rise in formal complaints from 2004-05 that predators enticed minors online or traveled to meet them in person (Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2005).
• 56% of teens receive requests for personal information; 12% of teens (8-12) (Polly Klaas Foundation, 2006)
• 54% frequently have private conversations with online strangers through instant messaging; 10% of teens (ibid.)
• 42% said they have posted personal information online; 5% of teens (ibid.)
• 30% reported that they have talked with a cyber-stranger about meeting in person; 4% of teens (ibid.)
• 27% said they have talked with an online stranger about sex (ibid.)
• 16% discovered that someone online was an adult pretending to be much younger (ibid.)
• 1 in 4 children inadvertently views online pornography each year (University of New Hampshire, 2001)