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Safety Tips
10 Tips for Online Safety
This service offers a fun and secure environment
for meeting and relating with others online. It’s also a great place
to build friendships that can lead to long lasting real life relationships.
Whether you decide to correspond with members online or meet members offline,
please use sound judgment and be responsible for your conduct online and
off. In both the virtual and real worlds, common sense is your best safety
tool.
Start Slow Watch out for someone
who seems too good to be true. Begin by first communicating solely via
email or instant messages. Be on the lookout for odd behavior or inconsistencies.
“Listen†to your correspondent’s words. The person at
the other end may not be who or what he/she says. Trust your instincts.
If anything makes you uncomfortable, walk away for your own safety and
protection.
Guard Your Anonymity All correspondence
with members done via the site does not reveal any personal contact information
about you. Be very wary of including your last name, real email address,
personal Web site URL, home address, phone number, place of work, or any
other identifying information in your profile or initial emails you exchange
with other members. Make sure your email signature file is turned off,
or does not include identifying information, when corresponding with another
member via your own email. Stop communicating with anyone who pressures
you for this information or attempts in any way to trick you into revealing
it. Take all the time you need to become comfortable with someone before
revealing any person contact information. Ask questions and make sure you
are satisfied with the answers. Trust your instincts, move cautiously and
be selective.
Exercise Caution and Common Sense
Careful, well-thought decisions generally lead to better results. Guard
against trusting the untrustworthy. Any suitor must earn your trust gradually,
through consistently honorable, forthright behaviour. Your job is to take
all the time you need to test for a trustworthy person, and pay careful
attention along the way. Take a relatively conservative approach to trusting
anyone you meet online. If you think someone is lying, it is likely that
they are, so act accordingly. Move on to someone you can eventually trust.
Conduct yourself in a responsible manner. Don’t become prematurely
intimate with someone, even if that intimacy only occurs online.
Request a Photo A photo will give
you a good idea of the person's appearance, which may prove helpful in
achieving a gut feeling about your correspondent. In fact, it’s
best to view several images of this person in a variety of settings: casual,
formal, indoor, outdoors. If he or she continuously comes up with an excuse,
it may be because that person has something to hide. Getting a photo scanned
is cheap, so there is little excuse for not doing it.
Talk Via Telephone A phone call
can reveal much about a person’s communication and social skills.
It is worth the cost of the call to protect your security. But do not give
out your personal phone number to a stranger. Try a mobile/cell phone number
instead for added security. Or make arrangements to call from a pay phone.
Only when you feel completely comfortable should you furnish your phone
number.
Meet When YOU Are Ready The beauty
of meeting and relating online is that you can gradually collect information
and then make a choice about pursuing the relationship in the real world.
You are never obligated to meet anyone, regardless of your level of online
intimacy. And even if you do decide to arrange a meeting, you always have
the right to change your mind. It’s possible that your decision
to keep the relationship at the anonymous level is based on a hunch that
you can’t logically explain. Trust yourself. Go with your gut instincts,
even when they can’t be logically explained. Never meet someone
who argues against your instincts, finds logical flaws with your feelings
or pressures you in any way.
Watch for Red Flags Pay attention
to any displays of anger, intense frustration or attempts at pressuring
or controlling you. Acting in a passive-aggressive manner, making demeaning
or disrespectful comments or any physically inappropriate behaviour are
all red flags. You should also be concerned if your date exhibits any of
the following conduct without providing an acceptable explanation:
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Provides inconsistent information about age,
interests, appearance, marital status, profession, employment, etc.
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Refuses to speak to you on the phone after
establishing ongoing, online intimacy.
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Fails to provide direct answers to direct
questions.
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Appears in person to be significantly different
from his or her online persona.
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Never introduces you to friends, professional
associates or family members.
Select the Safest Possible Environment
When you make the choice to meet offline, always tell someone where you
are going and when you will return. Leave your date’s name and telephone
number with that person. Never arrange for your date to pick you up at
home. Provide your own transportation, meet in a public place at a time
when many people are present and when the date is over, leave on your own.
A familiar restaurant or coffee shop, at a time when a lot of other people
will be present is great choice. Avoid hikes, bike rides or drives in remote
areas for the first few dates. If you decide to move to another location,
take your own car. When the timing is appropriate, thank your date for
getting together and say goodbye.
Take Extra Caution Outside Your Area
If you are flying in from another area, arrange for your own car and a
hotel room. Do not disclose the name of your hotel and never allow your
date to make the arrangements for you. Rent a car at the airport and drive
directly to your hotel. Call your date from the hotel or meet at the location
you have already agreed to. If the location seems inappropriate or unsafe,
go back to your hotel. Try to contact your date at that location, or leave
a message on a home machine. Always make sure a friend or family member
knows your plans and has your contact information. And if possible, carry
a mobile/cell phone at all times.
Leave an Unsure Situation Never
do anything you feel unsure about. If you are in any way afraid of your
date, use your best judgment to diffuse the situation and get out of there.
Excuse yourself long enough to call a friend for advice, ask someone else
on the scene for help, or slip out the back door and drive away. If you
feel you are in danger call the police. It’s always better to be
safe than sorry. Never worry or feel embarrassed about your behaviour.
Your safety is much more important than one person’s opinion of
you.
While liars, cheaters and impostors certainly
ply their craft on the Web, you’ll also find them in nightclubs,
at cocktail parties, and occasionally sitting across from you at your local
café. Regardless of where, or how, you meet someone, dating is never
a risk-free activity. A little caution will reduce your risk in these matters
of the heart. |