

While it is always better to only communicate online with people that you know and trust in person, we’ve created the acronym GAMBITS to help parents and children recognize the strategies of online predators. According to The Demand Project, predators commonly work to convince the child that they love them, while using sexual innuendos intended to desensitize and lower the child’s inhibitions.īoth parents and children need to know the tactics of online predators so that their exploitative gambits fail. Grooming is a slow, methodical process used by a predator to build a relationship of trust with a child, and sometimes the family, with an intention of sexually exploiting the child. Predators start their twisted game with a process called grooming. In a game of chess, a gambit is a risky opening move that is used to try and gain an advantage. In this case, we can teach them seven signals that someone may be an online predator.
#Cases of online predators how to#
We can help prepare them so that they know how to respond. While we can’t always prevent our kids from encountering bad people or bad things online, we can build a trusting and caring relationship with them.


Results from one major study found that 70% of teens hide online activity from their parents. It is worrying that, even as technology makes children more vulnerable to online predators, the majority of kids do not disclose to parents what they are really experiencing online. That’s because no other factor is as important in keeping them safe. In the Raise App, you’ll hear us talk over and over about the importance of your relationship with your children. And 12-14% of kids from different surveys report having met face-to-face with someone they met on the internet. By FBI and other law enforcement estimates, there are as many as 500,000 predators lurking online in the U.S, each contacting an average of 52 different contacts they are trying to exploit. That same year, the Cyber Tipline of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children received nearly 22 million reports. In 2020, an estimated 5 million interactions took place between predators and children. We can’t afford to wrongly conclude that everything is dandy if we are actually failing to see how close the dangers really are. But we can’t risk letting our guard down entirely, not when the internet, apps, and smartphones are able to bring the ugly parts of the world into the haven of our homes. And hopefully, for most of us, this can be the truth. We all want to believe we live that our home is a safe place, a refuge from the chaos and danger that we hear about in the news or see portrayed in movies.
