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Domestic Violence Internet Safety TipsIf you are in immediate danger, please: - Call 911
- Call
your local hotline
- Call a national hotline:
- U.S. National Domestic
Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or TTY at 1-800-787-3224
- U.S. National Sexual Assault
Hotline at 1-800-656-4673 automatically connect you to a local U.S. rape crisis program near your phone number´s area
code.
- U.S. National Teen Dating Violence Helpline at 1-866-331-9474
- Remember
that corded phones are more private and less interceptable than cordless phones or analog cell phones.
- Be aware you may not be able to reach 911 using an Internet phone or Internet-based phone service. So you may need
to be prepared to use another phone to call 911.
- Contact your local domestic violence program,
shelter, or rape crisis center to learn about free cell phone donation programs.
- If you think your activities are being monitored, they probably are.
Abusive people are often controlling and want to know your every move. You dont need to be a computer programmer or have special
skills to monitor someones computer and Internet activities anyone can do it and there are many ways to monitor with programs
like Spyware, keystroke loggers and hacking tools.
- It is not possible to delete or
clear all the "footprints" of your computer or online activities. If you are being monitored, it may be
dangerous to change your computer behaviors such as suddenly deleting your entire Internet history if that is not your regular
habit.
- If you think you may be monitored on your home computer, be careful how you use your
computer since an abuser might become suspicious. You may want to keep using the monitored computer for innocuous
activities, like looking up the weather. Use a safer computer to research an escape plan, look for new jobs or apartments,
bus tickets, or ask for help.
- Email and Instant/Text Messaging (IM) are not
safe or confidential ways to talk to someone about the danger or abuse in your life. If possible, please call a hotline
instead. If you use email or IM, please use a safer computer and an account your abuser does not know about.
- Computers can store a lot of private information about what you look at via the Internet, the emails and instant
messages you send, internet-based phone and IP-TTY calls you make, web-based purchases and banking, and many other activities.
- It might be safer to use a computer in a public library, at a community technology
center (CTC) at a trusted friends house, or an Internet Cafe.
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