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Tips to browse safely online

Here you'll find some basic tips to protect your privacy and reduce the ability for people to see what you do online.

The 'Close this site' button

Some pages on this website include a 'Close this site' button. Use this button to quickly hide what you are looking at. You might find this helpful if someone comes into the room or looks over your shoulder and you don't want them to know what you've been looking at.

When you use the 'Close this site' button, it immediately closes this website and opens the Google search page in a new window.

You can also quickly close this site by using the ESC button on your computer keyboard. It immediately closes this website and opens the Google search page in a new window.

The 'Close this site' function doesn't delete your browser history. This means that if someone checks your browser history on your computer or mobile device, they will be able to see everything you looked at on our website.

Clear your browsing history regularly

Web browsers keep track of your online activity through your browser history, cookies and caching. This is so you can find websites you've visited before, but it also means other people can see this data.

To protect your privacy, it's a good idea to clear your browsing history regularly. You can choose to delete everything or only some things.

Find out how to clear your browsing history in:

  • Internet Explorer
  • Google Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Safari
  • Safari on iPhones or iPads.

For other browsers and devices, check the provider's website.

Use private browsing

Private browsing is an easy way to hide your browsing habits. If enabled, when you close your browser, all browsing history and stored cookies from future browsing sessions will automatically disappear.

However, the sites you visited during your current browsing session will record your browsing activity. Your internet service provider will also record this information. Any files you download using private browsing won't be deleted, so other people can access them if they use your device.

Find out how to enable private browsing in:

  • Internet Explorer
    • In the 'Tools' menu (the cog icon on top right of the browser window), select 'Safety', then 'InPrivate Browsing'.
  • Google Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Safari
  • Safari on iPhones or iPads.

For other browsers and devices, check the provider's website.

Accounts and passwords

Don't let your browser auto-save your passwords. While the auto-save function may be convenient, it gives anyone who uses your device access to your accounts.

When you are using an account with a password (e.g. your social media or email account), always log out before leaving the website.

Using other computers and devices

If you are worried about someone looking at your internet use, consider using a computer or device that they can't access.

This might be a computer at your local library, your work computer, or a family or friend's device. But again, don't auto-save any passwords and make sure you log out of your accounts when you've finished using the computer.

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

This advice is from "Tips to browse safely online" by The State of Queensland.
The content is licensed under the CC BY 4.0 license.
© The State of Queensland 2024.
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Tell the NSW Government to stop placing children in motels, hotels and caravan parks

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Who's signing

  • Linda from NSW signed 257 days ago
  • Dimitra from SA signed 285 days ago
  • Joan from QLD signed 289 days ago
  • Kinga from ACT signed 289 days ago
  • Lisa from NSW signed 290 days ago
  • Louisa from NSW signed 290 days ago
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  • Emely from ACT signed 310 days ago
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  • Michelle from WA signed 312 days ago
  • Evan from VIC signed 313 days ago
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  • Emily from NSW signed 314 days ago
  • Thomas from NSW signed 315 days ago
  • Alana from NSW signed 315 days ago
  • Louise from NSW signed 315 days ago
  • Cathy from NSW signed 315 days ago

1,268 have already signed.

Let's get to 500

No child should live in a motel room.

Yet this is the reality for hundreds of children who are removed from their homes by the NSW Government’s Department of Communities and Justice (DCJ) and forced into a revolving door of unstable and sometimes dangerous ‘alternative care arrangements’.

“They just move me around like a doggy in the pound pretty much, moving cage to cage.” That’s how a 16-year-old boy described it.

These settings, including hotels, motels, Airbnbs and caravan parks, are meant to be for emergencies when a foster home can’t be found. Yet the boy who described them as “cages” had been in this situation for over 500 days.

The experiences of children in alternative care arrangements

Dozens of children are in alternative care arrangements across NSW each month. Well over half of them are Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. Children with disability are also over-represented.

“You’re getting up and you’re moving every two weeks. You’re never in the same place, so it’s never stable… I was in hotels for six months.” – Child interviewed by the Advocate for Children and Young People

These young people are supervised by a changing roster of paid workers, often contracted by for-profit organisations outsourced from the government department responsible for their care. We have acted in at least one case where a six-year-old boy had over 100 adults acting as his caregiver at various times.

“I was out of school for about a year… barely [went to school] because I had to keep changing schools because I was moving.” – Child interviewed by the Advocate for Children and Young People

Some children told the Advocate for Children and Young People about cockroach infestations, broken showers, and living off takeaway food. Children talked about feeling unstable and like they had nowhere to call home, with one child saying she had to take a suitcase to school because she could be moved at any time. Several children said they were mistreated and abused, including a 12-year-old child who reported being sexually assaulted in a hotel.

No child should be forced into these experiences, least of all by a system that is meant to protect them.

“I’m Aboriginal. I had no assistance in finding my mob – still don’t know it.” – Child interviewed by the Advocate for Children and Young People

All children deserve safety, stability, and the best chance to live safely at home with their own family and kin. Do you agree?

 

Information is taken from the Advocate for Children and Young People’s Special Inquiry into Alternative Care Arrangements: https://www.acyp.nsw.gov.au/special-inquiry

What we want to see

The NSW Advocate for Children and Young People has called for an urgent transition away from alternative care arrangements, meaning children would no longer be forced into motels, hotels and caravan parks.

The Aboriginal Legal Service supports this call and is urging the NSW Government to act. We want to see a strategy for alternative options, including supported bail accommodation, as well as a bigger focus on early support for struggling families – not just removing children from their homes.

Young people have said they want these unstable, harmful placements to end. Please sign and support children’s voices to be heard.


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We acknowledge and pay our respects to the Traditional Custodians of the lands on which we live, work, and travel, and their Elders past and present.

Warning: This website may contain images and names of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who have passed away.