Sexting
Sexting is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos. They are generally sent using a mobile phone but can also include posting this type of material online. While sharing suggestive images or text messages may seem like innocent flirting or be considered funny for young people, sexting can have serious social and legal consequences. What do I need to know?
Stay calm and delete
If you have sent a picture or video you regret to a friend or your girlfriend/boyfriend ask them to delete it immediately. If it is posted online then un-tag yourself and report it so it can be removed. Ask friends you trust to help hunt down images and also delete and/or report those images. If you think it would help you could tell a trusted adult at school and they may be able to send a note to students directing them to delete any private photos or videos they have received without naming you.
Report it
If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on. If they are at your school you can report them to a teacher if you choose to. It is not OK for them to share your image without your permission.
Try to relax and talk to someone
If the video or image has already spread online, try to stay calm. You might like to have a free and confidential talk with Kids Helpline. You can phone them on 1800 551 800 for advice and how to handle the situation. You might also want to tell your parents. It is possible they may find out some other way. They might be upset, angry or in shock, so you might like to ask a trusted friend or relative to help.
What if the police get involved?
The Police sometimes need to become involved in sexting cases where creating and/or distributing sexual images with minors constitutes the production and/or distribution of child pornography. This differs under state laws.
Where the Police are involved, it’s best to be honest. Tell them how the video/image was made and where it might have been sent/posted. They will want to know who was involved and whether there was consent from all involved. Their concern is preventing any harm to you and other young people.
Take care of yourself
Avoid looking at the video/image and any comments. Distract yourself by spending time with friends and family that you trust. Remember to stay positive. Many people have had similar experiences. Stay strong, you will be ok.
http://esafety.gov.au/esafety-information/esafety-issues/sexting. Acesso em: 27/07/15
“Sexting” in Portuguese means
Sexting
Sexting is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos. They are generally sent using a mobile phone but can also include posting this type of material online. While sharing suggestive images or text messages may seem like innocent flirting or be considered funny for young people, sexting can have serious social and legal consequences. What do I need to know?
Stay calm and delete
If you have sent a picture or video you regret to a friend or your girlfriend/boyfriend ask them to delete it immediately. If it is posted online then un-tag yourself and report it so it can be removed. Ask friends you trust to help hunt down images and also delete and/or report those images. If you think it would help you could tell a trusted adult at school and they may be able to send a note to students directing them to delete any private photos or videos they have received without naming you.
Report it
If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on. If they are at your school you can report them to a teacher if you choose to. It is not OK for them to share your image without your permission.
Try to relax and talk to someone
If the video or image has already spread online, try to stay calm. You might like to have a free and confidential talk with Kids Helpline. You can phone them on 1800 551 800 for advice and how to handle the situation. You might also want to tell your parents. It is possible they may find out some other way. They might be upset, angry or in shock, so you might like to ask a trusted friend or relative to help.
What if the police get involved?
The Police sometimes need to become involved in sexting cases where creating and/or distributing sexual images with minors constitutes the production and/or distribution of child pornography. This differs under state laws.
Where the Police are involved, it’s best to be honest. Tell them how the video/image was made and where it might have been sent/posted. They will want to know who was involved and whether there was consent from all involved. Their concern is preventing any harm to you and other young people.
Take care of yourself
Avoid looking at the video/image and any comments. Distract yourself by spending time with friends and family that you trust. Remember to stay positive. Many people have had similar experiences. Stay strong, you will be ok.
http://esafety.gov.au/esafety-information/esafety-issues/sexting. Acesso em: 27/07/15
According to the text, sexting
I. is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos.
II. is the gesture of posting messages or sexual photos online.
III. can have serious social and legal consequences.
IV. can make people get into serious troubles.
V. is not a joke and is very dangerous.
It isAccording to the text, sexting
I. is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos.
II. is the gesture of posting messages or sexual photos online.
III. can have serious social and legal consequences.
IV. can make people get into serious troubles.
V. is not a joke and is very dangerous.
It is CORRECT
Sexting
Sexting is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos. They are generally sent using a mobile phone but can also include posting this type of material online. While sharing suggestive images or text messages may seem like innocent flirting or be considered funny for young people, sexting can have serious social and legal consequences. What do I need to know?
Stay calm and delete
If you have sent a picture or video you regret to a friend or your girlfriend/boyfriend ask them to delete it immediately. If it is posted online then un-tag yourself and report it so it can be removed. Ask friends you trust to help hunt down images and also delete and/or report those images. If you think it would help you could tell a trusted adult at school and they may be able to send a note to students directing them to delete any private photos or videos they have received without naming you.
Report it
If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on. If they are at your school you can report them to a teacher if you choose to. It is not OK for them to share your image without your permission.
Try to relax and talk to someone
If the video or image has already spread online, try to stay calm. You might like to have a free and confidential talk with Kids Helpline. You can phone them on 1800 551 800 for advice and how to handle the situation. You might also want to tell your parents. It is possible they may find out some other way. They might be upset, angry or in shock, so you might like to ask a trusted friend or relative to help.
What if the police get involved?
The Police sometimes need to become involved in sexting cases where creating and/or distributing sexual images with minors constitutes the production and/or distribution of child pornography. This differs under state laws.
Where the Police are involved, it’s best to be honest. Tell them how the video/image was made and where it might have been sent/posted. They will want to know who was involved and whether there was consent from all involved. Their concern is preventing any harm to you and other young people.
Take care of yourself
Avoid looking at the video/image and any comments. Distract yourself by spending time with friends and family that you trust. Remember to stay positive. Many people have had similar experiences. Stay strong, you will be ok.
http://esafety.gov.au/esafety-information/esafety-issues/sexting. Acesso em: 27/07/15
“regret” (paragraph two) in Portuguese means
Sexting
Sexting is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos. They are generally sent using a mobile phone but can also include posting this type of material online. While sharing suggestive images or text messages may seem like innocent flirting or be considered funny for young people, sexting can have serious social and legal consequences. What do I need to know?
Stay calm and delete
If you have sent a picture or video you regret to a friend or your girlfriend/boyfriend ask them to delete it immediately. If it is posted online then un-tag yourself and report it so it can be removed. Ask friends you trust to help hunt down images and also delete and/or report those images. If you think it would help you could tell a trusted adult at school and they may be able to send a note to students directing them to delete any private photos or videos they have received without naming you.
Report it
If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on. If they are at your school you can report them to a teacher if you choose to. It is not OK for them to share your image without your permission.
Try to relax and talk to someone
If the video or image has already spread online, try to stay calm. You might like to have a free and confidential talk with Kids Helpline. You can phone them on 1800 551 800 for advice and how to handle the situation. You might also want to tell your parents. It is possible they may find out some other way. They might be upset, angry or in shock, so you might like to ask a trusted friend or relative to help.
What if the police get involved?
The Police sometimes need to become involved in sexting cases where creating and/or distributing sexual images with minors constitutes the production and/or distribution of child pornography. This differs under state laws.
Where the Police are involved, it’s best to be honest. Tell them how the video/image was made and where it might have been sent/posted. They will want to know who was involved and whether there was consent from all involved. Their concern is preventing any harm to you and other young people.
Take care of yourself
Avoid looking at the video/image and any comments. Distract yourself by spending time with friends and family that you trust. Remember to stay positive. Many people have had similar experiences. Stay strong, you will be ok.
http://esafety.gov.au/esafety-information/esafety-issues/sexting. Acesso em: 27/07/15
In the sentence “If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on” (paragraph three), “they” is related to
Sexting
Sexting is the sending of provocative or sexual photos, messages or videos. They are generally sent using a mobile phone but can also include posting this type of material online. While sharing suggestive images or text messages may seem like innocent flirting or be considered funny for young people, sexting can have serious social and legal consequences. What do I need to know?
Stay calm and delete
If you have sent a picture or video you regret to a friend or your girlfriend/boyfriend ask them to delete it immediately. If it is posted online then un-tag yourself and report it so it can be removed. Ask friends you trust to help hunt down images and also delete and/or report those images. If you think it would help you could tell a trusted adult at school and they may be able to send a note to students directing them to delete any private photos or videos they have received without naming you.
Report it
If someone else has posted sexual or naked photos or videos of you online, report them to the service they posted it on. If they are at your school you can report them to a teacher if you choose to. It is not OK for them to share your image without your permission.
Try to relax and talk to someone
If the video or image has already spread online, try to stay calm. You might like to have a free and confidential talk with Kids Helpline. You can phone them on 1800 551 800 for advice and how to handle the situation. You might also want to tell your parents. It is possible they may find out some other way. They might be upset, angry or in shock, so you might like to ask a trusted friend or relative to help.
What if the police get involved?
The Police sometimes need to become involved in sexting cases where creating and/or distributing sexual images with minors constitutes the production and/or distribution of child pornography. This differs under state laws.
Where the Police are involved, it’s best to be honest. Tell them how the video/image was made and where it might have been sent/posted. They will want to know who was involved and whether there was consent from all involved. Their concern is preventing any harm to you and other young people.
Take care of yourself
Avoid looking at the video/image and any comments. Distract yourself by spending time with friends and family that you trust. Remember to stay positive. Many people have had similar experiences. Stay strong, you will be ok.
http://esafety.gov.au/esafety-information/esafety-issues/sexting. Acesso em: 27/07/15
“them”, “They”, and “Their” (in paragraph seven) are
INTELLIGENT CITIES II
How wifi is reinventing our city parks
A walk through New York City\\'s Bryant Park is a walk through time. Designed during the Great Depression on
the site of a former reservoir and executed under the leadership of Parks Commissioner Robert Moses, the park
was inspired by French classicist gardens. Its gravel paths in the shade of London Plane trees suited the rhythm
of life in pre-air-conditioned New York. Today the park, which sits behind the great main branch of the public
library, has cafes, entertainment, a reading library, lawn games — all amenities tuned to contemporary urban
life.
One of the most important amenities, though, is invisible. A cloud of wifi hovers over the park, bringing activities
that Moses, a truly ambitious urban planner, could not have imagined. Those trees that shaded city-dwellers out
for a stroll decades ago now keep the glare off touch screens. And despite the fears that mobile communication
technology would drive us all into lives of wireless isolation, the opposite seems to be happening. Bryant Park,
like myriad parks and plazas in other cities, is returning to a role it filled generations ago: a place to share, read,
write, gossip, and debate...in short, communicate.
Technology has always shaped the city, changing our relationship to time, space, nature and each other, but
today\\'s technologies are so small it\\'s hard to see how that happens. Yet ubiquitous data and information
communication technologies (ICT) such as smart-phones, tablet computers, and digital books, are changing the
way we interact with the built environment and our fellow citizens.
The success of the rejuvenated Bryant Park raises familiar questions for designers and planners.
What exactly are the essential ingredients of a great urban space? Can they be measured? In 1980, influential
urbanist William Holly Whyte published The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces, a meticulous study of how
people used open space in the city. Whyte, who had been involved for more than a
decade in the comprehensive plan for New York, wondered if all the parks and plazas were actually performing
the way the architects and planners assumed they would. So he began to watch people.
And film them. It was a radical project at the time, as no one had done any systematic research on how people
actually used the spaces designed for them. Why were some brand new plazas empty while people crowded
into others? (...)
By Susan Piedmont-Palladino. http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/. Adaptado.
De acordo com o texto,
I. os parques de Nova Iorque passaram por grandes transformações desde que foram construídos, considerados, hoje, muito atrativos porque estão situados nas proximidades do centro financeiro da cidade, com muitas livrarias e lojas em volta.
II. o projeto urbanístico de Nova Iorque, idealizado há várias décadas, previa grandes mudanças em seus parques, tal como no Parque Bryant, onde a Tecnologia da Informação e Comunicação (TIC) é o grande diferencial.
III. os recursos mais importantes do Parque Bryant são invisíveis, pois câmaras de segurança escondidas sob as árvores mais altas, onde estão também os monitores, enviam informações, em tempo real, para o departamento de polícia da cidade.
IV. apesar dos temores de que a tecnologia móvel levasse todos nós ao isolamento, o contrário parece estar acontecendo; o Parque Bryant, como outros parques, está retornando ao papel que teve antes: um lugar para ler, compartilhar, fofocar, debater, em suma, comunicar-se.
V. o sucesso da reforma do Parque Bryant levanta algumas questões, para os desenhistas e projetistas, sobre as coisas que são exatamente essenciais a um grande espaço urbano e se essas coisas podem ser medidas.
Estão CORRETAS apenas