Business. Diane Rambaldini and Hadi El-Khoury publish a book to avoid the dangers of the internet and social networks. A read intended for teens and young adults but that can teach everyone.
Bank accounts, health data and other private information… Virtually more than one part of our life is not on the network. With the dangers that this entails. “It can be a weapon of mass destruction. And the problem is that many parents are disabled because they feel overwhelmed by technology and think that because young people know how to use tools, they also know how to protect themselves. Except that’s not necessarily the case.” Sorry Diane Rambaldini.
“A Digital Survival Guide”
This specialist in cybersecurity, based in Orne, has been interested in this topic for years. co-founder of a specialized company with Hadi El-Khoury, he focused on raising awareness among children ages 7-12: “We had the idea of a book as a “vacation notebook” about the dangers of the Internet and the good reflexes to have. The feedback was very good and we noticed that there was expectation in these topics. »
So the duo targeted a different age group for this fun and educational new book that tackles all facets of online risk, from data hacking to the problem of nudity (nude photos whose recipient can misuse) passing through false information, without falling into heaviness or psychosis. And if the target audience is between 15 and 30 years old, the older ones will also be able to discover a lot of things! “We wanted it as a digital survival guide,” confirms Diane Rambaldini, between two interventions in colleges and high schools where she details this “subject of society”.
Other projects are on the shelves of the two specialists who are campaigning to make the network more secure. So that the dramas linked to misuse stop pushing young people towards irreparable damage, like this 17-year-old American teenager who committed suicide a few weeks ago after being a victim of sextortion on the internet.
“Cybernetic envy”, €13.90 (Studyrama editions).
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