WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Thirty-three percent of teens say their parents know little or nothing about what they do online. Forty percent of teens think its safe to chat with people they dont know. June has been declared National Internet Safety Month to help protect our children.

GEICO and the Internet Keep Safe Coalition have provided action steps parents can take to protect their families online:

1. Keep the computer in a common room in the house and position the monitor so its available for public viewing.

2. Establish rules for using the Internet and teach your child important safety guidelines.

3. Understand social networking. Teach your kids that people online are not always who they say they are. Teach your kids how to use the privacy settings and to keep any identifying information off their blogs and social networking pages.

4. Tell your kids to keep their personal information protected. Children should never give their real name, address, phone number, the name of their school or a picture to anyone they meet online. NEVER let your children meet in person with someone they only know from the Internet.

5. Protect your childrens passwords and create generic names. Make sure your kids dont have screen names or aliases that reveal their personal information including their full name, age, gender, etc.

6. Frequently check your computers Internet history and monitor your childrens e-mail account. Let them know youre checking it and why youre doing it, and talk about potential online dangers.

7. Spend time with your children when theyre online. Have them show you their favorite sites.

8. Teach your children cyber ethics. Tell them to never participate in cyber-bullying or online harassment. If its negative, dont post it, dont text it and dont pass it on. The rules of acceptable behavior in the real world and virtual world are the same.

9. Be computer savvy. Secure your computer with user accounts. Use antivirus, antispyware and a firewall. Keep them current but dont rely on them as your only line of defense. For an easy, step-by-step tutorial for parents, go to www.ikeepsafe.org/PRC.

10. Teach your children to keep telling a parent, teacher or trusted adult if they feel uncomfortable about anything theyve seen on a computer.

For additional information, visit www.iKeepSafe.org/geico.