Hereâs some answers from my community to yours ⊠Would you feel comfortable if a stranger saw your entire online history? For most people, the honest answer is noâand that discomfort is a useful warning sign. Your online history tells a story about your habits, beliefs, location, routines, finances, health concerns, and even your emotional state. At HomeSafe Academy, we teach that if something feels too personal to hand to a stranger in a shopping centre, itâs too personal to leave unprotected online. Awareness is the first layer of digital safety. What personal information do people overshare without realising? People often think âI didnât post my address or bank details, so Iâm safe.â In reality, itâs the small details combined that create risk. Common oversharing includes: - Full birthdates - Daily routines and locations - Photos showing home layouts, cars, uniforms, or school logos - Family relationships and names - Emotional states (stress, grief, loneliness), which scammers actively exploit HomeSafe teaches that patterns are more valuable than single facts to criminals. Should real names always be used online? Not always. Using a real name can be appropriate in professional or trusted environmentsâbut itâs not a requirement everywhere. From a HomeSafe perspective, safety comes before visibility. If using a real name increases the chance of being identified, tracked, or targeted, a controlled or partial identity is often the safer choice. The key is intention: Why am I sharing this, and who benefits? How do you decide who to trust in online groups? Trust online should be earned slowly, not granted quickly. HomeSafe encourages people to look beyond friendly language and shared interests. Ask: - Do actions match words over time? - Are they pushing urgency, secrecy, or emotional pressure? - Do they respect boundaries when you say ânoâ or âIâm not comfortableâ? A safe group allows questions, encourages verification, and never pressures members to overshare.