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Owned by Tim

HomeSafe Academy

31 members ‱ Free

HomeSafe Academy is here to help families stay safe, feel secure, and protected from scams. We want to turn victims into victors through preparation.

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20 contributions to Learn Online Security
And we're back!
Hoping everyone had a Merry Christmas and wishing everyone a Happy New Year!
And we're back!
2 likes ‱ Dec '25
@Tracy Stephenson LOL 😜 I’m working all over the “Holiday Season” so I’ll be taking a break after you all have had your breaks. As long as nothing gets broken so you’re forced to take a break from your break. I hope I have broken down my reply enough for you stay safe?
2 likes ‱ 30d
@Tracy Stephenson no pun intended right? LOL 😜
What Are the Top 10 Confidence Tricks on the Internet Today?
From my community to yours @Tracy Stephenson The internet is now the world’s biggest marketplace — and the biggest hunting ground for confidence tricksters. These scams don’t rely on hacking skills
 they rely on psychology. They work because they exploit trust, fear, urgency, loneliness, greed, hope, or curiosity. Here are 10 of the most common confidence tricks doing the rounds right now — the ones everyday Australians are falling for every single day: 1. The “Trusted Brand” Impersonation Scammers clone the websites of banks, Australia Post, Telstra, ATO, MyGov, or Netflix to “verify details” or “fix an account issue.” Red flag: Urgent login request + perfect-looking fake site. 2. The “Package Delivery” Text Trap A message claiming a parcel can’t be delivered until you pay a small fee or update details. Red flag: Random tracking numbers, weird links, or unfamiliar courier companies. 3. Investment & Crypto Impersonator Schemes Fake brokers, “experts,” or AI-generated influencers promising guaranteed returns. Red flag: Screenshots of fake profits + pushy personal account managers. 4. Romance Scams & Emotional Grooming Long-term manipulation where someone builds trust, then suddenly needs money for an “emergency.” Red flag: They’re perfect
 until they need funds. 5. Fake Online Stores Beautiful websites selling products at unreal prices — but nothing ever arrives. Red flag: No ABN, no physical address, no returns page, limited payment methods. 6. Job Opportunity & Work-From-Home Traps High-pay, low-effort jobs that require “training fees” or collecting/forwarding goods. Red flag: Payment before employment. 7. Social Media “Friend in Trouble” Hack A hacked account messages you urgently asking for help or money. Red flag: It feels out of character or rushed. 8. Fake Tech Support Pop-Ups A warning screen saying your device is infected and telling you to call a number. Red flag: Alarming language + random pop-ups that take over the screen.
What Are the Top 10 Confidence Tricks on the Internet Today?
What topics would you like to know about?
As we consider future podcast topics we'd like to hear your ideas. Share them here and one lucky member might get their idea covered!
What topics would you like to know about?
2 likes ‱ Dec '25
What are the best apps/programs to use over all devices to protect yourself against scams?
What motivated me to start HomeSafe Safety & Security Publishing and HomeSafe Academy?
This morning I have been going through my skool notifications and messages and it occurred to me that I haven’t really posted anything about what motivated me to start a skool community and why I have joined this community. So here it is 
 My motivation didn’t come from a single spark — it came from a few long-running forces converging: 1. Years working the frontline of security and safety I have spent a lot of time as a Security Officer & Safety Representative in NT/WA environments. I have witnessed and experienced firsthand how ordinary people including myself have been caught off-guard by preventable risks — violence, theft, scams, unsafe homes, poor situational awareness. That built a conviction: that everyday families need practical tools, not theory. 2. A belief that preparation turns fear into confidence My philosophy — observation, detection, reporting and deterrence = preparedness, layered protection — has shaped my mission. I want to help ordinary households apply the same simple principles used in professional security: perimeter→exterior→interior→core, colour-coded responses, ThinkSafe-ActSafe-HomeSafe. In other words, don’t panic — prepare. 3. A gap in the Australian family-safety space The public messaging I have encountered was scattered: a bit of police advice here, a pamphlet there, some online-safety tips thrown in. You didn’t see a unified system that: - spoke to regular homes - covered home safety, home security, and online safety together - gave step-by-step room-by-room action plans That gap has pushed me into creating a full publishing line. 4. A personal drive to leave a legacy This is emotional, not commercial. I want my work to: - prevent loss of life - stop innocent people becoming victims - help families protect children, elders, and finances - be something that I can look back on with pride That sense of legacy sits underneath everything — particularly now that I’m in my 60s. 5. A desire to teach and train, not just observe
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2 likes ‱ Dec '25
Well let’s see 
 Here’s a few questions on the topic of đŸ“± Social Media & Digital Footprint - Would you feel comfortable if a stranger saw your entire online history? - What personal information do people overshare without realising? - Should real names always be used online? - How do you decide who to trust in online groups? - Is privacy still possible online? Hope this gets some engagement?
2 likes ‱ Dec '25
Here’s 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 no—and 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, it’s 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 “I didn’t post my address or bank details, so I’m safe.” In reality, it’s 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 environments—but it’s 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 “no” or “I’m not comfortable”? A safe group allows questions, encourages verification, and never pressures members to overshare.
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Tim Stewart
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@tim-stewart-9214
HomeSafe Academy empowers families with practical guides and tools to stay safe, secure, and protected every day. Turning victims into victors!

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Joined Sep 29, 2025
Kununurra, West Australia