RiskEye Partner with ARAG to Create Online Security Service for the NAPD

In this blog post we take a look at the interview given to Fearghal O’Connor of The Sunday Independent about the new partnership between RiskEye, ARAG and the NAPD.

A New and Innovative Service

RiskEye and ARAG Legal Expenses Insurer joined forces in 2023 to provide a new service that protects organisations online. The National Association of Principals and Deputy Principals (NAPD) are the first organisation to benefit from this alliance in a bid to protect school principals who are struggling to deal with issues arising on social media.

RiskEye founder Nicola Byrne, is aiming to implement similar services for other professions and is in talks with both ARAG and Aviva about offerings in a number of other countries.

Byrne said that the issues facing school principals online are diverse and can include unfavourable school reviews, bullying and harassment and serious allegations against teachers or principals on social media platforms.

“ARAG already provides school principals with insurance protection if they find themselves in a legal dispute. Our product adds to this package to offer social media protection with personal and emotional support for principals”

NAPD deputy director Rachel O’Connor said that the new service was “ a very solution-focused hands-on, coaching approach - helping schools and leaders both mitigate and moderate these online issues that can cause our members’ significant distress”

“A significant percentage of calls we receive via our NAPD Confidential Support Service are issues such as bullying, intimidation, parody accounts, possible reputational damage etc - all as a result of online activity” said O’Connor. “We can help if, for example, a student in the school has targeted a teacher or if a parent is targeting the governing board,” said Byrne.

Experts in Online Risk And Mitigation

RiskEye has been assisting clients from small independent businesses to large corporates in Ireland, UK and US for the last 10 years. Organisations such as Bus Eireann and Dublin City University are assisted by the knowledge and expertise of RiskEye in mitigating damaging and harmful content on social media.

“It doesn’t matter what the issue is. We have a strategy to get different materials taken down and we can guide school principals through the process. Our aim is to help stop the content happening online and to bring the issue, whatever it happens to be, back to the real world and to protect everybody on the pitch.

“We are not setting ourselves up as a referee to determine who is right or wrong in a situation. All points of view may be valid. But what we’re trying to do is to stop the internet being weaponised to cause harm.”

For example, one case where RiskEye is involved relates to a teacher who is unhappy in the classroom and who doesn’t believe the principal is looking out for his or her best interests.

“That teacher feels they are not getting validated in the real world and has taken to certain Facebook groups or educators and used language that is causing a lot of hurt to other teachers in the school. They have named the school and so people know who the principal is.

“We have other situations where pupils are posting pictures of teachers and saying all sorts of untoward things. The problem is these things, once they are out there on social media, can then be brought up at a review board or with the Department of Education and can start casting doubt on a teacher’s performance, regardless of whether the criticisms are warranted or not.”

“In the past, these things might have been deemed as just watercooler banter or just written on a toilet door but now they are going out across a public forum and are there for all to see - parents, fellow teachers , the department, whoever. People are interpreting what they see and making judgements based on limited information and this can cause a huge amount of hurt and pain in the real world. We’re not there to act as a referee but we are very much experts in data and what we’re trying to do is get everything back into the normal processes in the real world that have been developed for dealing with these types of issues before the consequences get out of control.”

According to Byrne, while the rapid proliferation of social media is undoubtedly leading to major issues, the laws and regulations needed to police it effectively are already in place.

“We can’t keep making rules that can’t be enforced.” she said. “We don’t need any more laws, rules or data protection policies. We just need to enforce the rules and policies that we have.”

To read the full article click here

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RiskEye Partners with ARAG Ireland