Public A digital-safety initiative for youth, women and the general public: content, training and outreach. Bring it to your community
Community & Social Impact

Be Internet Secure

A public-awareness initiative dedicated to educating individuals about digital safety. Through podcasts, videos, blogs, infographics and on-site workshops, the programme empowers people, especially youth and women, with the knowledge and tools they need to stay safe and responsible online.

Be Internet Secure is a cybersecurity awareness initiative by Secure Purple, dedicated to educating individuals about digital safety and online threats. Through engaging content, interactive training and community workshops, we empower people, especially youth and women, with the knowledge and tools needed to stay safe and responsible online.

Building a culture of cyber awareness. Be Internet Secure is aimed at promoting cybersecurity and cyber safety awareness on a mass scale. This project focuses on educating people about digital threats and best practices through engaging content and interactive training sessions. Our goal is to empower individuals with the knowledge and skills they need to navigate the internet safely and responsibly.

Engaging, educational content. A key component of Be Internet Secure is the production of high-quality educational content. We create and distribute videos, social media posts, blog articles and infographics to raise awareness about various cybersecurity threats. These resources help people understand important topics such as online privacy, data protection and cybercrime prevention in an accessible and engaging way.

Hands-on learning and school outreach. Our work is not limited to digital content. We also conduct on-site training and workshops to ensure deeper learning and engagement. We collaborate with schools to educate children of all age groups about cyber safety, digital rights and the prevention of cybercrimes. Our training sessions cover essential topics such as recognising cyber predators, avoiding online scams and practising safe internet habits.

Empowering women and ensuring safety for all. In addition to working with schools, we focus on capacity-building programmes for girls and women. Our workshops address critical digital safety concerns, including cyberbullying, online harassment, image-based abuse and financial fraud. By equipping participants with practical knowledge and tools, we help them confidently navigate the online world and protect themselves from digital threats.

At Be Internet Secure, we are committed to continuous awareness efforts. We actively produce and share content to keep our audience informed about emerging cyber risks. Through education, training and advocacy, we strive to create a safer and more secure online environment for everyone.

Our Commitment

Safer Online Spaces, Built One Session At A Time.

Our mission is simple: make digital safety knowledge accessible to everyone, regardless of background, age or technical experience. That means turning up in classrooms, community halls and living rooms, not just conference stages.

  • 1Mass-scale awareness content produced in plain language
  • 2Hands-on school workshops for children at every age tier
  • 3Dedicated workshops for women on harassment, abuse and fraud
  • 4Continuous production and sharing of new materials
Programme Reach

Five Years, Counted.

Be Internet Secure has shown up in classrooms, women's collectives and community halls that the cybersecurity industry rarely reaches. Here's what that has added up to.

People Trained 25,000+ Students, parents, teachers and community members reached through on-site workshops and outreach sessions.
Women & Girls 60%+ Of all participants, by design, not coincidence.
School & Community Sessions 120+ Age-tiered workshops across primary, middle and high-school classrooms.
Cities Reached 12+ Urban centres, satellite towns and rural schools across the country.
Special Initiative

The Kids Programme: Digital Safety Before It Matters

A dedicated age-tiered curriculum for children aged 7–16, delivered in primary and secondary school classrooms. Modules are taught through stories and interactive exercises that kids actually remember, so the lessons land before their first phone does.

  • Age 7–10 Stranger-danger online · family rules for sharing · asking a grown-up.
  • Age 11–13 First-phone guidelines · social media basics · password hygiene · cyberbullying.
  • Age 14–16 Image-based abuse · predator patterns · digital footprint · reporting pathways.
Four Core Objectives

What Be Internet Secure Delivers

Each strand of the programme targets a different audience with a different format, from mass-awareness content to hands-on workshops with children.

Building A Cyber-Awareness Culture

Mass-scale education on digital threats and best practice, produced as accessible content for everyday internet users who may not otherwise encounter security guidance.

  • Online privacy & data protection
  • Recognising cyber predators
  • Avoiding online scams
  • Safe internet habits

Engaging Educational Content

Digital content produced across formats so it meets people where they already are: short video, social post, long-form blog or visual infographic.

  • Podcast episodes
  • Short-form explainer videos
  • Social media posts
  • Blog articles & infographics

Hands-on Training & School Outreach

In-person workshops delivered in schools, tailored to age group so the material lands for primary, secondary and college-age students alike.

  • Age-tiered curriculum
  • Interactive classroom sessions
  • Teacher & parent briefings
  • Take-home family resources

Empowering Women

Dedicated capacity-building programmes for women and girls, centred on the specific harms they face online most often.

  • Cyberbullying & harassment response
  • Image-based abuse awareness
  • Financial fraud prevention
  • Account & device hardening
Topics Covered

Six Conversations Every Session Returns To

The curriculum is broad on purpose: from constitutional-grade digital rights to the very real, very specific harms that women and girls face online every day.

01 Foundations

Digital Rights

Your rights as an internet user: to privacy, to consent, to safe expression and to legal recourse when a platform, person or state crosses the line.

  • Right to privacy & data protection
  • Right to be forgotten
  • Freedom of expression online
02 Threat Landscape

Cyber Crimes

The full catalogue of criminal activity that lands in inboxes, DMs and group chats, framed so participants can spot the playbook before the hook lands.

  • Phishing & financial fraud
  • Identity theft & impersonation
  • Ransomware & data extortion
03 Defense

Prevention of Hacking

Practical, no-jargon hardening: the five or six habits that stop ninety percent of account takeovers and device compromise in the real world.

  • Strong passwords & MFA
  • Device & app hygiene
  • Recognising social engineering
04 Women-Led

Women & Cyber Safety

A dedicated strand built with women, for women, covering the patterns of targeting they disproportionately face, and the ones that slip under the radar of generic training.

  • Stalkerware & location tracking
  • Account & device hardening
  • Safe public-profile practices
05 Response

Cyber Harassment

How to recognise harassment patterns early, document evidence safely, and use the reporting pathways that actually work on the major platforms and with law enforcement.

  • Evidence capture & preservation
  • Platform reporting pathways
  • Legal & FIA complaint routes
06 Support

Women-Based Online Abuse

Non-consensual imagery, blackmail, doxxing and image-based abuse, with takedown routes, first-response steps and support pathways for survivors and their families.

  • Non-consensual imagery takedowns
  • Blackmail & sextortion response
  • Trusted helplines & counselling

"Safety online is no longer optional. It is a basic literacy. Be Internet Secure brings that literacy to the classrooms and living rooms that the security industry rarely reaches."

Be Internet Secure Programme Team
Common Questions

Everything You Might Want To Ask

For schools, partners and anyone looking to bring Be Internet Secure to their community.

How secure are your digital safety practices?

Our programmes are designed with the highest security standards in mind, including encryption, multi-factor authentication and continuous monitoring for our own systems, which participants see us demonstrate during the training.

Do you offer ongoing support after a workshop?

Yes. Schools, parents and community groups can reach our team 24/7 for follow-up questions, incident support or additional resources. A dedicated team of cybersecurity experts is available to help.

What industries and audiences do you serve?

We work across sectors (education, healthcare, finance, retail and beyond), but the flagship focus is community: schools, youth groups, women's collectives and the general public.

Can you customise the programme for our organisation?

Absolutely. Every organisation has unique concerns. Our team works with you to tailor the curriculum, choice of modules and delivery format to match your audience and context.

What types of cyber threats does the content cover?

Malware, ransomware, phishing, data breaches, insider threats, financial scams, cyberbullying, harassment, image-based abuse and impersonation: the full surface that everyday users actually face.

How is participant data privacy ensured?

We apply strict access controls, encryption protocols and compliance with international data protection regulations. No participant details are shared outside the immediate programme team.

How do we get started?

Contact us via the website or email ask@securepurple.com. Our team guides you through an initial consultation, audience profiling and module selection.

What is your approach to incident response?

Our approach is immediate detection, containment, eradication and recovery, minimising impact and restoring normal operations as quickly as possible. We walk participants through this same framework so they can apply it at home.

Do you offer cybersecurity training for employees?

Yes. We run employee-facing training programmes designed to be engaging and practical, not compliance-theatre. Topics can be tailored to the team's risk profile.

How often should awareness material be refreshed?

Cybersecurity is an ongoing process. Threats evolve, platforms change, and so should the content. We recommend a refresh cadence at least annually, with top-ups after any major industry shift or incident wave.

Voices from the programme

What participants say about Be Internet Secure.

It's the first cybersecurity session I've attended that didn't feel like a sales pitch. Everything we learned we could use the same evening.
Kinza Hashim Student
I thought hacking was scary. Now I know how to stay safe online and I even showed my mom how to check if her email was leaked.
Arham Khan Student, age 11

Partner With Us To
Reach More Communities.