tailieunhanh - Towards a better internet for children

This report presents new findings and further analysis of the EU Kids Online 25 country survey. It also brings together our previously published findings relevant to European Commission Vice President Kroes’ CEO Coalition recent initiative to make the internet a better place for children. New results show that, of nine different kinds of parental worries about their child, online risks – being contacted by strangers (33% parents) or seeing inappropriate content (32% parents) - rank 5th and 6th. Will the Coalition’s principles help manage online risk of harm, and so address parental concerns? Our evidence supports recommendations about initiatives that industry can take under four of the five headings considered by the CEO Coalition. Simple and. | ISSN 2045-256X Towards a better internet for children Sonia Livingstone Kjartan Olafsson Brian O Neill and Veronica Donoso Summary This report presents new findings and further analysis of the EU Kids Online 25 country survey. It also brings together our previously published findings relevant to European Commission Vice President Kroes CEO Coalition recent initiative to make the internet a better place for children. New results show that of nine different kinds of parental worries about their child online risks -being contacted by strangers 33 parents or seeing inappropriate content 32 parents - rank 5th and 6th. Will the Coalition s principles help manage online risk of harm and so address parental concerns Our evidence supports recommendations about initiatives that industry can take under four of the five headings considered by the CEO Coalition. Simple and robust reporting tools 13 of children who were upset by an online risk say they have used reporting tools and two thirds of those who used them found them helpful. Country differences are considerable 35 of children who were bothered by an online risk have used reporting tools in Turkey but just 2 of such children in Hungary. Children are more likely to use reporting tools when upset online if they come from a poorer home if they are a girl if they experience psychological difficulties or if they are more active online. This suggests the tools meet a need and should be promoted more widely. Limited ease of use and effectiveness are likely to impede take-up. Age-appropriate privacy settings 43 of 9-16 year old SNS users keep their profile private 28 have it partially private and 26 have it public. Children who have their profile set to public are also more likely to display their phone number or address on their SNS profile. More efforts are needed to promote the use of privacy settings and make them user-friendly. Children are more likely to have a public profile if they cannot understand or manage the .

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