LISTEN: Children admit to seeing adult content online
Fifty per cent of school children surveyed say they’ve seen sexual, violent and other adult material online.
Fifty per cent of school children surveyed by the NSPCC admit they’ve seen sexual, violent and other adult material on social media sites, apps and games.
And 78% of children reported that they had joined social media sites before reaching the minimum age of 13 as stipulated by many in the terms and conditions.
We've been hearing from Jayne Laidlaw, a service manager for ChildLine about the survey:
The findings are revealed in the latest update of the Net Aware guide, produced by the NSPCC in partnership with O2.
Now available for the first time as a free mobile app, it is the UK’s only parents’ guide to 50 of the most popular social media sites, apps, and games, that young people use, designed to help them talk to their children about socialising safely online.
To inform the guide, NSPCC and O2 asked 1,725 children and young people and over 500 parents on the O2 / NSPCC ‘Parent Advisory Board’ to review and rate the most popular social networking sites and apps.
The top five sites where young people reported seeing inappropriate content were Sickipedia (100% of children surveyed), Chatroulette (92%), Omegle (89%), Ask.fm (88%), and Yik Yak (74%).
Despite repeated calls for improvements in online safety, the Net Aware results have highlighted the scale with which children and young people are being exposed to inappropriate content on social media sites.
The research revealed young people were more likely than parents to report seeing harmful content on three quarters of the sites they looked at. And while young people rated Chatroulette, Omegle and Tumblr as high risk for sexual content, parents rated them as low risk - highlighting the need for parents to find out more about these sites so they can have informed conversations with their children about staying safe online.
Peter Wanless, NSPCC chief executive, said: “Our Net Aware research has shown that children are far more likely than parents to report seeing sexual, violent, or other adult content on social media. It’s vital that parents sit down together with their children regularly to talk about which social media sites they are using, and how to get help if they need it.
“More than sixty per cent of young people we asked said social media platforms need to do more to keep children safe. These companies need to take more responsibility for keeping children safe online. We think there should be minimum standards in place and a new regulator may be required if industry cannot regulate itself.
“Thankfully, it’s not all bad news. Around half of the sites in Net Aware have made improvements to their privacy settings and reporting functions; a trend I hope will continue. The NSPCC will continue to campaign for a safer internet, provide support for children through ChildLine, and advise parents through our partnership with O2.”