Assistance for Parents and Pedagogues to Protect Children in the Digital Jungle is Needed


BERLIN, February 11 /PRNewswire/ --

- Youth Protection Roundtable - YPRT

   An international experts' survey assigns the task to prevent children 
from encountering unwanted and harmful content on the Internet with highest 
priority to parents and pedagogues, while policy makers, companies, and the 
police are seen as carers with less relevance.

Inadequate sexual content is named by 68% of the respondents as most
harmful followed by unsuitable contacts (58%) and violent content (56%).
With social networking communities becoming the most popular area of the
Internet for young people, being a victim of privacy fraud becomes most
likely. 50% of the respondents to the survey carried out by the German-based
Stiftung Digitale Chancen within the Youth Protection Roundtable in 26
European countries judge this as a significant threat.

"In social community sites approved technologies like filter software are
less effective. Therefore it is more then ever up to parents and pedagogues
to protect children. But for many adults the digital world is unexplored
terrain. While children are on an expedition through the digital jungle,
their adult carers need support and advice to preserve them from unexpected
risks and light-headed online behaviour," says Prof. Dr. Herbert Kubicek,
Scientific Director of Stiftung Digitale Chancen.

Therefore the Youth Protection Roundtable develops guidelines for a safe
and secure use of the Internet by children and youth. The project builds on
dialogue and exchange of views between technical experts and children's
welfare specialists to find suitable solutions for youth protection online.

The YPRT is a network of 32 international partners funded by the European
Commission within the Safer Internet Programme.

Please find the complete survey results and printable graphics under
http://www.yprt.eu/survey

http://www.yprt.eu

Stiftung Digitale Chancen
    Jutta Croll, Managing Director
    Tel.: +49-30-437277-30
    E-Mail: jcroll@digitale-chancen.de



© PR Newswire Association LLC.

News archive

Subscribe to AfterDawn's weekly newsletter.