Internet fears over the child iPad boom
Miranda Suit, co-chairman of Safermedia, said yesterday: ‘Ofcom’s figures show the problem of dealing with the internet is still growing. ‘Parents have still not been able to catch up with their children’s technology skills and protect them adequately. ‘Children who use tablets are more easily able to use public wi-fi. Instead of sitting at the family PC they can just go to the local park or café. And lots of public wi-fi is unfiltered, meaning they can access whatever they want.’ She said she recognised the problems faced by parents. ‘The way children access the internet is getting more complex, and more difficult to monitor,’ said Miss Suit.
In a survey of 2,374 parents, Ofcom found that 64 per cent believed their online safety measures were effective. But half admitted their children knew more about the internet than them. The report also found that children aged 12 to 15 have never met almost a third of the ‘friends’ on social networking sites, opening them to the risk of grooming and bullying. On average, teenagers said they had 272 online friends, but had never met 78 of them. A third allowed their pages to be viewed by strangers, up from 22 per cent last year.
The Ofcom report warned: ‘Children with a social networking site profile that may be visible to people not known to them are more likely to have undertaken some kind of potentially risky online behaviour, such as adding people to their contacts they don’t know in person, or sending them photos or personal details.’
Alasdair Glennie