
Parental control platform to limit childrens’ exposure to harmful language
An online platform which requests anonymous submissions from parents/guardians of examples of harmful online language experienced by children was launched today by Amárach Research, Cilter, the DCU Anti-Bullying Centre, and SFI (Science Foundation Ireland) funded ADAPT centre (“the Consortium”).
The submissions will be used to inform parental control technology for smartphones. This technology will sit in the operating systems of smartphones, and will prevent children being exposed to cyber-bullying, grooming, and self-harm content, as well as alerting parents/guardians if their child is attempting to send or receive this content. The data gathered in this survey will be the world’s first repository of harmful verbatim private language that children experience.
The newly released research, which was carried out by Amárach on behalf of Cilter, also shows that over 70% of five to eight year-olds (Junior Infants to 2nd Class children) have access to a smartphone. This follows the recent report by Cyber Safe Kids (CSK) which indicated that 93% of eight to 12-year-olds own a personal smart device, and 100% of 12–16-year-olds do.
The Amárach research also demonstrates sharp increases in social media/messaging usage among children as they start secondary school, coupled with parental supervision of internet use dropping significantly at this time – over 80% of parents of children with smartphones aged 11+ say that their child’s internet access is only sometimes or never supervised. Children are also spending significant time using smartphones in their bedrooms.
When considered alongside recent data this paints a clear picture of the vulnerability of children online. Recent CSK data showed that 84% of 12-year-olds have their own social media/messaging account, and National Society Prevention of Cruelty to Children figures also show the prevalence of platforms like TikTok, Snapchat and Instagram involved in instances of child-sexual grooming (73%). The Australian e-safety commissioner recently revealed that 16% of self-generated child sexual abuse material was created in children’s bedrooms.
Rena Maycock, chief executive officer, Cilter, said: “This is a game-changing opportunity for parents and guardians to contribute to something that will play a central role in protecting young people. The benefits and freedom that the internet provides kids can be amazing, however the dangers are becoming increasingly prevalent. We’re building the Cilter software solution that will block outgoing and incoming harmful content on smartphones, while providing parents and guardians with the peace of mind that if there is anything they need to be aware of, they will be. The language examples collected in this research from parents and caregivers in Ireland will directly contribute to the success of the software.”
Prof James O’Higgins Norman, director, DCU Anti-Bullying Centre, said: “The data captured in this study will be truly unique and contribute to building advanced child protection software. Peer-to-peer messaging is very different from public posts on social media, and databases of private harmful language are not publicly available. That’s why this research is so important when building datasets to create this technology.”
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