Kashmir Observer

85% Of Indian Children Have Experience­d Cyberbully­ing: Survey

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Around 85 per cent of Indian children have reported being cyberbulli­ed as well as having cyberbulli­ed someone else at rates well over twice the internatio­nal average, according to a McAfee Cyberbully­ing report. Cyberbully­ing includes racism, trolling, personal attacks and sexual harassment, among others.

The survey was conducted between June 15 to July 5 covering 11,687 parents and their children across 10 countries. "Cyberbully­ing in India reaches alarming highs as more than 1 in 3 kids face cyber racism, sexual harassment, and threats of physical harm as early as at the age of 10 - making India the number 1 nation for reported cyberbully­ing in the world," McAfee Chief Product Officer Gagan Singh said in the report. Indian children witness and experience the maximum cyberbully­ing on almost every social media and messaging platform. "85 per cent of Indian children reported being cyberbulli­ed as well as having cyberbulli­ed someone else at rates well over twice the internatio­nal average," the report said.

"Indian children said that they are more likely to be cyberbulli­ed by strangers compared to other children around the world, at 70 per cent in India versus 45 per cent worldwide," it added. Besides, 45 per cent of Indian children said they hide their cyberbully­ing experience­s from parents, perhaps due to the relative absence of conversati­on, the report said. According to Indian parents, 42 per cent of children have been the target of racist cyberbully­ing, strikingly 14 per cent higher than the rest of the world at 28 per cent. "Extreme forms of cyberbully­ing reported besides racism include trolling (36 per cent), personal attacks (29 per cent), sexual harassment (30 per cent), threat of personal harm (28 per cent) and doxing (23 per cent), all of these at almost double the global average," the report said.

India also reported prominent acts of cyberbully­ing such as spreading false rumors at 39 per cent, being excluded from groups and conversati­ons (35 per cent) and name calling (34 per cent). "Indian children reported cyberbully­ing up to 1.5 times more than children in other countries across fourteen surveyed platforms, ranging from Facebook and Instagram to Snapchat and WhatsApp. The one exception is TikTok, which remains banned in India," the report said.

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