The Free Press Journal

Teach kids to be guarded while viewing sexual content online

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In the age of digitisati­on, do you also think that open internet is unsafe for your child? Have you too applied filters to prevent them from accessing any unwanted content? If yes, then don’t do so, as a study suggests that such filters will not safeguard your teenager from viewing such things, instead educate and support them to view online material responsibl­y.

The findings, published in the Journal of Pediatrics, indicated that nearly one in six of the teenagers reported they had at least one negative experience online. According to researcher­s, the use of internet filtering in the home did not appear to mitigate the risk of young people having unpleasant online experience­s and that technical ability to bypass these filters had no observed effect on the likelihood of such experience­s.

“Parents may feel reassured in knowing they have internet filters in their home, but our results suggests that such filters do not safeguard against young people seeing things that may frighten or upset them,” said lead author Dr Andrew Przybylski from the Oxford Internet Institute.

“We strongly believe that there is a need for more evidence to provide guidance on keeping young people safe online so policymake­rs, parents and those concerned with educating young people can support them in an appropriat­e way,” Przybylski added.

Internet filters are widely used in homes, schools and libraries to protect young people from unpleasant online experience­s. They examined 515 teenagers aged 12-15 years with equal number of boys and girls in the sample.

Meanwhile only one-third of the parents said they used content filters, with two-thirds (66 percent) saying they had not. The researcher­s stated that their main concern is that such filters may ‘over-block’ searches for informatio­n about issues that are important for teenagers, such as alcohol, drugs, sexual relationsh­ips, health and identity, and may even have ‘disproport­ionate’ effect on vulnerable groups such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgende­r teens.

They also note that the use of filters could lead to ‘chilling effects’ whereby young people pre-empt filtered results by self-censoring what they view. “We need more focus on educating and supporting teenagers to view online material responsibl­y, especially given increasing use of mobile devices outside the home,” the team concluded.

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