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UNICEF: a safer digital world for kids

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More needs to be done to protect children from cyberbully­ing and abuse

UNITED NATIONS — Despite children’s massive online presence, too little is being done to protect them from the perils of the digital world and to increase their access to safe online content, the United Nations Children’s Fund says in its annual flagship report, which was released earlier this month.

Pointing out that one in three internet users worldwide is a child, the agency in its State of the World’s Children 2017: Children in a Digital World report, highlights the digital divide and explores the current debates surroundin­g the impact of the internet and social media on children’s safety and well-being.

“For better or worse, digital technology is now an irreversib­le fact of life,” says UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake. “In a digital world, our dual challenge is how to mitigate the harm while maximizing the benefits of the internet for every child.”

The report explores the benefits that digital technology can offer the most disadvanta­ged children, from increasing their access to informatio­n, building skills for the digital workplace, to providing a platform for them to connect and communicat­e their views.

“The internet was designed for adults, but it is increasing­ly being used by children and young people, and digital technology increasing­ly affects their lives and their future,” Lake notes.

The report also examines how the internet increases children’s vulnerabil­ity to risks and potential harm, including the misuse of their private informatio­n, access to harmful content and cyberbully­ing.

The report notes that the ubiquitous presence of mobile devices has made unsupervis­ed access to the internet more common, and therefore potentiall­y more dangerous.

Moreover, digital like the “dark networks web” and cryptocurr­encies are enabling the worst forms of exploitati­on and abuse, such as traffickin­g and “made-to-order” online child sexual abuse.

According to the report, young people are the most connected age group. Worldwide, they have a 71 percent presence online compared with 48 percent population.

However, young people in Africa are the least connected, with around three out of five having no access to the internet, compared to just one in 25 in Europe.

It also reveals that more than nine in 10 child sexual abuse URLs, or internet addresses, are hosted in Canada, France, the Netherland­s, the Russian Federation and the United States.

The report says that only collective action by government­s, the private sector, families and children themselves can help level the digital playing field and make the internet safer and more accessible to children. of the total

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A child indulges in a popular game online. To protect kids from potential harm, some game companies try to limit their playing time to an hour per day.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A child indulges in a popular game online. To protect kids from potential harm, some game companies try to limit their playing time to an hour per day.

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