Parents are unaware of the dangers their children face by posting details
about themselves on social networking sites, according to research commissioned
by Ofcom.
The survey of 5,000 adults and 3,000 children found that nearly half of
children aged between eight and 17 have a profile on one or more of the popular
social networking sites.
Although
Bebo
and
Facebook
set a minimum age limit of 13 years old, and
Myspace
14 years, the research found that more than a quarter of eight- to 11-year-olds
in the UK have used the sites.
Ofcom
said it found younger children lied about their age to bypass these
restrictions.
Despite two-thirds of parents saying they set rules for their children
regarding the use of social networking sites, one in five parents said they were
unaware that their child may have made their profile public.
Robin Blake, head of media literacy at Ofcom, said: “When their children go
out to play, parents often state ground rules about when they come back and when
to meet and so on. Parents need to recognise that going online has the same kind
of risks."
He said the websites, many of which are based in the US, could do more to
remind people of the risks involved in putting all their details online.
Currently Myspace, Bebo and Facebook all say they remove the profiles of
users that are found to be too young from their sites. But at present no
technology is used to actively verify the age of users.
The
Home
Office is expected to announce a voluntary code of conduct for social n
etworks this week.
This code will ask Bebo, Myspace and Facebook to set high privacy settings as
a default if a child is under the age of 18. It may also ask that sites maintain
a contact page listing emergency contact numbers where children can get help if
they feel they are in danger.
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