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Friday, April 02, 2010

Lots of underage social networkers

Thirteen is the minimum age of the world's most popular social network sites, including in the UK, and a quarter of British 8-to-12-year-olds who use the Net at home have profiles on social-network sites, according to study by UK regulator Ofcom. Given similarly high levels of Internet use on both sides of the Pond, I doubt US figures for underage social networkers would be much different (I'm aware of no parallel study done in the US). Ofcom also found that 37% of 5-to-7-year-old home Net users had visited Facebook (but didn't necessarily have a profile). The good news is that 83% of 8-to-12-year-olds with profiles have them set so that only social-site friends can see them, and 4% have profiles that can't be seen at all. "Nine in ten parents of these children who are aware that their child visits social networking sites (93%) also say they check what their child is doing on these types of sites." Here's another important takeaway, pointing to a growing need for solid new-media-literacy training in school: According to The Telegraph's coverage: Among kids 10 and under, "70% of those using blogs or information sites such as Wikipedia believed all, or most, of what they read."

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3 Comments:

Anonymous Sue Pierce said...

My 11 year old niece and 7 year old nephew have Facebook accounts (mainly to play Farmville!) but are strictly supervised by their parents.

2:30 AM  
Blogger Coda said...

An interesting post Anne. Should we not be concerned that parents of 8-12 year olds are colluding in the breach of TOS (supervised or not)? Surely, this is not an example of "good news" - is it?

4:15 AM  
Blogger Anne said...

This wouldn't be much of a service if I only "printed" good news. That post was just news - I didn't editorialize in that one. It's a huge question, Coda, as you know. Or rather many questions, and not just the important one you mention about parenting. I've written quite a lot about Terms of Use (see these search results), believing that responsible companies should enforce them, but not everybody agrees with that (even researchers not in the industry, I was surprised to find). The 12/13 minimum age of social sites reflects compliance with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). It does present quite a dilemma for parents, whether or not they're colluding, because so many children become very social creatures at a younger age than that set by COPPA. Some of us try to be strict about it, later finding out children either discover or are helped to discover workarounds.

11:49 AM  

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