The UK has unleashed a new Net-safety watchdog, the BBC reports. Called the UK Council for Child Internet Safety, it’s the panel called for in British psychologist Tanya Byron’s Action Plan, which resulted from the year-long study she conducted at Prime Minister Brown’s request. Announced by British Children’s Secretary Ed Balls and Home Secretary Jacqui Smith, the council has representatives from more than 100 organizations in both public and private sectors, including social-network companies and children’s advocates, according to the Children’s Office press release. The council’s charged with educating the public about safety on the social Web and, among other things, establish what we call “best practices” – as the BBC puts it, “voluntary codes of practice, with an examination of how websites handle videos or messages posted by users.” View video of Byron’s own look back at her report’s development here. Here’s my original post on the Byron review last April.
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