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News

Stay up to date with the latest opportunities, challenges and initiatives for keeping children and young people safe online, on national, European and global levels.

Browse the articles below, or use the filters to refine your search.

News

Stay up to date with the latest opportunities, challenges and initiatives for keeping children and young people safe online, on national, European and global levels.

Browse the articles below, or use the filters to refine your search.

News

Stay up to date with the latest opportunities, challenges and initiatives for keeping children and young people safe online, on national, European and global levels.

Browse the articles below, or use the filters to refine your search.

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Showing 841 - 850 out of 1027 results

Toddler looking at a phone screen their parent holds for them
  • news
  • Finnish Safer Internet Centre
  • 18 February 2021

In the current age, small children are born into a world full of media. This is why media education should be considered early on in families, preferably before the child is born. How are media and different devices part of our everyday lives? How is our family’s digital well-being? How do you mind the baby or the toddler while using media yourself? Rauna Rahja, Planner at the Mannerheim League for Child Welfare, reflects on this question and on what the Finnish Safer Internet Centre is doing in this regard.
A woman sitting at a laptop and her son
  • news
  • Dutch Safer Internet Centre
  • 17 February 2021

The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is not yet working optimally when it comes to protecting the privacy of children. Of the 28,000 complaints received by the Dutch Data Protection Authority, only 1 per cent concerned the violation of the privacy of a minor user. This while children represent a third of the online user group. The Dutch Safer Internet Centre and the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) cooperated on a podcast on this theme.
BIK annual report 2020 cover image
  • news
  • BIK Team
  • 09 February 2021

The Better Internet for Kids (BIK) review of the year 2020 is released on the occasion of Safer Internet Day (SID) 2021, Tuesday, 9 February. It provides a summary of a multitude of stakeholder efforts to protect children and young people online over the past year.
Child laying on a bed, with headphones on, watching content on a tablet
  • news
  • Belgian Safer Internet Centre
  • 06 February 2021

"Malika (the name is an alias) is 12 years old. After arguing with her family, she left home without her ID or smartphone. Malika’s mother is expecting her to come back later that night. She does not. Hours go by. Without any news, Child Focus opens a case and starts the research with the police. Everything is set up to find Malika in good health: call to witnesses, posters… But there are no solid leads. After three weeks of intense research, the young girl is finally found,” says Miguel Torres Garcia, Deputy Chief Operation Officer at Child Focus. “Each year, we open about 700 cases like Malika’s”. What if Malika had a person she trusts to talk to? Someone who is available to listen to her? Do you think she would have chosen to run away from her problems?
InfoHunter logo on a black background
  • news
  • French Safer Internet Centre
  • 27 January 2021

More than 4 billion pieces of shared content circulate on social networks every day, indiscriminately mixing infor, intox, and fake news. In French, this information overload has a name: “infobésité”.
Two children sitting on the ground, eating and watching something on a tablet
  • news
  • Romanian Safer Internet Centre
  • 26 January 2021

Romanian children’s news consumption mostly revolves around the internet – 49 per cent of them say they use websites, while 26 per cent use social media to read the news – followed by conversations with their parents (39 per cent) and watching television (28 per cent).
Two boys sitting side by side and using their phones
  • news
  • Maltese Safer Internet Centre
  • 25 January 2021

When children are taking the step of creating an account on social media without you knowing, the best piece of advice for you is to get curious, not furious. Use this as an opportunity to ask some key questions about the particular social media platform they are on and what they have been doing on it.
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