Children are becoming bolder and putting themselves in danger by secretly
meeting people they have met online, a Government report has found.
Children today are three times more likely to meet up with a stranger than
they would have been two or three years ago, according to the the Child
Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) in its
strategic
overview of 2006 to 2007.
In its research, based on a sample of 6000 children aged between 11 and 16,
the organisation found that a quarter had met someone in the real world after
first contacting them online. This figure is three times higher than that found
in a similar study carried out by the organisation two years ago.
Of those children who met up with a stranger, over a quarter did not take
anyone with them. Of the three quarters who did take someone with them, four
fifths took another child friend, which the organisation said "put them both in
danger". Only six per cent took a parent, and two per cent took a trusted adult.
CEOP told Computeractive that the growth in children meeting with people had
"probably come from the explosion in social networking sites over the past few
years" and the fact that children were online a lot more.
A representative for the organisation said: "There is far more user generated
content around now than there was two or three years ago and children are
utilising Web 2.0 a lot more". She added that online activities such as using
podcasting tools and posting user generated content online weren't as popular
two years ago.
However, she said that these sites and tools were "not solely or necessarily
" to blame for the increase in unsafe behaviour:
"Paedophiles go anywhere children go and are constantly using new
technologies to interact with and groom children. They may meet these children
on a social networking site but could then take them into private chat rooms
where they can continue to groom them without the screening they would find on a
site."
John Carr, secretary of the Children's Charities Coalition for Internet
Safety, described the results as "astonishing and alarming", but agreed that
social networking sites were not to blame.
"If you ask the police they will say that their main concern is still instant
messaging as a child is on their own and can be more easily groomed," he told
Computeractive.
His views were backed up by CEOP’s 2006 reporting figures, which showed that
it received more than 1,400 reports from children saying that they have been
groomed online. Of these, two out of three said that it happened in chatrooms or
when using instant messaging.
Since then the organisation has worked with companies such as Microsoft,
which makes the popular Windows Live! Messenger software, to put in place a
symbol that can be clicked if a child feels uncomfortable. This takes them
straight to the CEOP reporting site where they can cut and paste the
conversation for CEOP trained staff to investigate and, if necessary, trace the
person in question.
The organisation has now said that it wants this tool to be more visible on
every site and is calling on the internet industry to help them make reporting
easier. It feels that this will not only help to children keep safe, but also
act as "deterrent" against paedophiles.
"We need to educate children on the availability of this logo and need these
sites to help us do it. If it becomes widespread and is visible to paedophiles
then they might think twice about entering these sites to groom children" said
the CEOP representative.
Children are also advised by the organisation to refrain from putting too
much personal information online.
Parents concerned about their children’s online behaviour are also advised by
CEOP to visit
its
education website, which gives a range of hints and tips to keep their child
safe online. This includes sitting down with a child to discuss the dangers of
meeting people online and finding out who they are talking to.
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