LONDON - A strategy aimed at ensuring Britain becomes the safest place in the world for young people to go online was announced on Monday by the government. It follows a study showing four out of five parents were concerned about their children sexting, a higher proportion than parents who fear their offspring will smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol.
Ministers have begun work on a new Internet Safety Strategy, led by Culture Secretary Karen Bradley. A government green paper is expected to be published in the summer.
A report by leading academic Professor Sonia Livingstone has been commissioned to provide up-to-date evidence of how young people are using the internet, the dangers they face, and the gaps that exist in keeping them safe.
Ministers will also hold a series of round tables in the coming weeks with social media and technology companies, young people, charities and mental health experts to examine online risks and how to tackle them.
The focus will be on preventing children and young people from harm online and making the internet a safer place.
The round tables are also expected to examine concerns around issues like trolling and other aggressive behavior including rape threats against women.
The discussions will involve ministers and officials from government departments including the interior, education, health and justice.
A government spokesman said on Monday: "It comes amid growing fears that the threat from online dangers has grown far more quickly than society's response to them, and worries that tech-savvy young people are being exposed to risks that their parents never were and might not know how to confront, like sexting, cyberbullying, and content which promotes self-harm, suicide and eating disorders."
A recent poll found more parents were concerned about sexting than about their children drinking or smoking.
A YouGov survey showed 78 percent were concerned about sexting, compared to 69 percent concerned about alcohol misuse and 67 percent concerned about smoking.
A study last year for the charity, the NSPCC and the Children's Commissioner, found 13 percent of 11 to 16 year-olds reported that they had taken topless pictures of themselves and 3 percent had taken fully naked pictures of themselves.
More than one in 10 young people say they have been the victim of cyberbullying, and self-harm among children is on the rise amid evidence of a link between internet use and an increased risk of self-harm.
Xinhua