Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Theoretical framework for children's internet use
- two Methodological framework: the EU Kids Online project
- three Cognitive interviewing and responses to EU Kids Online survey questions
- four Which children are fully online?
- five Varieties of access and use
- six Online opportunities
- seven Digital skills in the context of media literacy
- eight Between public and private: privacy in social networking sites
- nine Experimenting with the self online: a risky opportunity
- ten Young Europeans’ online environments: a typology of user practices
- eleven Bullying
- twelve ‘Sexting’: the exchange of sexual messages online among European youth
- thirteen Pornography
- fourteen Meeting new contacts online
- fifteen Excessive internet use among European children
- sixteen Coping and resilience: children's responses to online risks
- seventeen Agents of mediation and sources of safety awareness: a comparative overview
- eighteen The effectiveness of parental mediation
- nineteen Effectiveness of teachers’ and peers’ mediation in supporting opportunities and reducing risks online
- twenty Understanding digital inequality: the interplay between parental socialisation and children's development
- twenty-one Similarities and differences across Europe
- twenty-two Mobile access: different users, different risks, different consequences?
- twenty-three Explaining vulnerability to risk and harm
- twenty-four Relating online practices, negative experiences and coping strategies
- twenty-five Towards a general model of determinants of risk and safety
- twenty-six Policy implications and recommendations: now what?
- Appendix Key variables used in EU Kids Online analyses
- Index
eight - Between public and private: privacy in social networking sites
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Theoretical framework for children's internet use
- two Methodological framework: the EU Kids Online project
- three Cognitive interviewing and responses to EU Kids Online survey questions
- four Which children are fully online?
- five Varieties of access and use
- six Online opportunities
- seven Digital skills in the context of media literacy
- eight Between public and private: privacy in social networking sites
- nine Experimenting with the self online: a risky opportunity
- ten Young Europeans’ online environments: a typology of user practices
- eleven Bullying
- twelve ‘Sexting’: the exchange of sexual messages online among European youth
- thirteen Pornography
- fourteen Meeting new contacts online
- fifteen Excessive internet use among European children
- sixteen Coping and resilience: children's responses to online risks
- seventeen Agents of mediation and sources of safety awareness: a comparative overview
- eighteen The effectiveness of parental mediation
- nineteen Effectiveness of teachers’ and peers’ mediation in supporting opportunities and reducing risks online
- twenty Understanding digital inequality: the interplay between parental socialisation and children's development
- twenty-one Similarities and differences across Europe
- twenty-two Mobile access: different users, different risks, different consequences?
- twenty-three Explaining vulnerability to risk and harm
- twenty-four Relating online practices, negative experiences and coping strategies
- twenty-five Towards a general model of determinants of risk and safety
- twenty-six Policy implications and recommendations: now what?
- Appendix Key variables used in EU Kids Online analyses
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Social networking has changed many people's everyday lives, and in an extraordinarily short time. Children and young people, especially, are adopting social networking as a part of their social relationships, learning, consumption and creative practices. What defines children and young people as social beings is happening more and more often in social networking sites (SNS), which are online spaces where people can communicate, play, watch video clips, look at photographs and share their feelings and thoughts with others. They are manifestations of ‘public culture’, the term that Appadurai and Breckenbridge (1995) suggest as an alternative to ‘popular culture’ or ‘mass culture’. Public culture links engagement in popular culture to the practices of participation in the public sphere. Ito and colleagues (2010, p 19) understand public culture as indicating a change from audiences purely consuming media to the ‘active participation of a distributed social network in the production and circulation of culture and knowledge’. They refer to ‘networked publics’, which facilitate the development of public identities and friendship-driven practices on the internet.
As previous research points out, SNS offer a range of possibilities for children to perform, express identity, create and communicate with others (boyd and Ellison, 2007; Green and Hannon, 2007; boyd, 2008; Notley, 2009; Sharples et al, 2009). Young people, in particular, are adapting easily to the new digital cultures, and are eagerly exploring online worlds that appear strange to many adults. However, SNS also involve risks, which are of concern to parents and educators (Livingstone and Helsper, 2007; Ybarra et al, 2007; Staksrud and Livingstone, 2009). Public profiles on SNS and open sharing of materials on the internet can lead to misuse of personal information.
Concerns have been expressed that children and young people do not have a sense of privacy, nor do they understand the dangers of personal data being misused or the risks involved in meeting strangers online. These concerns are illustrative of the blurring of the boundaries between public and private that occurs when SNS connect the private sphere of home to global media and youth culture (see Morley, 2000). It is argued that online worlds create media spaces that overlay the physical locations in which media users live, such as their homes or even their bedrooms (Scannel, 1996; Couldry, 2003).
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- Children, Risk and Safety on the InternetResearch and Policy Challenges in Comparative Perspective, pp. 99 - 112Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2012