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Protecting children online: content regulation, age verification and latest thinking on industry responsibility – Mariya Stoilva

There has been rising pressure for internet regulation, both within the UK and internationally, and we have witnessed some significant developments, such as the UK government’s Online Harms White Paper, which the new government plans to action, and the publication of the Age appropriate Design Code by the Information Commissioner’s Office.

In the international arena, we saw the drafting of a General Comment on children’s rights in relation to the digital environment by the Committee on the Rights of the Child and the announcement that the US Federal Trade Commission is to review the operation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act Rule (COPPA). There were important setbacks as well, such as the abandonment of the proposed UK Internet age verification system in October 2019 and the findings from the Global Treat Assessment (WePROTECT Global Alliance) that online child sexual exploitation and abuse – in its scale, severity and complexity – is increasing faster than its prevention and response. In spite of the progress, we are still facing important questions, particularly in relation to what shape online safety regulation should take, and whether it should come from government or industry.

A recent Westminster eForum event on child online protection summarised the latest evidence and thinking around content regulation, age verification and industry responsibility. Below are some highlights from the speakers.

Protecting children online – key issues and emerging trends

Pointing to her work on children’s online activities, risks and safety and recent reviews of the existing evidence for the UK Council for Internet Safety (2017) and UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti (2019), Professor Sonia Livingstone (London School of Economics and Political Science) argues that, overall, there is very little evidence of increased online harm for children. While online safety is a problem which on a social level affects everyone, on an individual level fewer children experience online risks with the most severe cases of harm affecting very small fractions of children. The situation is often misrepresented in the media where scary stories prevail, often misrepresenting the evidence and fuelling public anxiety about children’s online safety, while the evidence suggests otherwise. Still, it matters that even small proportions of children are exposed to online harm and it is evident that we need to take appropriate and much better action than we have so far. So, when we are asking, what are the pathways to harm and what are the sensible points of intervention, there are a few points of consensus in the evidence which should guide our efforts:

Where next for protecting children online – priorities for industry and regulation

This post originally appeared on the LSE Media Policy Project blog and is reproduced with permission and thanks

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