The
Culture, Media and
Sport Select Committee
recently published a report on harmful content on the internet. This once
again brought a renewed focus on social networking following the earlier
publication of the Byron Report this year and the Home Office best practice
document on social networking.
The report
was written to address the "increasing
anxiety among parents about the use of social networking sites". The
Committee's inquiry included evidence from industry, other parliamentarians and
the third sector concluding with 29 key recommendations. Recommendation
28 is of particular note; stressing the need for greater parent
responsibility in protecting children from harm on the Internet and suggesting
that parents should have more knowledge of social networking sites.
This is
interesting stuff, but what does this mean in regards to social media
consumption?
Leading
children's charity in this area Childnet International have this
week published a new guide for parents on young people and social
networking sites suggesting that one of the easiest ways for
parents to become more familiar with social networking sites is
to set up their own page to see what the attraction and the appeal is, and to
look at the information and advice for parents on these sites.
This
view was backed up with advice issued in July by the Internet
Safety Advocate, at security provider Symantec, with whom Metrica have been working on the
Digital Family Safety campaign: "now
that summer is in full swing, chances are your kids are spending more time
online than usual. Staying informed about what they're
doing in cyberspace is the best way to help ensure they don't do anything
foolish".
With
social networking sites high on the public agenda, and likely to stay there
with the September start of the new UK Council for Child Internet
safety, it could well be that more parents go online and set up
their own profiles. As the internet increasingly becomes the
marketplace to reach people of all ages, companies may find that reaching
parents on sites not necessarily associated with that generation will become
increasingly possible and profitable.