The Berkman Center for Internet & Society and the Youth and Media Project are pleased to share a new report, the first in a series discussing issues of youth and privacy in collaboration with the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project. The Youth and Media Team has put together a fun video sharing data and findings from the report.
A full press release follows:
WASHINGTON
(November 20, 2012) - Most parents of teenagers are concerned
about what their teenage children do online and how their
behavior could be monitored by others. Some parents are taking
steps to observe, discuss, and check up on their children’s
digital footprints, according to a
new survey by the Pew Research Center’s Internet &
American Life Project.
Among the survey’s key findings:
“There
is a growing policy discussion about how government should act
in an environment where personal information—about both
children and adults—is widely collected, analyzed and shared
as a new form of currency in the digital economy,” said Mary
Madden, Research Associate for the Project and a co-author of
the report. “Parents are anxious about a wide range of online
risks for their children, but it is particularly striking that
their current level of worry about data collection by
advertisers meets or exceeds other concerns about their
child’s online activity.”
A notable number of parents, especially parents of younger
teens, are taking steps to act on these concerns:
In
addition to such direct interventions, some parents are
monitoring their children on family computers and in online
searches:
The
survey also finds that a growing number of parents are
becoming social media users themselves:
While parents may forge connections with their teens on social media in order to passively observe them, many are also actively engaging with their children and making their presence known. Half (50%) of parents who use social media (and who also have teens who use the sites) say they have commented or responded directly to something that was posted to their child’s profile or account. Mothers and fathers of children of all ages and across all demographic groups are equally as likely to engage with their child’s profile in this way.
“Teens,
in turn, have mixed feelings about being friends with their
parents on social networking sites like Facebook. Some teens
like the fact that they are friends with their family members.
Other young users prefer not to friend their parents, but do
it anyway because it is expected from them. And yet others
keep their profiles secret or restrict parents’ access to
information,” said Sandra Cortesi, Director of the Youth and
Media Project at the Berkman Center and a contributor to this
report.
The findings of the study are detailed in a new report called,
“Parents, Teens and Online Privacy” that is the result of a
collaboration between the Pew Internet Project and the Berkman
Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. The
data are based on a nationally representative phone survey of
802 parents and their 802 teens ages 12-17, conducted between
July 26 and September 30, 2012. Interviews were conducted in
English and Spanish and on landline and cell phones. The
margin of error for the full sample is ± 4.5 percentage
points.
This
report includes quotes gathered through a series of
exploratory in-person focus group interviews about privacy and
digital media conducted by the Berkman Center’s Youth and
Media Lab between May and December 2011. The team conducted 16
focus group interviews with roughly 120 students.
About the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life
Project
The Pew
Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project is
one of seven projects that make up the Pew Research Center, a
nonpartisan, nonprofit "fact tank" that provides information
on the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the
world. The Project produces reports exploring the impact of
the Internet on families, communities, work and home, daily
life, education, health care, and civic and political life.
The Project aims to be an authoritative source on the
evolution of the Internet through surveys that examine how
Americans use the Internet and how their activities affect
their lives.
About the Berkman Center for Internet & Society
The Berkman
Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is
a research program founded to recognize, study, and engage the
most difficult problems of the digital age and to share in
their resolution in ways that advance the public interest.
Founded in 1997, through a generous gift from Jack N. and
Lillian R. Berkman, the Center is home to an ever-growing
community of faculty, fellows, staff, and affiliates.
Fundamental to its work is the study of the relationship
between digital technologies and democratic values, including
civic participation, access to knowledge, and the free flow of
information. More information can be found at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu.
Media contacts
Mary Madden: mmadden@pewinternet.org and
202-419-4515