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International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The international child protection challenge and the role of the ITU John Carr.

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Presentation on theme: "International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The international child protection challenge and the role of the ITU John Carr."— Presentation transcript:

1 International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The international child protection challenge and the role of the ITU John Carr Senior Expert Adviser ITU Odessa, Ukraine, April 2011

2 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World The challenges  Content  Contact  Conduct  Commerce  Excessive use  Digital Divide 2

3 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Content  Harmful content  May not be illegal but it is undesirable  Age inappropriate materials  Suitable for adults but not for kids  Illegal content  Child abuse material – an internet crime – including self-generated 3

4 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Contact  Inappropriate exposure to sexual predators – adults and other young people  Inappropriate exposure to harmful online communities 4

5 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Conduct  Placing too much information in the public domain  Bullying  Facilitates and can promote risky sexual behaviour e.g. with web cams 5

6 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Commerce  Age inappropriate goods and services – more methods of paying online becoming available  Scams, identity theft, fraud 6

7 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Excessive use  Addiction or close to it  Impairs children’s health and personal development 7

8 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Digital Divide  Children with access to the internet performing better in exams  Children without the internet stigmatised as poor or old- fashioned or both  Societies without it will fall further behind 8

9 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Need for a holistic approach  Piecemeal approach not good enough  Need a comprehensive national focus  Involving all the key players – including the consumers!  Kids have a lot of knowledge, but that is not the same as wisdom 9

10 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Nature of the challenges  The huge differences in cultural and legal systems around the world is a fact of life that is not going to change in a hurry, if it ever does.  Detailed advice, guidance or instructions from a single centre is not going to be very useful 10

11 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Nature of the challenges  Each country has to find its own way  Many of the things we discuss are really about how families raise their children or how schools teach  But in some areas improved co- operation and harmonisation of laws is vital e.g. child pornography 11

12 WTIM, 24-26 November 2010 Committed to Connecting the World Monitoring and Measurement  As with any public policy it is important to be able to track its impact and effects.  ITU carried out its own survey and has been putting together a compendium of indicators derived from data from other sources. ---ooo--- 12


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