NSPCC online safety bid puts our industry to shame. (Leader).(National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children )Nutley, Michael
Six easy-to-follow videos on key online safety messages for parents, carers and professionals to watch together with children aged 6-9 years old. A learning-to-read book A story for children aged 4 and above to share with an adult about being 'on the internet'. ...
Abusers, trolls, and predators online now face a fleet of tough new jailable offences from today (Wednesday 31 January), as offences for ‘cyberflashing’, sending death threats, and ‘epilepsy-trolling’ are written into the statute book after the Online Safety Act gained Royal As...
Today the Office of the Children’s Commissioner for England, the NSPCC and Middlesex University launched a new report,‘I wasn’t sure it was normal to watch it’, a Quantitative and Qualitative Examination of the Impact of Online Pornography on the Values, Attitudes, Beliefs and Behaviours of...
appointing an online safety coordinator within each of relevant ACT Programmes providing clear and specific directions to staff and volunteers on how to behave online and online safety through supervision, support and training supporting and encouraging the young people using our service to use the inte...
Politics Technology NSPCC Child grooming Tuesday 15 August 2023 at 7:11amA child using a laptop Credit: PA Tens of thousands of online grooming crimes have been recorded during the wait for updated online safety laws, as campaigners urged no more delays to the Online Safety Bill. The ...
The Online Safety Bill has taken years to agree and will force firms to remove illegal content and protect children from some legal but harmful material. Children’s charity the NSPCC said the law would mean a safer online world. But critics argued it would allow a regulator, and tech firms...
Among the bill's backers have been charities like the NSPCC, safety group the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), bereaved parents who say harmful online content contributed to their child's death, and sexual abuse survivors. Ahead of the bill facing its final stages in ...
Richard Collard, NSPCC associate head of child safety online policy, said: “We cannot underestimate the sheer number of children of all ages that are being exposed to online pornography on a daily basis.” Speaking about the Online Safety Bill, he demanded “strong measures” and argued that ...