Under-age social media use on the increase-Ofcom suggests
Half of children aged 11 and 12 have a social
media profile, despite most platforms' minimum age being 13, a study from
regulator Ofcom suggests. And it may seem true..
Children's
charity the NSPCC called on the government to act on the issue of under-age
profiles.
The media
watchdog also said children were increasingly getting their news from social
media, but most were aware of the concept of fake news.
Just 32%
believed that news accessed on such platforms was reported truthfully.
Ofcom's
Children and Parents Media Use and Attitudes report found that 46% of
11-year-olds, 51% of 12-year-olds and 28% of 10-year-olds now have a social
media profile.
Parental
awareness of the age limit was low - with about eight in 10 of those parents
whose children use Instagram or Snapchat unaware of the restrictions.
More than
four in 10 said they would allow their child to use social media ahead of them
reaching the minimum age required.
The NSPCC
said: "Social networks are clearly turning a blind eye when it comes to
children under 13 signing up for their services.
"For
too long sites like Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat have failed to protect
children on their platforms and government urgently needs to step in."
It is
recommending that ministers force social networks to design child protections
into their services via an amendment to the Data Protection Bill, which is due
to be voted on in two week's time.
A
spokeswoman for Facebook - which also owns Instagram - said that it enforced
its pre-teen ban.
"When
we become aware that someone is under 13 and they have therefore lied about
their age, we remove their account and we use cookies to prevent them from
signing up again," she said.
The report
suggested that older children - aged 12 to 15 - were relatively sophisticated
consumers of news.
More than
half (54%) said they used social media platforms such as Snapchat, Facebook and
Twitter to access online news, making it the second most popular source after
television (62%).
Nearly
three-quarters (73%) were aware of "fake news" and four in 10 said
they had seen such a story.
Of those
aware of fake news, 86% said they would make an effort to fact-check stories.
Methods
include:
Seeing if a news story appears elsewhere
(48%)
Reading comments after the report to verify
its authenticity (39%)
Checking whether the organisation behind it
is one they trust (26%)
Assessing the professional quality of the
article (20%)
Emily Keaney,
head of children's research at Ofcom, said: "It's reassuring that almost
all children now say that they have strategies for checking whether a social
media news story is true or false.
"There
may be two reasons behind this: lower trust in news shared through social
media, but the digital generation are also becoming savvy online."
Snapchat has
rapidly grown in popularity among youngsters, Ofcom found, while Facebook is on
the wane.
In 2014, 69%
of 12 to 15-year-olds had a social media profile, and most of these (66%) said
their main one was on Facebook. That has now dropped to 40%.
And, in more
bad news for traditional broadcasters, YouTube has become a more recognised
brand among children than the BBC and ITV.
Some 90% of
12 to 15-year-olds used YouTube, watching music videos and those showing pranks
and challenges.
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