A37: Foster self-regulation in the use of online services

Foster multi-stakeholder dialogue and self-regulation of European and global service providers (e.g. social networking platforms, mobile communications providers), especially as regards use of their services by minors.

What is the problem? Children are not safe online

More and more European children go online via mobile phones and game consoles. More than 50% of 13-16 year olds go online from their bedroom and more than half of 9-16 year olds have a social networking profile. At the same time, young people are a vulnerable group as they do not always see the risks of their online actions such as sharing personal information online or talking to people they have never met in real life. In this rapidly changing context, addressing risks and strengthening the online safety of children is a shared responsibility of individuals as much as of private and public bodies, both at home and globally.

Why is EU action required? EU wide action is needed for children's safety online

Many of the providers of products and services that have an impact on the online safety of children, such as social networking sites, mobile phones, online applications and content or games consoles are global or European players.

A general pan-European approach should be adopted since purely national systems risk producing fragmentation.

What will the Commission do?

In 2011 :

  • The Commission will launch a review of the current self-regulation agreements in the field of protection of minors. To this end, it will bring together manufacturers of mobile devices and game consoles, Internet service providers, social networking services providers, mobile applications and content providers, consumer organisations, researchers, children' organisations, youth, parents and teachers to identify gaps and new measures that need to be implemented by the industry for the protection and empowerment of youngsters using new technologies. This input is expected to feed into the definition of new industry initiatives in self-regulation.
  • In May and July the Commission will release, in two batches, the results of the 2nd independent assessment of the implementation of the Safer Social Networking Principles for the EU, the self-regulatory agreement signed by major social networking sites active in Europe in 2009

Contact:

patricia.manson@ec.europa.eu


RELATED ARTICLESExplain
Digital Agenda for Europe
Pillars & Actions
P3: Trust and Security
A37: Foster self-regulation in the use of online services
W16: Every European child safe online
DG INFSO
A28: Reinforced Network and Information Security Policy
A30: Establish a European cybercrime platform
A32: Strengthen the fight against cybercrime at international level
A33: Support EU-wide cyber-security preparedness
A34: Security breach notification provisions
A36: Online safety for children
A38: Pan-European Computer Emergency Response Teams
A40: MS to implement harmful content alert hotlines
A41: Member States to set up national alert platforms
A39: MS to carry out cyber attack simulations
A29: Combat cyber attacks against information systems
A31: Analyse the creation of a European cybercrime centre
A35: Guidance on implementation of Telecoms rules on privacy
Graph of this discussion
Enter the title of your article


Enter a short (max 500 characters) summation of your article
Enter the main body of your article
Lock
+Comments (0)
+Citations (0)
+About
Enter comment

Select article text to quote
welcome text

First name   Last name 

Email

Skip