Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

One In Three Indian Parents Fear Cyber Bullying Risk For Kids: Report

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Mar, 2016 11:05 AM
    One in three Indian parents believe their child will be a victim of online bullying, considerably higher than the global average, a report has said, adding that nearly all parents surveyed (92 percent) worry about their children's safety online, particularly how their actions will have repercussions on the family.
     
    Highlighting that online predators, privacy and family vulnerability are some of the biggest issues parents are grappling with as the impact of cybercrime takes over personal lives, The “Norton Cybersecurity Insights Report” by Norton by Symantec said that close to one in two parents believe their children are safer from bullies on a playground than online.
     
    As a result, Indian parents are 20 percent more likely to limit their child's online activities. With increasing dependence on the internet, 57 percent of Indian parents also worry about children making the whole family vulnerable through their online activities.
     
    “Additionally, more than half of Indian parents worry that their children will be lured into illegal activities such as hacking, while 54 percent worry they will give too much personal information to strangers or be lured into meeting a stranger in the outside world (57 percent),” the report said.
     
    The Indian parents also fear what their children will post today will come back to haunt them in the future (51 percent).
     
    “In the last year, Norton has seen the online safety awareness levels of Indian parents increase rapidly as technology firmly cements itself in the family home,” Ritesh Chopra, country manager (India), Norton by Symantec, said in a statement. 
     
    “It is interesting to note that compared to the global average, Indian parents are more worried about their children's online safety and are more likely to limit their online activities to ensure safety,” he added.
     
     
    The "Norton Cybersecurity Insights Report" is an online survey of 17,125 device users ages 18-plus across 17 countries, commissioned by Norton by Symantec and produced by research firm Edelman Berland. 
     
    The India sample reflects input from 1,000 device users ages 18 plus who are parents. 
     
    According to the survey, the Indian parents are more likely to take action to protect their children online. 
     
    More than half (55 percent) limit the amount of information they post about their children on social networks. About 53 percent limit the amount of information their children can post on their social profiles.
     
    While, more than one in two limit access to certain websites, one in two parents only allow internet access with parental supervision. 
     
    Additionally, close to half the parents (49 percent) surveyed require computer use to take place in common areas in the home.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'
    In pleasant news for the hearing impaired, researchers have developed a new app called Transcense which transcribes speech into written...

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter
    Researchers at the Indiana University in the US are working on an ambitious project to collect and analyse 'social pollution' that is spreading on...

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter
    The micro-blogging site Twitter has added a new feature to allow its users to listen music directly from the twitter stream on mobile devices.

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report
     Videos on Facebook are fast catching up with YouTube in terms of number of shares and the social networking site may overtake YouTube in video sharing through its news feed soon, say researchers.

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3
    Apple unveiled the latest versions of its iPad Air, iMac Retina 5K and iPad Mini at an event at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, on Thursday.

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3

    An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable

    An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable
    Researchers from Columbia Engineering and the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a unique electric generator that is optically transparent...

    An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable