Children’s commissioner: Pornography affecting 8-year-olds’ behaviour

The behaviour of children as young as eight is being affected by them viewing pornography, the children’s commissioner for England has said

“Children are seeing pornography too young – most of them by the age of 13 but [some are] seeing it at eight or nine,” Dame Rachel De Souza said.

Most children first saw pornography on social media – and technology companies should do more to remove the images.

Schools needed to improve education and parents to set appropriate boundaries.

Dame Rachel has published a report on the influence of pornography on harmful sexual behaviour among children.

“At the most serious end”, children were using the language of violent pornography and it was affecting their behaviour, she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“Most children see porn first on Twitter – and then on Snapchat, as well as accessing the porn companies,” Dame Rachel told Today.

“We need decent age verification, through the Online Safety Bill, but these tech companies could be stepping up now to get these images down.”

“If you’ve got a social-media site that allows 13-pluses on, then they should not be able to see pornography on it.”

Both Twitter and Snapchat have a 13-plus age limit.

Adult nudity

A Snapchat official told BBC News:

“Our community guidelines make it clear that we prohibit accounts that promote or distribute pornographic content.

If we find this content, we remove it immediately.

We also use machine learning to help us detect it and are working constantly to improve these capabilities.”

Twitter has been approached for comment.

Its guidelines say: “You can’t include graphic content or adult nudity and sexual behaviour within areas that are highly visible on Twitter, including in live video, profile, header, List banner images, or Community cover photos.

They also “restrict specific sensitive media, such as adult nudity and sexual behaviour, for viewers who are under 18 or viewers who do not include a birth date on their profile”.

‘Violent porn’

The government says the Online Safety Bill will allow regulator Ofcom to block access or fine companies that fail to take more responsibility for users’ safety on their social-media platforms.

Dame Rachel said:

“It’s going through the Lords at the moment – we need it to go through, we need children not to be able to access porn, particularly this violent porn, online.”

Men at Work founder Michael Conroy, who trains professionals working with boys and young men to have safer conversations among their peers, said:

“In the past 12 months, I’ve worked with I think about 1,000 teachers, social workers and youth workers.

And in each of training sessions I asked the question, ‘Are the young people you work with impacted by porn?’ The majority say, ‘Yes, very clearly, definitely.’

So there is there is an awareness of the issue – but perhaps not of the depth and scale of it.

This is the first generation ever – it’s like a gigantic historical experiment where we’ve given our children access to anything.

But more importantly, perhaps, we’ve given anything access to our children.”

See more here bbc.co.uk

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Comments (2)

  • Avatar

    Size

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    Then stop teaching 4 year-old school kids about sex?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    “Schools needed to improve education and parents to set appropriate boundaries”
    School sex education was the start of the current ‘problem if you ask me. Schools teach conformity to an ideal and that has certainly happened. Was it by design? My instincts say yes, and look at the filth in school books now.
    Parents can’t help if they allow it.

    “Our community guidelines make it clear that we prohibit accounts that promote or distribute pornographic content.”
    Guidelines do not equate to action, and it’s a guide, not a “do not cross line”, Actions speak louder than words. These scumazoids can index the content fast enough though can’t they.

    If we find this content, we remove it immediately.
    “If”, doesn’t sound very pre-emptive.

    “We also use machine learning to help us detect it and are working constantly to improve these capabilities.”
    Ah, the AI, only doing as it’s told, not what it should. Isn’t it a learning machine? Perhaps it needs schooling properly?

    “It’s going through the Lords at the moment – we need it to go through, we need children not to be able to access porn, particularly this violent porn, online.”
    The more they tighten the grip, the more will slip through their fingers ( a play on Princess Leia). When did the govt ever do anything except appease unless it benefits them? One is porn, the other is violence, the particular doesn’t stand.

    “Most children first saw pornography on social media – and technology ”
    In bygone days, it was magazines, what’s your point?

    “And in each of training sessions I asked the question, ‘Are the young people you work with impacted by porn?’ The majority say, ‘Yes, very clearly, definitely.’
    I find that not helpfull in an assessment since it is clouded by the teachers skill, knowledge of the individual, judgement, and empathy.

    “So there is there is an awareness of the issue – but perhaps not of the depth and scale of it.”
    What?! It’s obvious how pervasive it is, have a look around.

    I notice there’s no mention of the ‘exhibitionists’ who parade with their todgers out, either real or fake. It’s still meant to exite, it’s still porn.

    Reply

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