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Generation Screen: 31% of Parents Say Child Was Contacted by Stranger Online, With Access to Location

Generation Screen: 31% of Parents Say Child Was Contacted by Stranger Online, With Access to Location Image Credit: Cox Mobile

Cox Mobile yesterday released findings from its first survey, 'Generation Screen: Parenting and Mobile Safety'.

The survey uncovered an alarming correlation between location sharing and "strangers" communicating with kids and teens through their mobile devices:

  • 56% of parents said their children's location sharing is turned on, making their location publicly accessible across several mobile apps.
  • 31% said their children have been contacted by a stranger on their mobile device.
  • Nearly one-third (28%) said the stranger referenced their child's location.
  • Despite parental vigilance, 73% of parents still say their children are savvy at hiding their online activity. One in seven parents even admitted to creating a fake social media account to keep an eye on their child's social media activity.

Cox Mobile's findings complement similar stats from a 2023 research report conducted by Common Sense Media, a global nonprofit helping families navigate media, tech, and digital parenting, uncovering that these risks are especially prevalent among young girls. The 2023 Teens and Mental Health: How Girls Really Feel About Social Media report showed more than 50% of girls ages 11 to 15 were contacted by a stranger through social media apps.

A large majority of parents surveyed said they prioritize their children's phone safety and have frequent conversations about risk prevention:

  • 65% of parents discuss mobile device safety with their children several times a week.
  • 75% check screen time and text messages daily to a few times a week, along with phone calls their children received (73%).
  • 73% of parents are friends with their children on social media, and 64% interact with them through those channels.

Cox Mobile's 'Generation Screen: Parenting and Mobile Safety' also found:

  • More than half of parents believe the use of social media apps elevates safety risks for kids, yet 60% say their child has them on their phone.
  • Cyberbullying is among the top three things keeping parents up at night.
  • Parents are most concerned about their children encountering predatory or inappropriate behavior (39%) and content (23%) on their phones.

Source: https://www.coxmobilesafety.com

Mark Greatrex, president of Cox Communications

Parenting today's tech-savvy kids can be challenging. Many get their first phone between the ages of 10 and 14, much earlier than other generations. While providing kids with greater access to technology enables many positive connections and benefits, the reality is that real dangers can exist just one tap or swipe away. As our customers' trusted connectivity provider, we are encouraging digital literacy, educating families on the potential risks, and promoting safer, informed use of these incredibly powerful connectivity tools.

Jill Murphy, editor-in-chief and head of distribution at Common Sense Media

Even the most safety-conscious parents can overlook features like location sharing, which in many cases is automatically turned on and can be confusing to turn off. More intuitive app settings and parental education can help mitigate this silent risk for kids.

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Author

Principle Analyst and Senior Editor | IP Networks

Ariana specializes in IP networking, covering both operator networks - core, transport, edge and access; and enterprise and cloud networks. Her work involves analysis of cutting-edge technologies that drive application visibility, traffic awareness, network optimization, network security, virtualization and cloud-native architectures.

She can be reached at ariana.lynn@thefastmode.com

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