An Analysis of Children's Content on YouTube in the Context of Sharenting

2022 ◽  
pp. 291-314
Author(s):  
Pelin Kilinç Özüölmez ◽  
Senem Duruel Erkiliç

Parental responsibility will be evaluated from the children's perspective, and the pre-birth rights of the child will be discussed in a juridical and social context. Within this scope, 375 videos, viewed between March 17, 2019 and December 23, 2020, will be studied in-depth using the content analysis method. As the aforementioned YouTube channel mainly targets younger child groups and the E.K.M. is also 6, it is of great importance to discuss the suitability of the experienced digital games' educative and instructive features for children, as well as if they consist of elements of violence and horror. Parental responsibility will be evaluated together with a selection of digital games and game displays. Having numerous followers in Turkey, the ‘Sesegel Çocuk' channel will be probed extensively since the channel has a potential to act as a role model for its target audience. Digital parenting and the sharenting phenomenon will be extensively analyzed with regard to privacy, personal data confidentiality and security, protection of emotional and private data, and protection of personal rights.

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fatima Mahmud Muhammad ◽  
Saharnaz Nedjat ◽  
Haniye Sadat Sajadi ◽  
Mahboubeh Parsaeian ◽  
Abraham Assan ◽  
...  

Abstract Background While the use of sulphadoxine pyrimethamine (SP) is effective in preventing malaria infection during pregnancy, there are challenges limiting its uptake in Nigeria. This study aimed at exploring the barriers to IPTp usage among pregnant women in Kano state - Nigeria. Methods This is a qualitative study. The purposive sampling strategy was used for identification and selection of 14 key informants for interviews. In addition, six focus group discussions (FGDs) were conducted with pregnant women (3 FGDs) and married men (3 FGDs). The conventional content analysis method was used to interpret meaning from the content of the data. MAXQDA 10 software was used for data management and analysis. Results Poor policy implementation, poor antenatal care attendance, inadequate access to intermittent preventive treatment at the community levels, lack of sustainable funding, and poor community engagement emerged as major barriers to IPTp use in Nigeria. Conclusion While the political will to allocate sufficient financial resources could help improve service delivery and IPTp usage among pregnant women, community participation is critical to sustain the gains.


2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 162-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Haritaworn

How can we study ‘Queer’, or indeed, should we? Drawing on fieldwork with people raised in interracial families in Britain and Germany, and reflecting on my own coming out as transgendered/genderqueer during the research, I reflect on the role of difference, similarity, and change in the production of queer knowledges. My entry point is a queer diasporic one. Queers of colour, I argue, have a particular stake in queering racialised heterosexualities; yet differences within diasporic spaces clearly matter. While ‘Queer’ can open up an alternative methodology of redefining and reframing social differences, the directionality of our queering - ‘up’ rather than ‘down’ - is clearly relevant. I suggest the anti-racist feminist principle of positionality as fruitful for such a queer methodology of change. This is explored with regard to a selection of empirical and cultural texts, including the debate around Paris is Burning, Jenny Livingston's film about the Harlem house/ball scene; the appeal that a non-white heterosexual artist such as South-Asian pop singer MIA can have for queers of colour; the camp role model which Thai sex work femininity can represent for queer and trans people from the second generation of Thai migration; and the solidarity of a Southeast Asian butch with feminine women in her diasporic collectivity.


Author(s):  
Ewa Suknarowska-Drzewiecka

The digital revolution, also called the fourth industrial revolution, constitutes another era of change, caused by the development of computerisation and modern technologies. It is characterised by rapid technological progress, widespread digitisation and an impact on all areas of life, including the provision of work. The changes affecting this area are so significant that there are proposals to remodel the definition of the employment relationship in the Labour Code. New forms of employment, which do not fit the conventional definition of an employment relationship, are emerging and gaining importance. An example could be employment via digital platforms. At the same time, there are also employment forms that do fit that definition, but deviate from the conventional understanding of the terms and conditions for performing work, which have undergone modification due to the use of new technologies. Teleworking, or working outside the employer’s premises, are examples of that. Employers get further opportunities to organise and control work, which often raises concerns due to the employee’s right to privacy, the protection of personal rights and personal data.


2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-384
Author(s):  
Ilona Tamutienė ◽  
Vaida Auglytė

This article focuses on institutional risk factors that relate to the ability of child rights professionals to protect maltreated children. The aim of the article is to reveal the structural threats existing in the system of protection of the child’s rights, which create preconditions for the disclosure of institutional risks. Semi-structured qualitative interview method used. Ten interviews with children's rights protection specialists (CRPS) conducted during March-April 2018. According to the content analysis method, it has been established that the family assistance model for child protection is declarative in nature, due to the lack of services that meet the needs of children and families, and poor accessibility and quality, especially in rural areas, and social work orientation into control. The findings highlighted gaps in inter-agency cooperation in the protection of the child, the low level of involvement of health care, in particular – the treatment of paediatric and addictive diseases. In view of the internal field of the childʼs rights services, it has been highlighted that institutional problems are significantly contributing to the institutional risk: CRPS experienced inadequate methodological assistance and training which not corresponding to the problems encountering in everyday practice, lack of human resources, large workloads, low wages, lack of working methods, lack of stress management. In the context of the ongoing reform of the protection of the rights of the child, it is recommended to eliminate institutional risks, to strengthen services for children and families, and to improve inter-agency cooperation in the protection of the child.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ppaa.17.3.21953


Author(s):  
Fatma Arvas

In order to sustain their presence in the market, personal data acquirers must obtain, store, and process personal data from sources that feed data such as social media shares, shopping records, and sensor networks. On the other hand, the problem of conformity of real and legal persons whose personal data are processed within the framework of personal data law brings about many legal problems and requires a profound research rather than a limited examination. The fact that a small number of enterprises create dominant power by using big data in market strategy has led to data-dependent companies or markets. Due to the effects that big data caused in the market, there is a need to address many problems in the field of competition law as well as the dimension of privacy and personal rights. In this context, the conflict of interest between the economic interest created by big data and the legal principles of personal data will be addressed and compared with regard to Turkish law and foreign law practices by discussing the relationship between big data and competition law.


2015 ◽  
pp. 101-111
Author(s):  
Visnja Djordjic ◽  
Tatjana Tubic

Due to the importance of role models in youth and media coverage of athletes, the aim of this research was to analyze the significance and characteristics of sports role models and the existence of gender patterns in elementary school students. Research sample consisted of 468 students aged 11-15. Sports role models were analyzed using a modified questionnaire of Adriansee & Crosswhite [2008]. Research results indicated that most respondents (80.8%) had role models. Role models belong to different domains with the highest proportion of famous athletes (31.5%) and family members (30.4%). Gender of the respondents was significantly correlated with selection of the role model, with sports role models being selected more often by males (49.2%) than by females (22.5%). Within the category of sports role models, famous athletes were highly predominant (88.1%), and most of them were males and foreign sports stars. Since adolescence is a period when future preferences for physical activities are developed, it is important to exploit all possible ways of supporting the youth to develop a healthy life style, where sports role models can have a significant influence.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (3-4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thea Grav Rosenberg ◽  
Ardis Storm-Mathisen ◽  
Kamilla Knutsen Steinnes ◽  
Henry Mainsah

SammendragDenne artikkelen diskuterer barns rett til deltagelse og beskyttelse på internett i relasjon til kommersielletredjepartsaktørers bruk av digitale persondata. Det tas utgangspunkt i FNs barnekonvensjon,norsk lovgivning, samt kvalitative og kvantitative funn fra en nylig gjennomført studieblant norske 15–18 åringer om personvern og markedsføring i sosiale medier. Datamaterialetbestod av fokusgruppeintervjuer, barns skjermdumper av markedsføring fra deres profiler isosiale medier og en landsrepresentativ spørreundersøkelse. Studien viser at barns deltakelsei sosiale medier skjer i et svært komplekst kommersielt landskap hvor de utsettes for skjultemarkedsføringsteknikker, skreddersydd reklame og ulovlig innhold. Diskusjonen løfter frem utfordringerog dilemmaer knyttet til økende kommersialisering av barns persondata, stereotypiskog diskriminerende syn på kjønn og plattformenes inngrep i barns privatliv. Det pekes på behovfor tilsyn av hvordan beskyttende regelverk og brukervilkår fungerer og gis eksempel på hvordansamarbeid med barn er viktig for bygging av relevant kunnskap, styrking av bevissthet og digitalkompetanse i denne sammenheng.Nøkkelord: barn, sosiale medier, markedsføring, personlige data, rettigheter, forbrukerkompetanse,stereotypier, diskrimineringCustomized to the child’s best interest? Privacy andmarketing on Norwegian children’s social media profilesAbstractThis article takes a closer look at conditions that influence Norwegian children’s need for provision, participation,and protection online and discusses these rights in relation to how third-party commercialactors use user data to customize content on social media. The discussion is based on the United NationsConvention on the Rights of the Child, Norwegian legislation and a study conducted in 2018 among 15–18year old Norwegian children on privacy and social media marketing (focus groups, visual material, and arepresentative survey). This study finds that children are subjected to a highly complex commercial landscapeconsisting of hidden marketing strategies, tailored advertising, and illegal content. Social media participationentails a continuous gathering and exploitation of children’s personal data by commercial actors.The discussion highlights challenges and issues related to increasing commercialization, stereotypical anddiscriminatory gender views, and risk of intrusion into children’s privacy. The need for protective regulationsand co-creational strategies with children to strengthen digital competence is also emphasized.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-71
Author(s):  
Jędrzej Wieczorkowski ◽  
Przemysław Polak

The phenomenon of big data includes technological (new opportunities), business (application), and social aspect. The social aspect applies to the social consequences of the use of big data methods, in particular, those related to the processing of personal and other private data , as well as the danger of privacy violation. In the context of the big data phenomenon, this study presents the results of a survey on the level of acceptance of privacy violation resulting from mass data processing. The different objectives of processing were taken into account, including general, social and commercial. This study helps to draw conclusions concerning commercial and non-commercial use of private data, as well as the legal regulations on personal data processing.


2020 ◽  
Vol III (I) ◽  
pp. 11-18
Author(s):  
Javeria Nazeer ◽  
Muhammad Farooq

In recent era, Social networking sites (SNSs) have become an important source of communication and also became a matter of interest for researchers in several disciplines such as communications, technology and sociology. These Social networking sites including Facebook, Twitter etc. often reveal private data through the enclosure of public profiles, photographs, videos and messages send to the family, friends and general public. As it was not possible to conduct a survey in complete population, therefore sample of 250 respondents (50% males & 50% females) was selected from different universities and colleges of Lahore, city of Pakistan. In the process of survey, questionnaire technique has been used to obtain the quantitative data. The findings revealed that Social Networking Sites significantly violate the human basic privacy rights. Majority of the respondents were of the view that privacy rights are harmed by SNSs. 10.4% respondents were strongly disagreeing about the statement that Facebook privacy is a real problem, 18.0% were disagree, 20.4% were neutral about the problem while 38.4% said they are agreed and 12.8% were strongly agree. The results also suggested that social networking sites leak personal data and also become a reason for disclosure of personal information.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-52
Author(s):  
Abdullatif Kaban

Do we care about the security on the internet environment the way we do in the daily life safety of our children? In order to answer this question, this study aims to reveal what kind of education is provided at school about using secure internet. In accordance with this purpose, Information Technologies and Software Course textbooks at primary and secondary schools are examined applying document analysis method and analyzed by content analysis method. According to the findings, in the textbooks, the most frequently mentioned topics related to the use of secure internet are “protection of personal data”, “security measures that can be taken” and “digital footprint”; and the most frequently mentioned topics related to the ethic are “internet ethics” and “respect for others”. In this study on the use of secure internet, suggestions have been made about the precautions to be taken. The results are expected to provide information and resources to the researchers who work on secure internet use, educational institutions and teachers. Keywords: Curriculum, Information technologies and software, Secure internet use, Primary school, Secondary school.


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