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AVG调研称81%的2岁儿童就已经和互联网产生联系

发布时间:2010-10-11 10:25:08 Tags:,,

据mashable网站的报道,一份来自AVG针对2200名母亲的市场调研称81%的2岁儿童就已经和互联网产生联系,其中美国的比例最高为92%,而西欧的数值大概在73%。

AVG的调查甚至称约四分之一的婴儿在未出生以前就已经被父母将怀孕的声波图像分享到网上,这个比例在美国的数值显得更大有超过三分之一,加拿大则有37%。但是在西欧或者日本这个比值相对较小,分别只有13%~15%以及14%。

babycomputer

babycomputer

在出生后,7%还在牙牙学语的婴幼儿就拥有了自己的电子邮件帐号,这个数值在西班牙更高有12%。同样有5%的比例已经在社交网站上有自己的介绍资料了。高达70%的父母认为他们这样做主要是想和自己的家人朋友一起分享孩子的成长过程。

读者Wisu Suntoyo回复称他自己三岁半的小女孩已经有了自己的facebook帐号,而她的哥哥已经可以在小学老师的指导下兑换farmville(zynga旗下社交游戏)礼物了。而他以及他的妻子只是偶尔登录他们的帐号看看是否安全。

读者joshuakarp表示,在他自己孩子出生的几分钟内,他就为他们注册好域名了。

读者Jen Knoedl称在线生活是未来人们必需习惯的趋势,而c asGhar则认为这样的趋势不可避免,那么facebook就应用有属于儿童的专区或者属于他们自己的应用。(休闲益智类的小游戏)(本文由游戏邦/gamerboom.com编译)

According to a recent international survey of 2,200 mothers, 81% of children under the age of two currently have some form of online presence — ranging from photos uploaded and shared by their parents, to a full-fledged profile on a social networking site. A full 92% of children in the U.S. have an online presence by the time they are two, compared to 73% in western Europe.

The study, which was conducted by Internet security firm AVG, found that nearly one in four children have an online presence before they are even born. On average, 23% of parents share images from prenatal sonograms on the web; a full third do so in the U.S. The practice is even more common in Canada (37%), and significantly less popular in western Europe (13-15%) and Japan (14%).

After birth, 7% of babies and toddlers have an e-mail address created for them (12% in Spain), and 5% have their own profile on a social network.

When asked why they were inspired to post images of their infants online, more than 70% of parents said it was because they wanted to share them with friends and family; 22% of mothers said they wanted to expand the content on their social networking profiles, while 18% admitted they were merely mimicking their peers. Few (3.5%) expressed concern about the amount of information that would be available about their children in future years.

AVG CEO J.R. Smith said he found it “shocking” that most 30-year-olds have an “online footprint stretching back 10 to 15 years at most, while the vast majority of children today will have online presence by the time they are two years old — a presence that will continue to build throughout their whole lives.”

He cautions parents to think about the kinds of information they upload about their children to the web, since that content “will follow him or her for the rest of their life.”

Personally, I’m grateful that my parents weren’t able to chronicle my childhood online. It’s infinitely reassuring to know that home videos of spaghetti-eating and squabbling with my little sister are safely stored not in the Google-optimized archives of YouTube but in obsolete videocasettes, where they belong.

读者的回复:

Wisu Suntoyo

My 3,5 year old girl has a Facebook account… her elder brother exchanges farmville gifts with his 4th grade teacher… Me and my wife are occasionally look in to both account verifying everything is safe…

Jen Knoedl

I think everyone just needs to chill out. Kids “get” that. Why shouldn’t adults? Times are changing as, they always do, and this is just a sign of the times.

More and more people live their lives online. It’s not for everyone, but it is for a growing number . It’s natural for people to want to share the stories of their life. Things haven’t changed. They’ve just gone digital.

c asGhar

So we need a babies section in facebook and applications sporting toys … welcome to facebook kindergarten .(source:mashable)


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