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TikTok refuerza las reglas de seguridad para proteger a los adolescentes de retos y bulos peligrosos tras la publicación de un estudio

TikTok reinforces safety rules to protect teens from dangerous hoaxes and post-study challenges

Posted:

November 18, 2021 03:40 GMT

The measure includes detecting and eliminating posts that alarm or self-harm, as well as a warning that will be presented to those looking for malicious content.

tik tok ad This Wednesday reinforced safety rules regarding challenges and potentially dangerous tricks for teens.

The procedure includes detection and elimination of postings warning or self-harm. “We’ve built technology that warns our security teams of sudden increases in abusive content associated with hashtags, and now we’ve expanded it to also include potentially dangerous behaviour,” explains Alexandra, head of public security policies for the social network in Europe. Evans.

Similarly, users who search for “challenging content or harmful hoaxes” will see a new notification that, according to the platform, will “encourage them (…) to get more information, and if people search for hoaxes related to suicide or self-harm, Additional resources will be shown in the search.

What does the survey say?

Changes are based on recommendations and conclusions a study Conducted by the British NGO Praesidio Safeguarding. The analysis included a survey of 10.900 Teens, parents and teachers from different countries of the world.

In particular, they were asked to describe the level of risk of an online challenge they had seen recently. It was determined that 48% of the interviewees rated it as ‘safe’ and 32% thought it ‘involved a small risk’, but also overall as ‘it was safe’. 14% of respondents mentioned a “serious challenge” and 3% a “very serious challenge”. At the same time, only 2% of teens confirmed “partly a serious challenge” and 0.3% in “Very dangerous”.

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For a similar question about a recent hoax, 31% of study participants rated it as “obviously wrong/unbelievable” and 27% thought it was “reliable and could mislead someone.” 35% of those surveyed admitted that the hoax was a concern to them and they had to “check again if it wasn’t true”, while the 3% They believed the hoax, even at the time of the survey.