Who controls what children should see online: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "'''YOU<sup>th</sup>DIG 2026 programme'''<br /><br /> == Session teaser == Children’s online experiences are not neutral — they are shaped by platforms, algorithms, parental controls, infrastructure choices, and public policy. From content filtering to AI-driven recommendations, multiple actors influence what young users can access, often without transparency. This session explores how different layers of the internet — from apps to infr..."
 
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== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
Council of Europe work on children’s digital rights
* Council of Europe work on children’s digital rights
EU discussions on child online protection and platform responsibility
* EU discussions on child online protection and platform responsibility
 


== People ==  
== People ==  

Latest revision as of 08:46, 17 April 2026

YOUthDIG 2026 programme

Session teaser

Children’s online experiences are not neutral — they are shaped by platforms, algorithms, parental controls, infrastructure choices, and public policy. From content filtering to AI-driven recommendations, multiple actors influence what young users can access, often without transparency. This session explores how different layers of the internet — from apps to infrastructure — shape children’s digital environments, and asks what a fair and safe “child-friendly internet” should look like.

Format

Scenario-based interactive session with layered decision-making and debate.

Further reading

  • Council of Europe work on children’s digital rights
  • EU discussions on child online protection and platform responsibility

People

Focal Point

  • João Pedro Martins, YOUthDIG Org Team