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Norton Online Living Report: scary stats for parents; social networking strong
Information Technology News
Norton Online Living Report: scary stats for parents; social networking strong | Norton Online Living Report: scary stats for parents; social networking strong |
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| by Alex Zaharov-Reutt | |
| Saturday, 16 February 2008 | |
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Page 1 of 5 The survey was conducted online by third-party research firm Harris Interactive and returned a total of 4,687 adult and 2,717 child responses. All respondents spend at least one hour per month online and were surveyed in their native language across eight countries (U.S., U.K., Australia, Germany, France, Brazil, China and Japan). The adult (18 and over) and child (8 to 17) samples were both weighted to be representative of the population of online adults and children for each individual country. The overall study entailed 15-minute interviews among adults and 5-minute interviews among children. Questions asked were identical across all countries, with some overlap between the adult and children surveys, and all-in-all, the report reveals surprising cross-cultural differences, and similarities, when it comes to interacting with technology. Symantec says their NOLR report is the “first multi-region survey-based document to catalogue the migration of offline activities to the online world”. The report finds that, more than ever, users around the world are turning online for their primary source of personal interaction and emotional connection – including dating, friendship and playing – as well as for information and communication. For example, an unprecedented number of adult Internet users worldwide have made friends online (54% of Australians) and that many of them (52%) enjoy those relationships more than their offline friendships. This indicates a major shift in how people relate to one other and provides potential clues for the future of human interaction. Of course Symantec didn’t just create the report for fun, they say that the report was created to “better comprehend how consumers interact with technology on a daily basis in order to understand the mindset of consumers worldwide”, with the detailed data within to be used by Symantec to “hone its products, deliver targeted and streamlined services and to anticipate online threats and trends”. Another common theme represented through most of the data worldwide reveals that parents perception of what their children are doing online does not reflect the reality of what their children say they are doing. So, just what were our kids getting up to online, without their parents’ knowledge? Please read onto page 2. |
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