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Over the past decade, there has been a rapid expansion in the use of the Internet in the Westernized world. According to the latest figures, 68.2% of all those in the United States have access to the Internet, representing a growth of 107% between 2000 and 2005, and 36% of all Europeans now have access to the Internet, a growth of 172% for the same period. The usage figures for children and adolescents appear to mirror overall usage figures. In 2003, a U.S. study found that 65% of American children used the Internet, a 59% growth rate from the year 2000. The same report found that teenagers spent more time online than watching television, for example, 3.5 hours versus 3.1 hours per day.

A 1998 study of international Internet use found that, on average, around 100% of secondary schools in Singapore and Iceland had Internet access. The figures were 95% in Canada and Finland, 88% in New Zealand, 85% in Slovenia and Denmark, 81% in Norway, 80% in Hong Kong, 72% in Italy, 58% in Japan, 55% in France, 52% in Israel, 42% in Hungary, 41% in Belgium (French), 30% in the Czech Republic, 25% in Bulgaria, and 23% in Thailand.

Children and adolescents are growing up in societies where the Internet is an extremely prominent form of media, and they are introduced to it at an early age, either at home or at school. At the same time, there have been many controversies about child and adolescent Internet use, primarily concerning censorship and limits to stop pornographic, violent, or commercially exploitative content. Other issues relate to ensuring the safety of children and adolescents, particularly protecting them from pedophiles or other “strangers” who intend to do harm. There have also been concerns about the addictive potential of the Internet and about children spending too much time surfing the Web. However, many parents see the benefits of the Internet for helping with homework and other scholarly uses, and the advent of broadband technology has meant that Internet use for many has become a relatively cheap resource no longer tied to the cost of phone calls. Internet use internationally has allowed children and adolescents to communicate with each other across the world and to share ideas and experiences as well as providing access to rich international sources of information.

Global Controversies

Much concern has been expressed about child and adolescent use of the Internet, especially about potential exposure to pornographic, violent, or otherwise inappropriate material. Much of this concern focuses on the fact that little can be done to censor the Internet itself or to prevent children and adolescents from viewing such materials. One attempt has been to use software (e.g., CyberPatrol and Net Nanny) that filter content and block websites if they contain words suggesting unsuitable content. However, many children and adolescents are often more proficient at using the Internet than their parents, who frequently do not understand how to implement such controls, and children know how to circumvent these restrictions. More recently, the widespread introduction of WAP cell phones and video game consoles linked to the Internet has freed Internet use from the confines of the personal computer. The result is even less physical control of children and adolescents' usage by their parents or other guardians.

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