No 54/2012
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18 September 2012
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EESC slates harmful ads and pushes for balance
of e-commerce and kids' safety
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In
a bid to protect children against harmful advertising and damaging
online content, the European Economic and Social Committee at its
plenary
session today called for specific regulations to be put in place.
At its plenary session of 18 and 19 September, the EESC adopted two opinions on advertising
aimed at children, the internet and social media.
"More
and more often, children, including very young children, have access to
a television
and the internet alone and unsupervised. 38% of children between the
ages of 9 and 12 already have an online profile, and this figure rises
to 78% for 13-16 year olds. We need to monitor this new reality," said
Jorge Pegado Liz, rapporteur for the EESC opinion on advertising aimed at young people and children.
TV
advertising has started using more sophisticated product-marketing
techniques in a bid to
becoming more persuasive. Despite that, current legislation has
abandoned any restrictions on inserting adverts. Moreover, advertising
is now present not only in audiovisual media, but also on the internet
and social networks, requiring more restrictive and
cross-cutting measures.
According to the EESC,
the EU communication for a child-friendly internet was "a missed
opportunity" for creating a coherent framework to protect minors. The
communication fails to provide clear rules on advertising and glosses
over food advertising, which, in the Committee's
view, deserves specific regulation.
Favouring E-commerce over child protection
While
backing the EU's bid to create a competitive digital single market, the
Committee cautioned
against favouring e-commerce over child protection. Although the
internet was not designed with children in mind, 75% of children now use
it. "The communication makes business growth a key objective, almost
putting child protection in second place," said
Antonio Longo (Italy, Various Interests Group), rapporteur for the opinion on a European Strategy for a Better Internet for Children.
Self-regulation
of business operators will not suffice to protect children online,
warned the
EESC. "Stringent rules should include the closure of these websites and
the withdrawal of licences in cases where holders breach data
protection rules or promote child pornography," added Mr Longo.
For more information please contact:
Karin
Füssl, Head of the Press Unit
Tel.: +32 2 546 87 22
E-mail:
Karin.Fussl@eesc.europa.eu
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