Skip to main content
  • English
  • Français

Footer Social Media Icons

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • TikTok
Home
  • Home
  • Digital Media Literacy
    • General Information
    • Media Issues
    • Digital Issues
    • Educational Games
    • Media Literacy Week
    • Workshops
  • Research and Evaluation
    • Our Approach
    • What We Do
    • Research Reports
    • Young Canadians in a Wireless World
  • For Parents
  • Teacher Resources
    • Find Lessons & Resources
    • Digital Media Literacy Outcomes by Province & Territory
    • Digital Media Literacy Framework
    • Media Literacy 101
    • Digital Literacy 101
  • Blog
  • Get Involved
    • Become a donor
    • Become a volunteer
    • Become a Corporate Partner
    • Media Literacy Week
    • Teen Fact-Checking Network

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Privacy Pirates: An Interactive Unit on Online Privacy

In the last year or two many writers and researchers have been trying to correct the common perception that young people do not care about privacy. While the public may finally be getting the message that teenagers do value their privacy -- as they define it -- the idea that younger children have any personal information worth protecting is still a new one. Certainly, most people would probably be surprised to learn how early children are starting to surf the Net: the average age at which children began to use the Internet dropped from age 10 in 2002 to age four in 2009 (Findahl, Olle, Preschoolers and the Internet, Presented at the EU-kids online conference, London, June 11, 2009); and, thanks to the iPhone and iPad, that number has probably dropped even lower.

Internet & Mobile, Parents, Privacy, Resources

Gone in Sixty Seconds: The Sociology of Snapchat

Snapchat, the mobile app that lets users send "self-destructing" photos, has the distinction of being the only digital tool that does not have a single redeeming feature. While the moral panic associated with blogs, cell phones, social networks and online games has largely faded in grudging recognition of their more positive uses (indeed, research shows that many parents have actually helped their children lie about their age register for Facebook accounts), Snapchat is seen as the Q-tip of the digital age: its sole function is to do the thing that you're warned not to do on the box.

Cell Phones and Texting, Internet & Mobile, Parents, Privacy, Social Networking

Online Privacy, Online Publicity: Youth do more to protect their reputation than their information

Do young people care about privacy? Participants in MediaSmarts’ 2012 focus groups told us that they valued their privacy highly, despite being enthusiastic participants in platforms and activities that adults see as being about nothing but sharing and broadcasting. Looking at the findings from our Young Canadians in a Wired World survey of more than five thousand students from every province and territory in Canada, we can begin to understand that contradiction: young people may not care that much about what we think of as privacy, but they care very much about control – control over who can see what they post, over who can track them digitally and, most especially, over how other people see them.

Cell Phones and Texting, Cyber Security, Digital Citizenship, Internet & Mobile, Privacy, Social Networking

Constant surveillance: Youth privacy in a digital age

Despite what many adults believe privacy matters to youth. More and more, though, youth are finding that their actions online are monitored – by parents, teachers, and corporations. A high school principal creates a fake Facebook profile page and adds over 300 of her school’s students as friends; a Texas middle-school plans to introduce ID cards with microchips that its students will be required to carry at all times; an Indiana high school student is expelled after a profane tweet (sent in the middle of the night from the student’s home computer) alerts his school’s monitoring system.

Privacy

It’s Not Easy Buying Green

There's an old urban legend called “the water engine,” which tells of the discovery of a way to turn water into fuel. There are variations to the story – sometimes it's tap water, sometimes sea water; in recent versions it's specified the fuel is nonpolluting – but the ending is always the same: the invention is suppressed by the oil companies, either by buying the invention and burying it or by forcing the inventor into ruin and suicide.

Marketing & Consumerism, Resources

Where Everybody Knows Your Name

One of the most famous images of online life is the New Yorker cartoon captioned “On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog.” The cartoon, published in 1993, was hugely influential in fixing an image in the public imagination of the Internet as a place where anonymity reigned. It did not take long for that humorous view of anonymity to take on a darker cast, as parents began to fear that Internet predators would use this invisibility to lure their children in the guise of twelve-year-old girls. It's instructive, though, to realize just how long ago this cartoon was published, and how much the Internet has changed since then.

Cyberbullying, Internet & Mobile, Privacy

Working for a living

One of the most unusual things about Internet-based businesses is that few of them try very hard to make money. Of course, with a very few exceptions (such as Wikipedia) making money is certainly in the business plan, or there wouldn't be all that venture capital floating around, but in general the approach has been to come up with a good product or service first, and only look for ways to make it profitable after it's acquired a steady clientele. Hugely important and successful ventures like Google, YouTube and Facebook all started out operating at a significant loss. This pattern continues today: it's already hard to imagine the Internet without Twitter, but so far that service isn't earning its makers much money (though you can be sure they're looking for ways to do that.)

Internet & Mobile, Marketing & Consumerism, Parents, Privacy

What is public space online?

New York's Gramercy Park is a curious institution: two acres of fenced-in greenspace that is accessible only to those who own the houses surrounding the park. (Non-residents must either stay at the Gramercy Park Hotel or join the Players Club or National Arts Club if they want to visit, and each of these institutions has a limited number of park keys.) Private parks like it are the exception, of course, not the rule: since the days of Frederick Law Olmsted, who campaigned for and designed city parks across North America (Central Park, in New York, and Montreal's Mount Royal Park among them) we have come to expect most of our recreational spaces to be public. Cities and neighbourhoods are routinely rated on both the quantity and quality of their parks, and any suggestion that these services should be cut back always receives violent reactions from taxpayers; playgrounds, too, are public by default.

Internet & Mobile, Marketing & Consumerism

Making Your School a Commercial-free Zone - Tip Sheet

Schools are supposed to be public spaces, but more and more advertisers are using them to target youth. Corporations know just how much time kids spend at school, whether in class, in after-school activities or just hanging out with their friends, and they don’t want to pass up a chance to reach them there. A school setting delivers a captive youth audience and implies the endorsement of teachers and the education system.

Marketing & Consumerism

Talking to kids about advertising

Today's kids have become the most marketed-to generation in history, due to their spending power and their future influence as adult consumers. By talking to kids about advertising - how it works and how they're targeted - we can help them to become more savvy as consumers and more resistant to the pressures to be "cool."

Marketing & Consumerism

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Current page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Resource Type

  • Article
  • Blog entry
  • Game
  • Guide
  • Lesson Plan
  • Resources Listing Page
  • Tip Sheet

Filter by Categories

  • 2SLGBTQ+ Representation
  • Alcohol Marketing
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Authenticating Information
  • Blogging
  • Body Image
  • Cell Phones and Texting
  • Comics
  • Crime Portrayal
  • Cyberbullying
  • Cyber Security
  • Digital Citizenship
  • Digital Health
  • Diversity in Media
  • Environment
  • Events
  • Excessive Internet Use
  • File Sharing
  • Food Marketing
  • Gender Representation
  • Global Development Portrayal
  • Human Rights
  • Indigenous People
  • Instant Messaging
  • Intellectual Property
  • Internet & Mobile
  • Journalism & News
  • (-) Marketing & Consumerism
  • Media Literacy 101
  • Media Production
  • Movies
  • Music
  • Online Ethics
  • Online Gambling
  • Online Hate
  • Online Marketing
  • Parents
  • Persons with Disabilities
  • Pornography
  • (-) Privacy
  • Privilege in the Media
  • Professional Development
  • Religion
  • Resources
  • Sexting
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Social Networking
  • Sports
  • Stereotyping
  • Television
  • Tobacco Marketing
  • Video Games
  • Video Sharing
  • Violence
  • Visible Minorities
  • Young Canadians In A Wired World

Sign up & Follow Us

Stay informed with daily news and updates!

Learn More

Stay connected with us on social media!

How to Support Us

Interested in supporting MediaSmarts? Find out how you can get involved. Charitable Registration No. 89018 1092 RR0001

Learn More

Find Teacher Resources

Corporate Partners

  • APTN
  • Amazon
  • Bell
  • Google
  • Meta
  • NFB
  • TELUS Wise
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

MediaSmarts

MediaSmarts is a non-partisan registered charity that receives funding from government and corporate partners to support the development of original research and educational content. Our funders and corporate partners do not influence our work, and any resources that offer guidance on specific digital tools and platforms do not constitute an endorsement.

Footer - This Site

  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Footer - About Us

  • Press Centre
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • English
  • Français