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Share Take Care for a safer internet

Forty two per cent of teenagers questioned in a new BBC survey said they or someone they knew had shared something online which they later regretted. The specially commissioned survey of 13-19 year-olds for BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 5 live also suggests that nearly a third of the young people who had ‘over-shared’ online believed that it had damaged their reputation.

Of those who claimed to be badly affected by the experience themselves, 58% said they fell out with friends and 26% said it had made them anxious and depressed.

The BBC’s Share Take Care campaign is part of its commitment to media literacy and online safety for young people. Working in partnership with The UK Safer Internet Centre to support Safer Internet Day, (Tuesday 7 February), the BBC’s campaign aims to raise awareness of the issues around safeguarding reputation online. It is designed to alert parents and young people to the risks of over-sharing information, photographs and video material online.

Empowering young people and parents with the skills and knowledge to take control and make informed choices about their online activity and potential consequences, the campaign will also encourage parents to foster a dialogue with their child and agree together how to use the technology safely and responsibly.

The specially commissioned Horrible Histories episodes will be available online from Tuesday 7 February at www.bbc.co.uk/CBBC

A range of resources about online safety are available at www.bbc.co.uk/webwise