11 September 19, 06:21
(This post was last modified: 11 September 19, 06:24 by harlan4096.)
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For the second summer straight, we cover the children’s interests during the period when they have enough leisure to give themselves full time to their hobbies. Modern children are active users of the internet, so most of their interests find reflection in their online activities, which are the subject of our today’s review.
Statistics collection principles
Kaspersky products scan the content of web pages children try to access. If the website belongs to one of the fourteen unwelcome categories, the Kaspersky Security Network is alerted (no private user data is sent, so privacy is not compromised). Mark these two important points:
It is up to the parent to decide which content to block by tweaking the protective solution’s preferences. But anonymous statistics are collected for all the 14 categories.
Data is harvested only from computers running Windows and macOS; no mobile statistics are provided in this report.
Website categorization
In the products featuring Parental Control functions web filtering is currently performed across the following categories:
- Internet communication media (social networks, messengers, chats and forums)
- Adult content
- Alcohol, tobacco, narcotics
- Violence
- Weapons, explosives, pyrotechnics
- Profanity
- Gambling, lotteries, sweepstakes
- Computer games
- Electronic commerce
- Software, audio, video
- HTTP query redirection
- Recruitment
- Religions, religious associations
- News media
Search query filtering
Children’s search activities best illustrate their interests. Kaspersky Safe Kids is able to filter kids’ queries for five different search engines: Bing, Google, Mail.ru, Yahoo! and Yandex — across six potentially risky subjects: “Adult content”, “Alcohol”, “Drugs”, “Tobacco”, “Racism” and “Profanity”.
We have grouped search queries by language. The English statistics we consider to be international, because English is such a wide spread language. We assume 100% to be the total of search queries submitted by individual users in all languages across all subjects of our interest, repetitions included. The percentage of queries says how popular a subject is.
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