NSPCC Internet Safety Petition Presented to 10 Downing Street

The NSPCC charity has managed to sign up nearly 30,000 people to their Safety.Net campaign petition, which tells the Government that the internet must be made safer for children as soon as possible. The petition was launched 6 months ago in June 2009, and will be presented today at 10 Downing Street by NSPCC staff and celebrity supporter Levi Roots.

The petition is calling on Prime Minister Gordon Brown to take swift and decisive action to –

  1. Stop the use of software for private sharing of child abuse images.
  2. Block children’s mobile phone access to adult content.
  3. Ensure social networking sites protect children by proactively reviewing & removing offensive/illegal content.
  4. Pre-install child safety software on all computer and mobile web devices.
  5. Make therapeutic services available for children who have been abused and had pictures and films of the abuse appear on the internet.
  6. Provide specialist training for professionals who deal with online offenders.

Due to the umlimited access children now have to the internet, it is now time to put into place measures to help shop people praying on the young via the worldwide web. One recently developed measure is the ImSafer Child Internet Security tool, which alerts parents via an email or text if it detects any signs of bullying or grooming during online activities. This preventory measure is a great way for parents to protect their children without being seen to be checking up on them.

Help the NSPCC today

The NSPCC help thousands of children each year, and with your donations they can endeavour to answer more calls from children who struggle to get through on their busy phone lines.

The NSPCC childrens charity are eager to raise £50million to help expand their UK services and recruit nearly two thousand volunteers. By donating to the NSPCC you can help stop atrocities happening to children.

> > Click here to order ImSafer today