CBSE cyber safety handbook warns teenagers
on revenge pornography, sets limits to online friendships
CBSE cyber safety handbook: While the
digital exposure of students has increased due to teaching activities moving
completely online during the coronavirus-induced lockdown, concerns about the
potential threats have been brought to the forefront with the recent “Bois
locker room” controversy.
By : Press Trust of India| Posted by
Nandini | New Delhi | May 24, 2020
Warning against “revenge pornography”,
setting limits to online friendships, valuing consent and reporting to elders
if faced with a problem, are among lessons the Central Board of Secondary
Education (CBSE) wants teenagers to learn to ensure their safety in the virtual
world.
While the digital exposure of students has
increased due to teaching activities moving completely online during the
coronavirus-induced lockdown, concerns about the potential threats have been
brought to the forefront with the recent “Bois locker room” controversy.
The CBSE has shared a Cyber Safety
handbook with schools for class 9 to 12 students. The handbook also details
guidelines for students as well as parents, listing the do’s and dont’s and
activities to understand the sensitivity of the issue.
“Students must learn to set limits to
their online friendships as well as online communication with real life
friends. There has to be a limit to what they share or exchange in terms of
written words, photographs or videos. They must remember that, once online,
they may not be able to control who will actually see it, prevent breach of
trust and misuse and potential risk and harm to their person and reputation,” a
senior board official said.
“Teenagers need to understand gender
relations. Boys must learn to interact with girls on equal terms and respect
them and their desires as those of human beings, not simply as objects of
respect or desires,” the official said.
“Consent must be an important part of
relationships. Pictures, videos and other material shared in confidence cannot
be published on social media without the permission of the person just because
the other person does not want to continue in a relationship. Youngsters must
learn to cope with rejection as it is a part of life but not the end of the
world,” the official added.
The board has advised parents to empower
children to decide for themselves how others collect and use their information
by requiring their consent. “As of now, there is no minimum age of digital
consent in India. If there are people offline who you would be uncomfortable
talking to about your physical or sexual experiences, chances are, you would be
uncomfortable doing this with strangers online too. Cyber Groomers create fake
accounts to befriend people, for the purpose of harming them whether
physically, sexually or emotionally,” the official said.
“Students must be cautious when their chat
partner gives them many compliments regarding their appearance within a short
span of their acquaintance. Do not talk to people who ask you to share your
sexually explicit photographs or videos. Never accept a friend request from
someone you have never met in person. If you share your sexually explicit
photos or videos with someone, the person can share those photos with others or
post them on social media. They can also blackmail you,” the official added.
The handbook warns against falling into
the trap of revenge pornography. “Teenagers in the age-group of 14 to 18 years
are the worst victims of revenge porn as well as the perpetrators themselves,
which is a matter of concern. Some teenage students who have been in a relationship
and end it find their explicit photographs circulated on social media
platforms. When such images go viral, students are often harassed and bullied
by their peers – branded with insult and in the end, isolated,” the handbook
states.
“A teenager may be targeted by her jealous
classmates, her ex-boyfriend or even an unknown friend on social media who may
be victimising her because she stopped communicating with him when she realised
the dangers of online relationships,” says the handbook.
Earlier this month, a massive outrage
erupted online after it emerged that an Instagram group named ‘‘bois locker
room’‘ was being used by some persons to share objectionable pictures of minor
girls and discuss illegal acts including rape.
People posted purported screenshots of
crude conversations among members of the group – believed to be students of
some top schools in Delhi and some allegedly as young as 13. It is alleged that
they shared photos of teenage girls and made explicit comments about their
looks.
However, during its investigation into the
‘Bois Locker Room’ case, the Delhi police has stumbled upon a conversation on
Snapchat where a girl, posing as a male, suggested a “sexual assault plan” to a
boy just to test his “values and character”.
Source : /www.hindustantimes.com/
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