First Youth Internet Safety Survey (YISS-1)
Dataset Number: 134
Investigator(s): David Finkelhor, Ph.D.; Kimberly J.
Mitchell, Ph.D.; Janis Wolak, J.D.
Abstract: The First Youth Internet Safety Survey (YISS-1) is
a telephone survey of a national sample of 1,501 youth, ages 10 to
17, and their parents, to assess the incidence, consequences and
risk factors related to unwanted or illegal exposure of children and
adolescents to sexual solicitation, harassment and pornography on
the Internet and to determine children's and parent's knowledge of
how to respond to such episodes.
Results indicate that approximately one in five youth (19%) received a
sexual solicitation or approach over the Internet in the last year
while one in thirty-three (3%) received an aggressive sexual
solicitation where a solicitor asked to meet them somewhere, called
them on the telephone, sent them mail, money or gifts. One in four
(25%) had an unwanted exposure to pornography online in the last
year. One in seventeen (6%) youth was threatened or harassed online
in the last year. A small percentage of young people who reported
these incidents were distressed by them. Only a fraction of all
episodes were reported to authorities such as a law enforcement
agency, an Internet Service Provider, or a hotline. About
one-quarter of the youth who encountered a sexual solicitation or
approach told a parent. About 40% of those reporting an unwanted
exposure to pornography told a parent.
The survey suggests that youth encounter a substantial quantity of
offensive episodes, some of which are distressing and most of which
are unreported. A comprehensive strategy to respond to the problem
would aim to reduce the quality of offensive behavior, better shield
young people from its likely occurrence, increase the level of
reporting, and provide more help to youth and families to protect
them from any consequences.
Download User's Guide (Data Codebook):
PDF
List of Publications:
134 YISS-1 Publications

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