Norton Online Living Report for 2009

The Norton Online living report is a large study with data from 12 countries and interviews with over 9000 parents and children. The survey results deal with safety issues, parental control issues, time spent online, relationships, learning benefits (or drawbacks) from online living, and how much value is attached to online living. More . . .

The second annual Norton Online Living Report (available March 17, 2009 at 11:30 AM EST,) explores the way online living has changed social lives. The study came from Symantic, the makers of the Norton anti virus and secuity software.

The online living report is a large study with data from 12 countries and interviews with over 9000 parents and children. The survey results deal with safety issues, parental control issues, time spent online, relationships, learning benefits (or drawbacks) from online living, and how much value is attached to online living.

Seventy percent of people worldwide say that the Internet has improved their relationships. These results include the use of email, webcams, social networking, online photo sharing, Instant Messaging and Twitter-like services.

The findings show that family relationships, in particular, are improved with online use. Seventy-one percent report that keeping in touch is easier, 53% report it improves communication, and 45% report that family relationships overall are improved with the Internet. A small segment of that group, which Norton calls the “We Family” reports that family use leads to more satisfaction with family life and stronger family bonds.

The night life of adults is changed by the online world.

Nearly 60% of online adults have made a friend this way, and have an average of 41 online friends. Three in four have gone on to meet someone they originally met online in person, and 56% have used the Internet to reconnect with old friends.

The survey looked at kids online use from both the kids’ and the parents’ perspectives. The results were sometimes very different. This is unchanged from last year’s survey, after which parents were urged to try to get a better understanding of what their kids were actually doing online.

Kids are now spending an average of 39 hours a month online. That’s about twice the time online that most parents think their kids are spending. The report shows

• 86% of kids send text messages
• Kids spend 3 hours/week texting
• 73% of kids email from their phones
• 23% of kids use a Twitter-like service
• 93% of kids socialize with family and friends online
• Kids spend 5 hours a week socializing online, the same as adults
• 55% of kids have made friends online, and have an average of 37 online friends

With kids, the issue is often safety. One-third of kids report their parents don’t always know what they are looking at online. One in five parents have caught their child doing something they do not approve of online. Remedies like parental controls are in place in about one-third of all homes. However, 70% of parents are now actively talking to their kids about online safety.

• 7 in 10 kids have rules for Internet use
• 78% of kids say they always follow these rules; 4 in 5 parents agree

The report emphasized that online safety talks are not a one-time thing. As kids grow they become involved in different sites with new challenges. It’s important to have “The Talk” about online safety frequently.

In terms of online security, most people—adults included—fall short.

The days when a virus scanner was enough to stay safe are long gone, but 79% of Internet users still rely on this to stay safe. Worse, 22% have no security software installed at all.
• 1 in 4 report a lack of confidence that their personal information online is secure
• 21% do not run virus scans frequently
• 33% do not avoid giving out personal information
• 55% do not back up their files

In addition, 50% visit sites that are not secure and do not keep their passwords secure.

The report gives three steps to ensure online safety. Point one is pretty obvious coming from an Internet security company, but all are worth consideration.

1. Choose a comprehensive Internet security suite including security plus backup. Antivirus is not enough for the average online user in today’s threat filled environment. Backup your irreplaceable photos and documents.
2. Use common sense – don’t use the same password for multiple accounts, don’t share personal information, don’t open or click on links in emails from people you don’t know.
3. Get a tune-up for your PC. You get a tune-up from your car at least twice a year, you use your PC as much so it makes sense to protect it from crashes and performance problems.

In spite of the dangers—the hacking, crashing and viruses—most people say having access to the Internet is worth the risk. When BlogHer took its benchmark survey in 2008, many women said they would give up a lot of things before giving up the Internet. The Norton study found that it isn’t only sex and chocolate people will give up before the Internet: people are now saying they would give up their CARS before giving up the Internet.

• Online adults (89%) and online children (90%) overwhelmingly agree that the benefits of using the Internet outweigh the risks
• Adults would give up their cars or digital music players before giving up Internet access

There is variation in the results by country. Here are some highlights, selected from a great range of findings for each location.

• U.S. kids have an average of 83 online friends, the highest number among the 12 countries surveyed.
• Of the 12 countries surveyed, kids in Brazil spend the most time online (70 hours/month), while parents in Brazil believe their kids spend 56 hours/month online.
• At 89%, online adults in Canada report the highest level of parental responsibility for protecting their children online.
• Parental confidence in the UK is extremely high – 81% are confident they know what their child is looking at online; the children report a different story. 69% of kids report their parents know what they are doing online.
• At 78%, kids in France were most likely to report that online messaging techniques and texting make learning to write well more difficult for children.
• Online adults in Germany report the highest level of socializing with family or friends in the real world at 23 hours per week.
• Italy reports the most agreement between how often a parent reports knowing where a child is online and the percentage of time a child reports the parents know where they are, (77% parents vs. 78% kids).
• Sweden is the only country where the Internet as something they couldn’t live without did not make the top three list; instead the top three were cell phone (46%), television (46%) and car (39%).
• At 83%, online adults in China say they are among the first of their friends and family to check out a new technology, the highest of the countries surveyed and compared to 62% overall.In China, adults (47%) and parents (43%) are by far most likely to report that the Internet actually makes educating their children harder. This finding is somewhat surprising considering that adults, parents, and youth in China consistently emphasize the benefits of the Internet on learning.
• Online parents in Japan are least likely to set parental controls (18%), monitor their children online (10%), or discuss safe online habits (10%).
• Of all countries surveyed, online adults in India report the most man hours per week sending text messages from a phone (4).
• Among all the countries surveyed, Australia’s online parents report knowing what their children are looking online the most often (86%); however Australian youth report their parents only know what they are looking at 65% of the time. This is the largest gap in all countries.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Useful Links: Playing for Change, 300+ WordPress tools, Text Zoom

Links to Playing for Change, a worldwide music project, 300+ WordPress tools. Accessibility tips. More…

Playing for Change is a worldwide multimedia music project, bringing musicians from all over the world together by digital magic to create wonderful  music for a web site, a YouTube site, an album, and iTunes videos. The program brings supplies, facilities and education to musicians around the world. I realize it has nothing to do with teaching or learning web design, but it’s clearly a project that could not have been achieved before the advances in technology that support it.

WordPress God: 300+ Tools for Running Your WordPress Blog. Who could resist a list like this? Only someone using Blogger or Typepad would pass up this gem.

Check your design with text size increased to 200 percent from 456 Berea St is good advice  to teach all students as a standard part of their routine checks of every page they design.

Legal Rights for Bloggers

Bloggers' Rights at EFF
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) released “the Legal Guide for Bloggers, a collection of blogger-specific FAQs addressing everything from fair use to defamation law to workplace whistle-blowing.”

The introduction to the Guide says,

Whether you’re a newly minted blogger or a relative old-timer, you’ve been seeing more and more stories pop up every day about bloggers getting in trouble for what they post.

Like all journalists and publishers, bloggers sometimes publish information that other people don’t want published. You might, for example, publish something that someone considers defamatory, republish an AP news story that’s under copyright, or write a lengthy piece detailing the alleged crimes of a candidate for public office.

The difference between you and the reporter at your local newspaper is that in many cases, you may not have the benefit of training or resources to help you determine whether what you’re doing is legal. And on top of that, sometimes knowing the law doesn’t help – in many cases it was written for traditional journalists, and the courts haven’t yet decided how it applies to bloggers.

But here’s the important part: None of this should stop you from blogging. Freedom of speech is the foundation of a functioning democracy, and Internet bullies shouldn’t use the law to stifle legitimate free expression. That’s why EFF created this guide, compiling a number of FAQs designed to help you understand your rights and, if necessary, defend your freedom.

The announcement at Blogger’s Rights contains links to the document and to usable badges like the one shown here.

I’ll be writing about fair use and the Shepard Fairey case regarding the Obama Hope poster tomorrow on BlogHer. I hope you’ll take a look at that article.

As with disability law and accessiblity on the web, so too with fair use and the rights of bloggers: very little is set into legal precedent yet in the current world. In the uncertain legal period we are muddling through, it’s good that an organization like the Electronic Frontier Foundation is working to help us be clear about our rights.

ADDED 2/14/09. Here’s the BlogHer article: The Murky Mysteries of Fair Use Rise Again.

Useful links: purchase behavior, accessibility in a recession, eduWeb conf, and hAccessibility

A Razorfish study about social behavior and buying decisions, recession accessibility tips, the eduWeb Conference and a look at hAccessibility. More . . .

New Razorfish Data Ties Consumer Social Media Activity To Purchase Behavior about the relationship between social behavior and purchasing decisions concludes,

Clearly this early data reflects our belief that content distribution, especially among social networks, positively impacts a publisher’s monetizable web traffic — which helps explains why ESPN, Hulu, YouTube and the like put such effort into widget distribution. And this is also why retailers and manufactures, of which Amazon.com is clear leader, should be actively creating and distributing value-add widgets across social networks to drive revenue.

Testing times: recession bustin’ accessibility tips from the Opera Developer Network is good reading.

Are you going to the eduWeb Conference? (In July in Chicago.) The eduWeb Conference is an annual event for the higher education community, attracting those who are involved in online strategy, marketing and technology. This includes recruiting, website design/development, CMS, social media, marketing communications and the integration of traditional marketing channels into this new medium.

Microformats, hAccessibility and Moving Forward from A Blog Not Limited offers some pragmatic code examples for an accessibility issue related to the use of the abbr design pattern when expressing dates in microformats.

Useful Links: Internet safety, jQuery, Obama and Tech

A important report on Internet safety, a new tutorial on jQuery use in Dreamweaver, and a look at President Obama’s plans for technology. More . . .

Internet Safety Technical Task Force Report from apophenia is important information for educators, parents, and policy makers. Please read it.

Moving Pictures: a jQuery Accordion Tutorial Greg Rewls explains how to use Dreamweaver CS4 with a jQuery Accordion Widget from the Dreamweaver exchange to create an image menu that slides accordion-style.

How Obama Will Use Web Technology at Tech Crunch examines what we can expect technologically from the new administration.

The new media team has identified three top priorities of the new administration – communication, transparency and participation. Let’s examine how the new administration has been leveraging web technologies to meet these priorities.

One of the most interesting changes at change.gov is that all the content is now available to the public under a Creative Commons license.

Useful Links: real-time web

Examples of the real-time web in action and places to watch during the inauguration for real-time news. More . . .

Sorry, Google, You Missed the Real-Time Web at ReadWriteWeb points out,

In case you missed it, this live streaming mashup of the plane that crashed in the Hudson River yesterday did what no media company could do. It is the future of media — crude, simple, and missing loads of things we would want, yes, but new media always show up that way.

My first glimpse of the plane crash was on Twitter. The mashup ReadWriteWeb mentioned was made using storytir. Storytir will pull in tweets, RSS, Facebook updates and all sorts of content and display it like the example in the story from ReadWriteWeb. Storytir seems worth checking out.

With the inauguration coming, the new experience of a real-time web will hit many people in the face for the first time in a big way tomorrow. A few real-time suggestions from me for the event  include National Public Radio’s (NPR)  already running Inauguration Report which is pulling in #inaug09 and #dctrip09 tagged posts to Twitter, Flickr, and YouTube. The Flickr stream for photos tagged “inauguration” is already available. Great photos.

This is raw, unedited, unpolished reality. It’s one of the ways media is changing.

Watch for my post tomorrow on BlogHer with many more suggestions for watching the inauguration in real time.

The Best Job in the World: Going Viral

Absolutely everybody wants to get paid $100,000 to live for six months on Australia’s Hamilton Island in the Great Barrier Reef and be the island caretaker. It’s the best job in the world. How did the job manage to go viral and become a sensation? More . . .

Absolutely everybody wants to get paid $100,000 to live for six months on Australia’s Hamilton Island in the Great Barrier Reef and be the island caretaker. It’s the best job in the world.

It sounds so easy. Keep an eye on the pool, stroll on the beach, write a weekly blog post, live in a beautiful three bedroom house/office, and make money doing it. You do have to be able to write in English, swim, and be over 18. Not the skills you normally see on a resume, but requirements, nevertheless.

So many people are willing to drop everything and go down under for 6 months that the number of applicants crashed the site. There are only 35 days left to apply at this web site, if you’re interested.

Island Reef Job web page

Finding BonggaMom’s I’ve Found My Dream Job expresses the desire to run away to a beautiful isle with sandy beaches and rolling surf, but tempers it with a dose of reality:

I suppose asking the kids to get themselves to school by themselves for 6 months is a bit unreasonable. Oh, well.

That’s my thought, too. It sounds like heaven, but who can leave everything behind and run away to paradise? Apparently a lot of people. Outnumbered 2 to 1: Fine, I’ll get a J-O-B summarizes the emotional pull of this job quite well.

So, let me get this right. You are going to pay me for something that I currently do now for free? I can live on an island paradise as opposed to the frozen tundra wasteland I currently call home? I can wear flip flops and sarongs as opposed to layers of sweats and college sweatshirts with an outer layer of blanket?

image of Hamilton island from islandreefjob.com

This image of Hamilton Island came from The Best Job in the World web site. Which brings me to the brilliance of the Tourism Queensland team that put this site and this job together. Raise your hands now—had you considered a vacation at Hamilton Island before hearing about this job? No? Well, what about after reading about the job, looking through the web site’s luscious photos of decadent irresponsibility and worry-free living like the one above? Is Hamilton Island on your list of places to visit now? If you said yes, then Tourism Queensland has done its job.

The job went viral. It was a sensation on Twitter, as you can see in this image.

a few tweets about the island caretaker job

The job was world news everywhere like this story from CNN.

I don’t think merely filling the job was the goal. I think the unspoken goal was to bring attention to Hamilton Island as a vacation destination. If the cost of the job and the nicely done website brings returns on the investment with tourist dollars, then the goal is achieved.

How did Tourism Queensland succeed in creating a viral sensation? I think these are some of the reasons:

  • they tapped into a universal desire (get away from it all and bask on a beach)
  • they came up with a hook—the best job in the world—that was guaranteed to grab attention
  • they tied it to a huge paycheck that is very attractive and feels very much like winning a huge sum for doing almost nothing. Something for nothing always attracts interest.
  • they packaged it beautifully in an attractive site with stunning visuals that emphasized the lure of paradise for both the job holder (and the potential tourist to Hamilton Island)
  • they made it easy to apply for the job. More importantly, it’s easy to learn more about the islands of the Great Barrier Reef and to find a vacation package to get you there.

Are you going to apply? Good luck if you do. If you don’t, perhaps you can still profit from a few ideas about what makes an idea worthy of going viral.

Cross posted at BlogHer.