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Surrey Libraries

Earlier this year, the Surrey County Council launched their campaign to encourage kids aged 5-11 to become regular borrowers. Here at Mind Candy we’re all in favour of getting more kids to read and thought we should lend a hand!

Over the upcoming Autumn half-term holiday – that’s 27th to 31st October – we’ll be giving away special Moshi Monsters prizes to any children who sign up for a new library card. 

If you live in Surrey, grab the kids and drop by. To find out more and see where your local library is, visit the council’s site.

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We Have Been WordPress’d!

We have finally made it, the new Mind Candy website is up & running (as you may have already noticed!). Taking a break from the daily Monstro City tasks myself & Ryan have been hard at work getting WordPress themed up and running smoothly over the last couple of weeks, but we are not finished yet – over the next while we will be adding new content, adding final tweaks to existing content, along with the inclusion of Flickr feeds and who knows, maybe even blog more :-)

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Byron Review Talk at BAFTA

So, if you’re in Britain at the moment you can’t help but notice that Dr Tanya Byron’s review “Safer Children in a Digital World” was published late last week. For the past few days everyone from Ofcom, to the Home Office (who’ve clearly not heard of Hotmail et al), to the Daily Mail (only read if you’re interested in finding out what “TV Personality Anne Diamond” thinks about violent games), and many other members of the mainstream media (thank you The Telegraph for the mention of Moshi) have been having their say about the review.

Last night Dr Byron’s whistlestop tour of TV studios and select committee hearings was suspended for a night at BAFTA, at an event run by BAFTA and Showcomotion. She was in conversation with Marc Goodchild of the BBC and went through chapters of the review in a Q&A with the audience. I have to confess that before I’d read the report I only knew of Tanya Byron through her TV work, and didn’t know of her scientific or high-flying medical background, and like a fellow audience member had been concerned about the integrity of the report’s methods and findings. Mea culpa. What came out of last night and from looking at the report for the last few days, and looking at the research commissioned to go with it was a feeling of a very well structured, intellectual, research exercise and consultation. I’d have loved to have been involved in the consultation exercise but at the early stages of that process we were getting Moshi Monsters into private beta and also working on getting our COPPA approval/CARU safe harbor and there just wouldn’t have been time for both.

The review was the result of 100 stake holder meetings and many other activities, it “put children at the heart of the thinking” and sought to be balanced in what is a “polarized and emotional debate”. Fascinatingly there were more responses from children than there were from adults (including all industry consultation). For it’s thinking, the report delves into the fields of neuroscience, educational psychology and child development. The talk last night showed Dr Byron’s passion for her role and what a great job they’ve done, for once at these events I could have listened for a lot longer.

The review concentrates on harm as not just “content” but also contact and conduct. These are all things we’ve been thinking about as we’ve been building Moshi and have placed report buttons everywhere and put the children in charge of moderating their own messages and reporting issues.

The review places a lot of onus on the industry to educate parents about what their children are doing and places an equal if not greater responsibility on parents to discuss with their children what they are doing and to close the “digital divide”. A lot of emphasis is also placed on the fact that we are now “living in a risk averse culture and children are deprived of experiences which will help their development due to this obsession with risk”. One great analogy which is in the review and mentioned in the talk is that of swimming pools. Children need to learn to swim in a controlled environment to prepare them for the risk of drowning in later life in the real world.

“A useful analogy here would be to think about how we manage risks related to public swimming pools. Here we have an area open to the public because it affords many benefits. But swimming pools have a number of safety measures in place to in order to manage the risks (e.g. of injury, drowning):

There are clear safety information signs around the pool area that advise on appropriate and inappropriate behaviour.

There are swimming aids available for younger or the less confident swimmers (e.g. water wings, rubber rings, floats).

There are different pool areas – shallow for those that need to stand and are less confident at swimming all the way to deeper waters for confident swimmers and divers.

There are lifeguards who can assist swimmers (of all levels of competency) in trouble, signal to those who
are behaving in a risky manner, respond to complaints about swimmers’ behaviour, and even ask them to leave the pool if warnings are not heeded.

There are fences, doors, locks and alarms to prevent access to the pool area when it would be unsafe to go in.”

I feel it’s been a really positive report for the industry and overall a positive week in the arena kid’s online safety in the UK. I’m looking forward to seeing the next steps and how the proposed “UK Council on Child Internet Safety” works with the industry. It’s unheard of that the government accepts all the recommendations of a review such as this and it’s a big testament to Dr Byron and her team and process.

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Save Kids TV

It’s been a while since we’ve blogged from over here in Battersea, those of you who have a Moshi Monster will no doubt know why, we’ve been a bit busy building Friends Trees, Pinboards and other parts of the Moshi world.

Last autumn, I was asked to speak down in Brighton and met Jayne Kirkham who is a great advocate for an organisation called Save Kids TV and I’ve been meaning to write about their campaign ever since.

Those of us who grew up in the Postgate-era (Clangers, Bagpuss, Ivor the Engine, Mr Ben etc) loved the wide variety of home grown TV and have totally taken kids TV for granted. It happened for us and I think we’ve all assumed it’ll be just as great for our kids. Talk of the absence of home grown TV sounds a bit “Daily Mail” at first, however I like many people think it’s vital for there to be a balance of kids TV which reflects back the environment kids are growing up in. Grange Hill, though less scenic in so many ways, was far more relevant to my generation then Beverly Hills 90210 and any pertinent issues it dealt with were more easily comprehended and talked about.

The current statistic is that only 1% of new programmes currently shown on UK kids TV are made in the UK with the current levels of funding – a frighteningly small percentage that’s likely to decrease over time. The death of this sector of the UK creative industry would be a great loss and would have a huge knock-on impact in the UK online kids space through brain drain, lack of cross-pollination and absence of unique IP from the UK to create online experiences to accompany.

Those of you who feel concerned about this do have a voice though, there’s a petition on the 10 Downing Street website.

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