Riyadh, November 10, 2022 – Almost three in four (73%) children and adolescents aged 8-18 around the world experienced at least one cyber risk in the 12 months to September 2022. This, and the Child Online Safety Index (COSI) rankings of 100 countries were announced by international think-tank DQ Institute at the Global Cybersecurity Forum in Riyadh today. Constituting these risks:

The 2022 Child Online Safety Index (COSI) is a national-level measure of child online safety that countries can use to track their performance and progress across six different stakeholders: children, families, schools, ICT companies, and soft and hard infrastructures of the government. As part of the 2022 COSI, a global ranking of 100 countries was also announced based on data from almost 330,000 children and adolescents across 100 countries, collected through DQ Institute’s internal programs and through aggregation of data from external sources.

It has been a widely believed myth that the COVID-19 aggravated the cyber risk exposure of children and adolescents, but the 2022 COSI revealed otherwise. While the rates of cyber risk exposure among children and adolescents remained high, they decreased by 2 to 10 percent during the 2020-21 pandemic, compared to the three preceding years (2017-2019). Meanwhile, children with excessive screen time and underage social media access increased by 10 to 15 percent amid widespread lockdowns. In 2022, children’s exposure to cyber-risk surged back up by 5 to 15 percent and increased more as lockdowns were lifted worldwide. The findings suggest that there was an increased awareness of threats to children’s online safety during the COVID-19 lockdowns and thus increased reporting.

The United Kingdom emerged as the most conducive country for children online globally in 2022, followed by Japan. The 2022 COSI revealed that the Western and the East Asian countries in general ranked higher for child online safety, while the South and Southeast Asian, Latin American, and the Middle Eastern and African countries tended to rank lower.

Dr. Yuhyun Park, Founder of the DQ Institute, emphasized:

“The 2022 Child Online Safety Index should serve as a wakeup call to everyone about the safety of the world’s children online. The cyber risks for children have always been present even before the pandemic but the pandemic has provided an opportunity to recognize the pressing need to address the issue.

With the advent of the metaverse, risks in the digital media industry already in web 2.0 are amplified. Everyone in society has a role to play in turning this around. Commercial entities providing social media and gaming services must collaborate more actively with legislators, the police force, and other non-government organizations to protect children online.”

ENDS

For the COSI methodology and other information, please contact contact@dqinstitute.org.

NOTES FOR EDITORS:

    1. The methodology report and an interactive online platform are available at:
      https://www.dqinstitute.org/impact-measure/#cosi_page
      https://www.dqinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/2022-COSI-Methodology-Report.pdf
    2. The images of the key findings can be found in the link below:
      https://www.dqinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/2022-COSI-Card-Report.pdf
    3. About DQ Institute: The DQ Institute (DQI) is an international think-tank that is dedicated to setting global standards for digital intelligence and to ensuring the safety, empowerment, and well-being of individuals, organizations, and nations in the digital age. Its DQ framework has been recognized as the global standard for digital literacy, skills, and readiness (IEEE 3527.1-2020). DQI operates as a 501(c)(3) organization in the United States and as a not-for-profit organization in Singapore.
      For more information, please visit https://www.dqinstitute.org/.
    4. The 2022 COSI ranked the following 100 countries:
Country COSI Score Rank
United Kingdom 81.3 1
Japan 80.4 2
India 79.9 3
Australia 73.5 4
China 72.1 5
Italy 71.5 6
Singapore 70.8 7
Germany 70.2 8
Republic of Korea 69.6 9
United States of America 67.6 10
Peru 67.2 11
Colombia 67.0 12
Spain 66.7 13
Philippines 66.1 14
Canada 65.2 15
New Zealand 64.2 16
Qatar 63.4 17
Brazil 62.9 18
Turkey 62.6 19
Sweden 62.2 20
Ecuador 61.7 21
Taiwan 61.0 22
El Salvador 61.0 23
Malaysia 60.5 24
Romania 59.4 25
Czechia 58.5 26
Saudi Arabia 57.6 27
Mexico 56.4 28
South Africa 55.8 29
Nigeria 52.5 30
Vietnam 52.4 31
Egypt 52.1 32
Nepal 51.7 33
Angola 50.8 34
Russian Federation 49.5 35
France 49.3 36
Dominican Republic 49.2 37
Switzerland 49.0 38
Thailand 48.3 39
United Arab Emirates 47.3 40
Kazakhstan 46.9 41
Indonesia 46.9 42
Cambodia 46.2 43
Costa Rica 45.9 44
Portugal 44.8 45
Chile 44.7 46
Netherlands 44.3 47
Estonia 44.3 48
Finland 44.1 49
Oman 43.5 50
Ireland 43.3 51
Latvia 43.3 52
Belgium 43.1 53
Denmark 42.4 54
Bangladesh 42.3 55
Greece 41.6 56
Lebanon 41.5 57
Austria 41.4 58
Lithuania 41.3 59
Uruguay 41.2 60
Slovakia 41.0 61
Argentina 40.9 62
Kenya 40.9 63
Bulgaria 40.6 64
Croatia 40.5 65
Poland 40.4 66
Bahrain 39.5 67
Tunisia 39.4 68
Israel 39.2 69
Kuwait 39.2 70
Sri Lanka 38.9 71
Ukraine 38.5 72
Jamaica 38.2 73
Iran (Islamic Republic of) 38.1 74
Morocco 38.0 75
Jordan 38.0 76
Paraguay 36.9 77
Botswana 36.1 78
Ghana 35.6 79
Mongolia 35.4 80
Zambia 35.2 81
Lao People’s Democratic Republic 35.2 82
Azerbaijan 35.2 83
Pakistan 34.7 84
Rwanda 34.5 85
Mozambique 33.2 86
Venezuela 33.1 87
Senegal 31.7 88
Mali 31.5 89
Madagascar 30.9 90
Cameroon 30.6 91
Ethiopia 30.4 92
Democratic Republic of the Congo 29.3 93
Algeria 29.3 94
Côte d’Ivoire 28.1 95
Panama 27.4 96
Malawi 27.0 97
Zimbabwe 26.9 98
Guinea 24.4 99
Burundi 19.2 100