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Young Canadians’ Exposure to Authentic Violent and Gore Content Online

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DataCite Commons2026-05-04 更新2026-05-09 收录
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https://borealisdata.ca/citation?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP3/8ARITZ
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International research has found that young people are regularly exposed to photos and videos of authentic violence and gore online (i.e., real depictions of violence, death, and injury that are not from fictional sources) (e.g., Classification Office 2025; eSafety Commissioner, 2025; Human Digital et al., 2025). This includes, for instance, photos and videos of self-harm (Stänicke et al., 2025), suicide (Ofcom, 2024), fist fights and stabbings (Youth Endowment Fund, 2024), mass shootings (Classification Office, 2025), animal abuse (Reyes Molleda et al., 2026), sexual violence (Dodge, 2016), and more (Ofcom, 2024). This content is now available in everyday online spaces, including on social media platforms and in search engine results (Broderick, 2025; Classification Office, 2025, 4). This content is insufficiently moderated (Gillespie, 2018), and at times algorithmically amplified (Saurwein & Spencer-Smith, 2021), by many popular social media and messaging platforms (eSafety Commissioner, 2025). While countries such as Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom have been trailblazers in researching and responding to this issue (e.g., Classification Office 2025; eSafety Commissioner, 2025; Human Digital et al., 2025), insufficient research in Canada has left policy makers, educators, and advocates without the evidence needed to make data-driven regulations and interventions. This report responds to this research gap by reporting the findings of a nationally representative survey on young Canadians’ (aged 13–18) exposure to authentic violence and gore online.
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Borealis
创建时间:
2026-05-04
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