The Happy Onlife experience has contributed to children’s right to be heard in matters affecting them in their digital interactions and lives. Happy Onlife has been considered as effective awareness raising and learning tool regarding cyber security issues by its end-users, namely students, teac...
This report presents the results of a qualitative study made over seventeen countries exploring how children between zero and eight engage with digital technologies, how far parents mediate this engagement and their awareness on the risks opportunities balance. It concludes on recommendations to...
The report presents reflections, thoughts and results from two workshops held at JRC premises in 2014: the first was “Digital memories: Ethical perspectives” ( 16th-17th January 2014) and the second “Open Data in health” (18th November 2014). The cases presented in the workshop cover different a...
This paper gives an insight into safety, security, privacy and societal questions emerging from the rise of the Internet of Toys. These are Internet connected toys that constitute, along with the wave of other domestic connected objects, the Internet of Things, which has increased the ubiquity o...
Since 2011 JRC researchers have been investigating the risks and opportunities to children in the digital age, including the cyber bullying phenomenon, to support the EU Agenda for the Rights of the Child and the European Strategy for a Better Internet for Children. During the research process i...
El mundo digital es un nuevo espacio para domesticar: con sus códigos, sus reglas, sus peligros y sus grandes oportunidades. Investigaciones recientes muestran que los cambios sociales y culturales que genera tienen un impacto desde la primera infancia. En la actualidad, el aprendizaje del funci...
Questa relazione post-evento è stata realizzata in lingua italiana per permettere la distribuzione tra le scuole che hanno partecipato attivamente al Laboratorio Happy Onlife organizzato nel corso della settimana del Codice del 2015. Per promuovere l’adozione dele competenze digitali e del toolk...
Based on newly available and affordable off-the-shelf 3D sensing, processing and printing technologies, the JRC has conducted a comprehensive study on the feasibility of spoofing 3D and 2.5D face recognition systems with low-cost self-manufactured models and presents in this report a systematic ...
Developed within the context of the JRC project on Trust in Digital Interactions (TRUDI), the Workshop on “Open Data in Health: how knowledge may generate trust” (Ispra, 18 November 2014) aimed to investigate some general issues surrounding Open Data in the EU normative perspective, reflect on i...
Personal wearable sensors have the potential to become the most powerful individual self‐surveillance technology available to citizens. These ubiquitous, networked devices currently offer a breadth of capabilities to sense, digitally enhance and upload data of fine granularity such as body and h...