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Despite Netflix hit Adolescence driving national conversation, no uptick in online safety apps
In weeks following launch of Netflix hit Adolescence, Ipsos UK found no change in average use of most popular online safety apps. The UK’s official source for Online Audience Measurement, Ipsos iris, measured usage of YouTube Kids, Microsoft Family Safety and Google Family Link pre & post March 13.
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The public are largely supportive of government public health interventions
Nearly three-quarters (73%) of the public support extending the indoor smoking ban to specific outside spaces to protect children and vulnerable people, including playgrounds, outside schools and hospitals. This is followed by introducing a tax on organisation that produce foods high in sugar or salt, with some of the revenue used to fund fresh fruit and vegetables for low income families (62% support) and reducing the number of retailers with licenses to sell tobacco to limit tobacco availability (61% support).
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One in seven parents are not confident they know what their children are seeing or hearing online
Three in four parents (75%) say they are concerned about what children are seeing, hearing, or doing online.
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The Financial Research Survey (FRS)
Unlocking Consumer Financial Behaviour: Insights to Drive Growth in Financial Services
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Love across the political divide? Not so easy, say Britons
42% of Britons think a potential romantic partner’s political views are important.
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Bridget Phillipson and Julia Gillard: an International Women's Day conversation
Join the Ipsos UK and the Global Institute for Women's Leadership for International Women’s Day.
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Majority of Britons believe it is important to talk about the Holocaust, with 1 in 3 fearing lessons will be forgotten in 10 years’ time
While seven in ten (69%) Britons believe the lessons of the Holocaust are largely remembered today, 1 in 3 (32%) think they will be forgotten in ten years’ time.
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Half of Britons believe that parents should never stop buying advent calendars for their children
What age should parents stop buying their children advent calendars?
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Active Lives Children and Young People Survey 2023-24
Ipsos conducted the seventh year of this ongoing survey on behalf of Sport England during the 2023-24 academic year. Sport England commissioned Ipsos to design and carry out the survey to inform their own strategy and the strategies of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), the Department for Education (DfE) and the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC).
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Online advertising experiences survey
A recent Ipsos survey, commissioned by the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport (DCMS) provides evidence on the online advertising experiences of internet users aged 18 and over, as well as children, through insights provided by their parents.