The Youth Network of Tasmania has issued a demand to the state government to provide more protections for young people online.
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YNOT chief executive Tania Hunt said the demand had come from young people themselves through the Your Online Environment report which was developed through survey responses from 520 Tasmanians aged between 12 and 25 years old.
The survey found 45 per cent of young people supported clearly defined criminalisation of cyberbullying which they identified as their main concern with online activity.
It found 11 per cent of young people did not support criminalisation.
Ms Hunt said young people wanted boundaries around online bullying identified and "where to draw the line".
There were concerns a young person's impulse actions might result in them overlooking consequences and misinterpretations of comment made online in the absence of tone and expression.
Ms Hunt said the report found young people wanted greater accountability from individuals and corporations that operated in the digital world, more parental involvement, and online safety training program in schools.
"Young people stated that social media is currently inadequate at preventing or responding to cyber bullying," it said.
The survey found young people wanted to see fair outcomes from complaints and to be taken seriously if they disclosed that they did not feel safe online.
Legislation was passed this year to make extreme cases of bullying a criminal offence.
Prosecution for extreme bullying behaviour from people under 18 would be a last resort, however.