According to Norton Cybersecurity Insights Report - Family Edition, 57 per cent of the Indian parents surveyed (vs 52 per cent globally) said they are worried that their children will be lured into meeting a stranger, they met online, in the outside world.
Also, 21 per cent of Indian parents indicated that an adult, their child didn't know personally, tried to get to meet them in the real world (vs 9 per cent globally), the report said.
However, one needs to be cognizant that this also poses a risk by exposing children and youngsters to cyber bullying, stalking and identity theft to name a few cyber threats, he added.
According to the report, 62 per cent of Indian parents surveyed indicated their child has experienced a form of online crime as against a global average of 51 per cent.
Not surprising then that Indian parents are 20 per cent more likely to limit their child's online activities, he said.
The survey said Indian parents are also more likely to take action to protect their children online.
Three in five Indian parents report their child has experienced a form of online crime. Of these, millennial parents (75 per cent) and fathers (67 per cent) in India are more likely to report their child as a victim, the report said.
"There are other steps as well. Some limit access to certain websites, while others allow Internet access only with parental supervision," Chopra said.
He further said that parents need to have an open dialoguewith children to discuss appropriate online behaviour.
"They should spend some time educating children regularly about the dangers of the Internet and create awareness around issues such as sexting, cyberbullying, online predators and privacy. They should make sure that the children are not sharing private information like passwords, addresses and phone numbers with people they don't know," he said.
