@orangelantern @futurebird I find it important to always highlight the notion of agency and consent in everyday interactions, just to subtly enforce a sense of normalcy when it comes to "ask before touch, ask before sharing data".
About twice per year I do a very action-packed indoors Humans-vs-Zombies NERF game at a convention, where the game mechanics involves people touching each other softly on the shoulder. When we demonstrate this (every new player gets an introduction to the rules), we always ask before actually touching folks. Regardless of age or gender, and I believe that it helps set the tone for how people play the game.
It's a really mixed sort of folks who participate, nearly all ages, all genders, clothing levels, body types, education types, and I guess even a reasonable range of political views. And in 14 years, as far as I know, we hadn't had a single incident of inappropriate behaviour!
And yes, @futurebird is quite right, this needs to be the felt default for online safety too, to give kids a healthier baseline of what to want in any service.