| Good parents don't let their kids on social media, ever. |
| One poor girl was bullied by harsh name calling, flashing on screen and then quickly disappearing. Pics can be flashed on screen and vanish. It makes it hard to document that there is a bullying problem. Kids are mean with it. |
| My kid is about to start hs and I gave him Snapchat last week. I use the family function so I can track a bit. I also control how much he uses it. |
| Our kids would all be better off if parents would just say no to these things. |
DP. My DCs can have Snapchat at 13 and Instagram at 15, but never Tiktok. I know everything on Tiktok shows up on YouTube, but I'm primarily concerned about protecting them from the algorithm. |
Yes, Snapchat is the one that is most used for bullying because of its disappearing feature, and has features (location sharing, public facing content) that can create risks the other conversation apps don't share. |
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No tik tok as long as we are paying for the phone. We said ok to Snapchat in 8th grade. It does become hard socially because “everyone”
Is using it. Not saying that’s a good excuse but if you have a kid who struggles socially, it feels like another hurdle and worth the risk. We haven’t had any issues with it but the first year, I did go through it with him. DS had to open the app with me there and show me messages he received and what people were posting. Location needs to be off at all times. |
Androids are sold by corporations…lol Being 13 is hard. Especially socially. Making it hard for your kid to be included in hopes it makes your kid quirky and different isn’t really the way to go. Kids who buck social norms are born not made |
I don't "most" is true in my middle schoolers' experience. One just finished 6th and the other 8th. Neither have it nor web browsers or other social media other than text and email on their phones. Actually we did allow WhatsApp this summer since two close friends are in other countries so this is how they FaceTime for free. |
PS for my older one I said I'd consider it after first semester of high school but I'd like her to sit with me when she opens it occasionally, especially in the first few months and the response was "never mind I didn't want it that badly." |
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13yo here. No Snapchat. It’s not happening. Pictures/messages disappear. It’s dangerous.
My kid has regular texting and Instagram. No other social media. |
| Here is the info on the family setting; we use this with my kid: https://parents.snapchat.com/safeguards-for-teens |
| 7th and 8th graders—their 15-20 friends just use text and FaceTime. |
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14yo does not have Snap/Tok/Insta. No social isolation (yet, at least) as a result.
The only friends who do have older siblings. |
| Never, for heavens sake |