Anonymous wrote:DP. I am sorry to tell you that they are retrievable. I have heard it directly from the mouths of police officers and FBI agents, and with my own eyes I have seen the evidence, which has been legally retrieved through a warrant or with permission. Please do not delude yourself into thinking that once your phone has been wiped or the photo "deleted" that the photo is gone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Police can't get the Snapchat photos. It will be your daughter's word against his.
http://blog.thirdparent.com/can-police-obtain-disappearing-snapchat-pictures/
Snapchat supplied some or all of the data requested in 92% of the U.S. cases and 21% of the foreign government cases.
If the pics disappear, you might be wondering what exactly the governments might be hoping to retrieve. It’s instructive to look at the most recent version of Snapchat Guide for Law Enforcement to see what is really happening.
Snapchat keeps (and can turn over) pics for 30 days in the event that they haven’t been viewed by all recipients
Snapchat retains records of meta data for all messages sent and received – to/from, date and time – but not the message content, and will turn over this data in response to a search warrant
Snapchat has the personal info that you supplied on file – user name, email address, phone number and the date the account was created
For furtive Snapchat users, the principal risk remains the chance that a recipient takes a screenshot of your picture, or otherwise manages to capture it before it is destroyed, then forwards that pic or posts it somewhere online. It is true, however, that Snapchat does have records that it will turn over to law enforcement – a fact that makes it an imperfect solution for covering your tracks if you are up to no good.
I do this for a living. They are not on the sender’s phone but are found on the recipient’s phone.
I would link to my personal site that shows a video example of this from a previous case, but I don’t want to out myself too much and have the site referenced back to DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
Completely agree. I'm appalled at the PPs insisting OP head directly to the police. Or even the school administration. The first thing to do is have OP's daughter confront this issue head-on. There seems to be this obsession with making girls into helpless victims rather than empowering them from the start. Of course, if the unwanted attention/behavior continues, even after she tells him to stop, etc. - then yes, parents and admin. will need to get involved.
PPs - not everything is a #Metoo event! Kids need to learn to advocate for themselves first. And that goes for either girls OR boys - anyone receiving unwanted attention needs to be given the tools to deal with it directly.
At this age, going to parents for help and advice is advocating for oneself, and the best possible way to do it. It is good for kids to know their resources and to trust that those resources will have their backs.
Yes, absolutely!
I'm the one who wrote the language above. Apparently, OP's DD did that. Perfect -- great job!
So, unless the kid sent another naked picture, the issue is closed, right? Problem solved.
If not, what am I missing here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
Completely agree. I'm appalled at the PPs insisting OP head directly to the police. Or even the school administration. The first thing to do is have OP's daughter confront this issue head-on. There seems to be this obsession with making girls into helpless victims rather than empowering them from the start. Of course, if the unwanted attention/behavior continues, even after she tells him to stop, etc. - then yes, parents and admin. will need to get involved.
PPs - not everything is a #Metoo event! Kids need to learn to advocate for themselves first. And that goes for either girls OR boys - anyone receiving unwanted attention needs to be given the tools to deal with it directly.
At this age, going to parents for help and advice is advocating for oneself, and the best possible way to do it. It is good for kids to know their resources and to trust that those resources will have their backs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
Completely agree. I'm appalled at the PPs insisting OP head directly to the police. Or even the school administration. The first thing to do is have OP's daughter confront this issue head-on. There seems to be this obsession with making girls into helpless victims rather than empowering them from the start. Of course, if the unwanted attention/behavior continues, even after she tells him to stop, etc. - then yes, parents and admin. will need to get involved.
PPs - not everything is a #Metoo event! Kids need to learn to advocate for themselves first. And that goes for either girls OR boys - anyone receiving unwanted attention needs to be given the tools to deal with it directly.
At this age, going to parents for help and advice is advocating for oneself, and the best possible way to do it. It is good for kids to know their resources and to trust that those resources will have their backs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
Completely agree. I'm appalled at the PPs insisting OP head directly to the police. Or even the school administration. The first thing to do is have OP's daughter confront this issue head-on. There seems to be this obsession with making girls into helpless victims rather than empowering them from the start. Of course, if the unwanted attention/behavior continues, even after she tells him to stop, etc. - then yes, parents and admin. will need to get involved.
PPs - not everything is a #Metoo event! Kids need to learn to advocate for themselves first. And that goes for either girls OR boys - anyone receiving unwanted attention needs to be given the tools to deal with it directly.
Anonymous wrote:I so hate Snapchat. It if weren't for this ridiculous app, this would be a much smaller issue. I think boys (and girls) feel the freedom to send inappropriate photos of themselves because they "disappear." This app is enabling teens to bully, sext, and who knows what else. I also hate that I cannot see what my teen is texting about. But deleting the app from her phone will almost destroy her social life. It is that prevalent in all of their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
OP did this. Her DD has already addressed it in this way.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the other advice above, but why not teach your daughter how to deal with this directly?
It's a great opportunity to help her learn to use her words and set clear boundaries and expectations about how she wants to be treated. Teach her how to assert herself directly with this kid, and give him a chance to comply. If he doesn't (i.e. if he sends more pics or harassing texts), then help her escalate things to his parents or the school.
For example, why not help her write a text back to this kid. Something like, "Don't ever send naked pictures to me again! I don't want to see them, and it's not ok for you to send them to me or anyone else. Hopefully you get it and will stop. If not, I'll have to tell your school and mine if you do it again."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you! She came to me blushing asking what to do.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did this turn into OP’s daughter essentially asking for it? OP says she said “sure” not knowing it’d be a nude photo, but you know how girls are, so you know she wanted it or lied about wanting it to her mom? That’s gross.
+1. If she "wanted it" (gross), she wouldn't have brought it up with her mother!
I have a question for parents who have been there and school counselors. If I report it to school tomorrow, can they keep it at school or are they required to involve police? I truly don't want to involve police at this point. Didn't even want to involve the school, but after the additional info provided here, don't want to have any responsibility for this photo either.
Go back and read the lawyer's and the prosecutor's posts. They are giving you good advice. Report it to the school first thing tomorrow morning and let them deal with it.
This. Then at least you've removed it from your hands. I would also sit down and talk with your daughter to make sure there's no chance there is anything else on her phone. I believe you, OP, that she did not ask for or want this, but you want to be positive that there aren't any surprises on there or that it hasn't happened before.
To all of you - talk to your kids about not doing this and about reporting it when someone does it to them. It is a serious offense and can ruin a kids life if photos get passed around (boys or girls). Anyone sending unsolicited photos (a boy or a girl) should be reported and hopefully their parents will know and can get them help. It is not developmentally appropriate for MS (or HS for that matter) and should be a major red flag that there is something going on with the child.
+1