Anonymous wrote:If your kid can’t be trusted, I get it. But if they’re generally trustworthy, why do this? With my three, including two teens and one young adult, I told them I wouldn’t track as long as they were abiding by our rules. We have Life360 for car trips and the like, but we otherwise never check. They know that if we have reason to stop trusting, they will get less freedom and independence. But I want to prepare them for a world in which no one is following their every movement to ensure they’re only making perfect decisions. Somehow all of us on here survived the teen years, and I can’t imagine there are many of us who didn’t make a few questionable decisions along the way. We learned from those as well. I do understand tightening the leash if your child is a habitual liar or meeting strangers from the internet at the mall or doing drugs, but otherwise, you’re doing no one any favors, including yourself. My anxiety would be through the roof if I felt responsible for tracking my kids all the time.
Anonymous wrote:How about telling your kid that if they do that again, they lose their phone for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously stop tracking your kid. People parented for thousands of years without doing this.
My kid is 14 so no
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is the teen, and what are you worried they are doing when they have location turned off?
We just had this discussed in our house. 17 year old wants privacy and not to be tracked. He does occasionally go to “hang outs” he sometimes has beer. !
As the parent of a fellow 17y...WTF? Nope. I am not naive thinking my kids will never drink. But wanting privacy and going to have a beer at 17y is not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about telling your kid that if they do that again, they lose their phone for a week.
Yep. And if they drive, the car is mine too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously stop tracking your kid. People parented for thousands of years without doing this.
My kid is 14 so no
They don’t drive so your tracking their walking?
Are you kidding pp
Tracking whether they are sneaking out. Or really at a friends house. Or really at a sleepover, or really studying at home (if you are elsewhere)
Some teens lie and sneak. I have 3 of them and 1 is trying to break the rules every darn day. So I get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is the teen, and what are you worried they are doing when they have location turned off?
We just had this discussed in our house. 17 year old wants privacy and not to be tracked. He does occasionally go to “hang outs” he sometimes has beer. !
As the parent of a fellow 17y...WTF? Nope. I am not naive thinking my kids will never drink. But wanting privacy and going to have a beer at 17y is not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Ok so I found out there are hacks to freeze life 360 so it looks like a teen is in one location but isn’t. It used to be just turning off cellular data so your location doesn’t refresh, but now it seems like offloading the app works too. Is there anyway to make it reliable to parents or do I download another tracker app and hide it on their phone?
Has anyone had success with another app? I am also thinking of Find my iPhone - with a parent lock but wasn’t sure if there were ways to get around it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is the teen, and what are you worried they are doing when they have location turned off?
We just had this discussed in our house. 17 year old wants privacy and not to be tracked. He does occasionally go to “hang outs” he sometimes has beer. !
As the parent of a fellow 17y...WTF? Nope. I am not naive thinking my kids will never drink. But wanting privacy and going to have a beer at 17y is not happening.
Anonymous wrote:How old is the teen, and what are you worried they are doing when they have location turned off?
We just had this discussed in our house. 17 year old wants privacy and not to be tracked. He does occasionally go to “hang outs” he sometimes has beer. !
Anonymous wrote:How about telling your kid that if they do that again, they lose their phone for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Most teens put the phone in airplane mode or disable gps on the entire phone.
And I am laughing at the comments. When the hacks work you don’t find out. That’s the whole point. You think your kid is in bed, or at a friends house, or at the library etc…
Find My IPhone with a full parent lock - without letting your teen know usually works and you can verify by checking both 360 and Find My at the same time. Caught my son this way. And yes loss of phone for 2 weeks. But I am sure he will try it again