Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the log ins to all my teens accounts. Snap, tt, insta on my phone. I can log on anytime and check.
Trust me - check. It’s crazy what teens do and say. So many parents are clueless
It's practically impossible for you to know that.
How? NP. I have all three apps on my phone and I can log into my teen’s tik tok, her insta, her finsta, and her snap. The agreement was I know the passwords.
Just another story that if your teen gives her password to any friends to do snap steaks etc… they too can log in on any account at any time and your teen won’t know. And they can download saved snaps on their own phone. That happened in our school to someone. So tell your teens to not give out info, Face ID their phones and individual apps, and change passwords often.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. I also have pretty responsible kids and I believe in privacy.
Privacy LOL it is not a diary.
Parents like you are idiots.
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you who think “not my kid,” I am the cautionary tale.
We had all the talks with our very kind and introverted DS. Many times. At 16 yo, we thought he had decent common sense.
Never in a million years did I think that I would one day get a text with nude pics of him from a random number trying to blackmail him.
That is a very real and very scary thing that happened. I wish I had been spot checking his phone (and laptop) all along.
At the end of the day your children are just that. Children. And there are adults on the internet who basically have made a business of exploiting their naïveté.
If anyone thinks parents are “creepers” bc they want to mitigate risks to their children online, then you are also very naive.
This is good advice and nice of you to share, especially when so many people act like only “bad” kids or kids whose parents haven’t talked to them about internet safety can get into this type of situation.
+1 My friend's 14-year-old was sending nearly nude photos to boys she liked. I would never have thought that respectful, sheltered kid would do something like that. If you aren't spot checking their phones, you'll have no idea what they may be engaging in.
84% of teens ages 12-16 have sent a provocative picture.
Even the good ones.
Anonymous wrote:No. I also have pretty responsible kids and I believe in privacy.