Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we deleted TikTok, dd found this racist video (it’s still up on YouTube, unfortunately):
If this is the most racist example you can come up with, you are kind of making the point of the pro-tiktok posters for them. This is just a bad song and bad video. Like hurts the ears bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many of you are missing the point.
Your teen can find bad things on you tube. Internet etc. tik tok is no different. So you need to shut all that off.
I find the tik tok videos my 13 year olds watches abs created funny and age appropriate. Lots of dogs, baking, dancing (with moms)
I will continue watching and see if things get worse as she gets older
The entire valuation of the Tik Tok parent company is based on the fact that it is far far superior targeting platform. It zeros in on your interests within 15 minutes of usage. It is not like Google or You Tube or what not, where you have to go looking. Tik Tok peers deep into your soul and feeds to its worst instincts. It is just not another app.
Anonymous wrote:I think many of you are missing the point.
Your teen can find bad things on you tube. Internet etc. tik tok is no different. So you need to shut all that off.
I find the tik tok videos my 13 year olds watches abs created funny and age appropriate. Lots of dogs, baking, dancing (with moms)
I will continue watching and see if things get worse as she gets older
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I looked around on it. Without much effort I found a lot of hard core porn.
I spend a LOT of time on TikTok (Im a 44 year old mom) and have never seen porn. Some women in shirts showing cleavage trying to promote traffic to their only fans page, yes. But thats it.
Because TikTok knows you are a woman and not interested in looking at porn. I watch softcore porn all the time. It is by far the most time saving way to consume porn for me. It knows my needs to a T.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many of you are missing the point.
Your teen can find bad things on you tube. Internet etc. tik tok is no different. So you need to shut all that off.
I find the tik tok videos my 13 year olds watches abs created funny and age appropriate. Lots of dogs, baking, dancing (with moms)
I will continue watching and see if things get worse as she gets older
The entire valuation of the Tik Tok parent company is based on the fact that it is far far superior targeting platform. It zeros in on your interests within 15 minutes of usage. It is not like Google or You Tube or what not, where you have to go looking. Tik Tok peers deep into your soul and feeds to its worst instincts. It is just not another app.
Anonymous wrote:I think many of you are missing the point.
Your teen can find bad things on you tube. Internet etc. tik tok is no different. So you need to shut all that off.
I find the tik tok videos my 13 year olds watches abs created funny and age appropriate. Lots of dogs, baking, dancing (with moms)
I will continue watching and see if things get worse as she gets older
Anonymous wrote:My 12yo DD is pleading for access to tiktok. She has no other social media. I feel like I’m damned if I do and damned if I don’t. My instinct is to say no but I realise she is already feeling left out as her friends share songs and dances. I realise it’s only meant to be for ages 13 and over. For those children already have access, please share your experience including downsides and precautions you took. If I say no, it needs to be a considered no. For further background, she already suffers from anxiety and has weekly therapy sessions.
Anonymous wrote:DD went down the TikTok rabbit hole. It wasn’t the more “extreme” stuff like the shocking racism or porn etc. the more typical things are an insidious onslaught of images and messages (through the postings) the influence thoughts about social status and body imagine. That’s the norm - constantly comparing and seeing likes and negative feedback and no real social context or perspective- and often in isolation. And then if your kid stumble onto some materials and then keeps looking at it, the algorithms feed you more. So my daughter started looking at workout things which led to diet culture and diet “tips and tricks” and then pro-Ana (anorexia) networks. All and all a bad scene. (Just to note almost any kid can be negatively influenced and impacted by this - but typically becoming truly anorexic or mental illness level anxiety has a genetic component - so not to beyond over scare but that is is about 10%)
Anyway even with this, we’ve worked with mental health team we now have - and do let daughter learn and do many of the TikTok dances - but she uses TikTok only in room with us - and we monitor and have mirror account. Also be sure to set restrictive mode. Which isn’t the best but does limit a lot.
Anonymous wrote:DD went down the TikTok rabbit hole. It wasn’t the more “extreme” stuff like the shocking racism or porn etc. the more typical things are an insidious onslaught of images and messages (through the postings) the influence thoughts about social status and body imagine. That’s the norm - constantly comparing and seeing likes and negative feedback and no real social context or perspective- and often in isolation. And then if your kid stumble onto some materials and then keeps looking at it, the algorithms feed you more. So my daughter started looking at workout things which led to diet culture and diet “tips and tricks” and then pro-Ana (anorexia) networks. All and all a bad scene. (Just to note almost any kid can be negatively influenced and impacted by this - but typically becoming truly anorexic or mental illness level anxiety has a genetic component - so not to beyond over scare but that is is about 10%)
Anyway even with this, we’ve worked with mental health team we now have - and do let daughter learn and do many of the TikTok dances - but she uses TikTok only in room with us - and we monitor and have mirror account. Also be sure to set restrictive mode. Which isn’t the best but does limit a lot.