• DigitalTraveler42
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    1 year ago

    “such demonic images”

    Lady it’s a skeleton wearing a hoodie, are all skeletons demonic to you?

    Fundies are fucking weird.

  • @themaninblack@lemmy.world
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    771 year ago

    Why would it ever be remotely acceptable to look through your kid’s phone? One can hardly think of a more serious violation of privacy. Not just for the kid but for all the people the kid communicates with. It should not be socially acceptable to admit that you’ve done this.

    If they’re causing problems, address them another way. Take the phone away if you need to, but do not turn your house into North Korea.

    • @helpImTrappedOnline@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Because a parent should have the right to monitor their child’s internet exposure just as our parents told us we couldn’t watch R movies or play violent video games…imagine for two seconds she didn’t have innocent pictures of a video game character, but the parent found she was in contact with a groomer and sending pics. Maybe she’s the bad one getting into drugs, or bullying other kids. It’s a parents job to intervene and to help their kid - you can’t do that if you don’t know what’s going on.

      How many stories have you heard about cyber-bulling, grooming, or “send me a pic” scams that led to suicide or other terrible outcomes? - way too many. In a lot of the post-interviews, the parents responses are always something like “I never knew this was happening, my 9 year old Billy was so happy the 20 minutes a day I saw him outside of his room. I never imagined that his ‘online friends’ on 4chanclone77 were telling him to send pics and that he should die everyday.”

      For a kid its protection over privacy everyday - same reason that you might want to know if your kid is spending a lot of “extracurricular time” at the teacher’s house.

      Once they’re a teen the training wheels slowly come off until they’re not needed, hopefully by 14, after they’ve been taught about the dark side of the world and how to protect themselves from that crap, and know that they can come to me with any problem no matter what, weather they caused it or not, and I’ll help them figure it out.

      • sour
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        201 year ago

        is difference between monitoring and looking through kids phone

              • sour
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                1 year ago

                the parent isnt the one looking in the phone

                • Kilgore Trout
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                  111 year ago

                  The monitoring app would look through the kid’s phone in stead of the parent. It’s the same thing.

                • @phorq@lemmy.ml
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                  81 year ago

                  Obviously, some random creep who convinced you to let them look on your kids phone for their “safety” is. Some things should just be left up to the parent…

      • Roflmasterbigpimp
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        151 year ago

        You got me thinking. I’m planning on having kids in the Future and thought what I would do.

        Since my Kids will grow up with all this, I will start teaching them early on what is okay and what not. I guess I will trust them as long as there is no reason not to. Like If a another Parent or a Teacher confronts me about that my child might bully someone I will check their phone but not randomly with no reason. Simply because if I would do this regularly my Child would just delete or hide everything he/she doesn’t want me to see. And I’m not willing to install spyware on my child’s Phone. I would rather launch a “suprise attack” if necessary, not have constant surveillance. And like I said, only if I have really good reasons.

        Children need spaces to talk without adults and I hope my Child will come to me when something weird is going on.

        • I think that’s a reasonable approach. Personally, I don’t want to be a helicopter parent, as that would be awful for the kid, and at the same time I don’t want to be oblivious to what is happening in my children’s digital life.

          I think the closest thing to ‘spyware’ I would consider is finding a way to prevent browser history from getting deleted and put on general web filters to block porn, sketchy sites, social media, etc. As they get older, the restrictions lighten up to zero filters. all the while teaching them internet safety as they grow so they aren’t cluless.

          The internet, and computer itself, are a fantastic place to explore and learn and I don’t want to hold that back from them.

    • @Newby@startrek.website
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      441 year ago

      Depends on the age of the child and also if the child understands that the parents have access to it and will make sure they are safe.

      There is a healthy balance.

  • Wugmeister
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    351 year ago

    Why did this mother think it was okay to look through her daughters porn folder?

  • oleorun
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    71 year ago

    Was it a hacker skeleton in the hoodie?

    (clickety-clack noises) “I’m in.”