Spying on Teens

There’s a fine line between wanting to protect your children and spying on them. Your children, especially your teenagers want their privacy – they THINK they are entitled to it… So while we as parents reason spying with the urge to protect our children, we often upset them and potentially jeopardize the trusting relationship we have with our kids.

How much spying is too much? There seems to be no right or wrong answer to this… Check out the article that was posted on Huffington Post about this issue:

 

How much, if ever, should we use technology to spy on our teens? According to Anthony Wolf, clinical psychologist and author most recently of “I’d Listen To My Parents If They’d Just Shut Up,” that question “is one of the most discussed dilemmas in teenage parenting circles.” The italics are Wolf’s.

I’m relieved to know that me and my tribe of post 50 friends with teens are not alone in fretting over this question. Before my son went on Facebook I had one condition: that he friend me so I could keep tabs on him. I’d warned him about the perils of the online world, including the fact that what goes on the Internet has the half-life of plutonium.

What I didn’t tell him, primarily because it didn’t really dawn on me at the time, was that Facebook and all the spokes in the wheel that radiate from this cyber supernova of connectivity (iChat, Google chat, texting, Skype, etc.) would give me extraordinary access to his private world should I choose to avail myself of it.

And the temptation is undeniable. When my son left a long iChat dialogue thread open on my laptop (emphasis on the words “my laptop”), I could not resist reading. I learned about several things he was doing on the sly. They were a little dicey but essentially age-appropriate. I, too, did them when I was his age. In fact, I had far more freedom than he did (another issue altogether). Still, the ability to peer into his world was an enticement to surveil him even more. And in that I’m not alone, either.

But what are the costs of cyber snooping on our kids, assuming they’re not being cyber-stalked or are cyber stalkers, or that nothing truly dangerous is going on? And what do we do with compromising information, whether it has to do with our child or someone else’s child? Does being a parent give us carte blanche to spy or snoop on our kids?

There are no right or wrong answers here, just a sea of subjective opinions as diverse as the parents who assert them. Some parents are control freaks. Others are more laissez-faire. Parenting experts, however, have some pretty clear consensual opinions. Wolf asks: “To what extent do you need to know about everything your child is doing in order to steer them in the right direction or to best protect them from harm? How much do you need to know in order to allow them the freedom and concomitant risk that enables them to navigate future situations better on their own?” It’s almost a rhetorical question.

“Kids that are hell-bent on bad behavior will usually find a way to engage in that behavior,” Wolf continues. And most parents will eventually find out about it in the real world. But “secret snooping has a definite downside. It is dishonest. And if our children find out — which they often do — they will very likely feel betrayed. It says that, in the adult world, being dishonest is okay, provided you have a good enough reason to be. If I could be convinced that sneaky snooping was a significantly useful instrument in a parent’s arsenal for protecting children from significant harm, then I might go along, reluctantly. But I don’t think it is.”

Wendy Mogel, clinical psychologist and author most recently of “The Blessing of a B Minus,” echoes Wolf’s sentiments. In a piece called “The Digital Lives of Your Kids: What Parents Need To Know” Mogel writes of the online world: “Our children’s lives are not like ours were. They’re not free to hang out at the corner drugstore or on the stoop or in a vacant lot. They have little privacy or downtime. They are scrutinized, measured and cloistered. But teenagers need to communicate and connect and express themselves freely. They need privacy and risk. They even need to make a few cheap mistakes before they go off to college.”

The value of the “cheap mistake” — indeed, even the blessings of a B minus, to coin the title of Mogel’s book — is often lost in today’s competitive and fearful parenting zeitgeist. But Mogel and Wolf both have good points. There is no room for what Mogel calls “the experimental floater life” or “a gentle truthiness” — two things we all got away with in our day — when an electronic eye is always peering overhead.

My son can’t get away with a white lie, for example (“Hey mom, can I get on Facebook? I don’t have any homework tonight”) because I can simply go online to Teacherease and instantly check the veracity of that statement. (“That’s not true. You have biology and geometry…”) I can also get real-time snapshots of his grades on every assignment and in every class, making report cards almost redundant.

Like most teens, my son loathes this. I have mixed feelings. On the one hand, I revel in the instant access to his academic progress. On the other hand, I feel like a traffic cop sitting perpetually by the side of the road with radar gun poised. Is there an injustice here, even if the virtues to the parents are evident? And how might this effect my son’s ability to be self-reliant (the subject of Mogel’s first book “The Blessings of a Skinned Knee”)?

A recent New York Times article called “Cracking Teenagers’ Online Codes” explored this terrain in a profile of 34-year-old Danah Boyd, a hip “rock star emissary from the online and offline world of teenagers” who is also a senior researcher at Microsoft and a fellow at the Berman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard. “Children’s ability to roam has basically been destroyed,” Boyd told the Times. “Letting your child out to bike around the neighborhood is seen as terrifying now, even though by all measures, life is safer for kids today.”

Like Mogel, Boyd sees the Internet as the online equivalent of yesterday’s café or coffee shop, where kids should be able to congregate, hang-out, and share their grievances and passions — without parental interference. “Teenagers absolutely care about privacy,” she states. “Teenagers are not some alien population. When we see new technologies, we think they make everything different for young people. But they really don’t. Teenagers are the same as they always were.”

That might be the case, but those “new technologies” certainly make parenting different. The virtual environments in which teens socialize and learn about the real world are also vastly different, posing all sorts of other questions that are as psychological as they are cultural. In fact, if anything seems constant in this new electronic wilderness, it’s that parenting is still as challenging as it is rewarding — and there’s nothing virtual about that.

13 Tips for Monitoring Kids’ Social Media

Great post that will help you protect your children (and yourself) from the dangers of social media:

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recently released findings from a comprehensive study on the impact social media has on kids and families. Although there are real benefits to kids using sites like Facebook, including increased communication, access to information and help in developing a sense of self, there can be serious downsides to all this online sharing too.

Social networking is on the rise, and the study found that 22 percent of teenagers log onto their favorite social media sites more than 10 times a day, and that 75 percent own cell phones. This level of engagement online increases the risks of cyberbullying, “Facebook depression” (a new phenomenon where “de-friending” and online bullying lead to symptoms of depression), exposure to inappropriate content, and sexting.

Just as we prepare our kids for life in the real world, we should prepare them for life in the online world. Read on for tips that every parent should keep in mind.

Read the full post on Parenting.com

Protecting Your Online Reputation

Be sure to check out what information is posted about you and your family online… Have you ever found some information that wasn’t supposed to be there? Here’s a great article from WBTV that will help you determine what information about you and your loved ones can be found online…

CHARLOTTE, NC (WBTV) –  We all know the old saying, “sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me.”  What if the names go global across the internet and now you or your kids have a bad reputation online that carries into your off-line life?

If any of you have used a service like eBay or Amazon, you have seen a rating of the buyers and sellers out there.  This gives you an idea of who to stay away from online when you are buying and selling something.

What if someone posted something negative about you or your child and now people stay away from you?  You don’t need to be a victim.

There are different ways for you to spot an issue and to deal with it.  Former White House cyber security expert Theresa Payton explains how you can deal with negative online postings about you.

Step Number One:  Start by searching your own name and the names of everyone in your family.  Try to read the results as a complete stranger.  Then I ask them, “Would you hire you?  Would you date you?  Would you marry you?  Would you want to do business with you?”

Sometimes the posts seem out of your control because someone else posted them.  But you are not completely helpless.  You can take control.

HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF

FOR THE DO IT YOURSELF – FREE OPTIONS

There are 4 easy steps you can take to be A.L.E.R.T. about your online reputation:

1)     A:  Automated Alerts.  Go to Google Alerts and set up a daily or weekly alert to let you know every time something hits the web with your name or your kids name.

2)     L:  Look yourself up in your favorite or multiple search engines.  Try www.Google.com, www.Bing.com, www.Yahoo.com .

3)     E:  Erase & Eliminate.  If you see postings you created that are not flattering, erase those.  If you see content you do not like posted by your friends, for example a crazy party you attended, ask them nicely to eliminate those.

4)     R:  Register your FirstNameLastName.com so that you own your name as a website and post information there.

5)     T:  Type postings that are either on your favorite hobby or your profession and post them on places such as www.Facebook.com, www.Twitter.com, www.LinkedIn.com, or even on your own blog. You own the content, the frequency, and your own network of friends and professionals can give you ratings there that others can view.  You can also use the free service, http://claimid.com to set up a profile about you.

PAID SERVICES

For those that prefer to pay a service to manage this for you, there are many options available to you.
First, decide your budget that you are willing to pay.
We are highlighting 4 options that you can research to see if they are a good fit for you.
These can help you, your kids, and your company:

ReputationDefender:  www.reputationdefender.com

They have many services, including a monthly service that mines the web to find references about you and advisors who can help you to weed out the bad and the inaccurate.  They also have a MyChild service targeted specifically for kids and how they and their friends use the internet.

Safety Net:  www.socialmediamanagement.net has several services.  They have one to protect your children and one that can focus on you or your company.

Designed for Businesses:

Reputation Hawk:  www.reputationhawk.com

DigitalStakeout:  www.digitalstakeout.com

WHAT TO DO IF YOU ARE A VICTIM

If the postings are false and you cannot get the negative postings down, you may have legal rights.  Talk to legal counsel about your case to see if laws regarding protections from  defamation, cyber stalking, or cyber bullying apply to your case.
Follow our A.L.E.R.T. tips on managing your online reputation.  It will take time, but those negative posts will begin to drop off the search results.

 

RESOURCES:

claimID:  ClaimID was created at UNC Chapel Hill in the computer department.  They wanted to provide a free way to help people manage their online identity.  Go to http://claimid.com

Understanding Social Media:  www.Mashable.com

Book That Explains How to Manage Your Reputation Online:  http://meandmywebshadow.com

Sue Scheff, Parent Advocate has helpful podcasts and articles about internet defamation.  Try:  http://suescheffpodcasts.com/  or http://suescheffblog.com/

Google Alert Set Up:  http://www.google.com/alerts