This article is a bit different
from most of the Internet privacy articles in this blog, however, a particular
news story prompted me to write this (Utah
Mom’s Facebook Check May Have Saved Son From Shooting Plot). The article appeared on The Huffington Post site on April 8,
2014. While many parents are realizing
the importance of supervising and monitoring their kids when they go on the
Internet, there are still many parents who don’t see the point of this.
Obviously, one
parent in Salt Lake City, Utah is thankful that she chose to monitor her son’s
social media. If she didn’t do this,
she, and possibly many other parents, would be mourning the loss of their
kids. The mom, who was not identified,
saw threats made to her son on his Facebook page and called police. When police went to the school, they found
two teens sitting in a car near the targeted victim’s high school. In the car, they found a gun, a loaded
magazine, marijuana and a bong. The two
were immediately arrested.
Another trend
developing are kids going to answer sites asking how they can get away with
having social media behind their parents’ backs. In order to have a social media account, a
child must be at least 13 years old. We
already know that some parents help their younger kids open accounts, but there
are some who don’t feel their kids are mature enough at 13, so they won’t allow
it. Some parents will monitor their
kids’ social media and will take it away because they have seen posts they
don’t approve of. Here is an example of
the types of questions being asked (this particular example was found on Yahoo
Answers) by the kids whose parents either won’t allow it, or have taken it away
because of inappropriate, on-line behavior:
Ok so I am 14 and my dad has
confiscated my Facebook account because of a past incident and I have
understood my mistake but he won't give me my password. I really want to add kids from my school.
Update 1: No need for anymore answer because i
am making a new one and i doubt my dad would find that out unless i tell him
that i would not tell so soon.
Here is the answer that the 14
year old chose as the Best Answer:
I see your update, but
have to answer.
This is not a very smart idea. As a 14 year old, I know you think parents are stupid, but they aren't. Your dad will find out about the other account and then you will not only lose Facebook, but you will lose other privileges as well. You will no longer be trusted.
You don't say how long your dad has been holding your FB hostage, but you need to give him some time while you show him you can be responsible. He didn't delete your account, so he is going to give it back, you're just "grounded" from FB for a while. Sneaking around isn't helping your case. In fact, it's hurting it.
You need to have an open discussion with your dad and show him that you realize your mistake. You could also go over the linked article and check out the guidelines. Discuss them with your dad and see what the two of you can come up with as a compromise so he will allow you to access your account again.
But, if this just happened, you could wait a while before adding people. It seems that you really learned nothing from all this.
This is not a very smart idea. As a 14 year old, I know you think parents are stupid, but they aren't. Your dad will find out about the other account and then you will not only lose Facebook, but you will lose other privileges as well. You will no longer be trusted.
You don't say how long your dad has been holding your FB hostage, but you need to give him some time while you show him you can be responsible. He didn't delete your account, so he is going to give it back, you're just "grounded" from FB for a while. Sneaking around isn't helping your case. In fact, it's hurting it.
You need to have an open discussion with your dad and show him that you realize your mistake. You could also go over the linked article and check out the guidelines. Discuss them with your dad and see what the two of you can come up with as a compromise so he will allow you to access your account again.
But, if this just happened, you could wait a while before adding people. It seems that you really learned nothing from all this.
Voice of reason, right?
Well, the 14 year old made this comment after choosing this answer: