Do you really know what your kid’s doing on that device?
Do you really know what your kid’s doing on that device?
By MARTHA IRVINE June 26, 2018
CHICAGO (AP) — Ayrial Miller is clearly annoyed. Her
mother is sitting with her on the couch in their Chicago apartment, scrolling
through the teen’s contacts on social media.
“Who’s this?” asks Jennea Bivens, aka Mom.
It’s a friend of a friend, Ayrial says, and they haven’t
talked in a while.
“Delete it,” her mom says.
The 13-year-old’s eyes narrow to a surly squint. “I hate
this! I hate this! I hate this!” she shouts.
Yes, Bivens is one of “those moms,” she says. The type
who walks into her daughter’s bedroom without knocking; the kind who tightly
monitors her daughter’s phone. She makes no apology.
Nor should she, says a retired cybercrimes detective who
spoke to her and other parents in early June at Nathan Hale Elementary School
in Chicago.
“There is no such thing as privacy for children,” Rich
Wistocki told them.
Other tech experts might disagree. But even they worry
about the secret digital lives many teens are leading, and the dreadful array
of consequences — including harassment and occasional suicides — that can
result.
Today’s kids are meeting strangers, some of them adults,
on a variety of apps. They range from the seemingly innocuous Musical.ly —
which lets users share lip-syncing videos — to WhatsApp and, more recently,
Houseparty, a group video chat service. Teens are storing risque photos in
disguised vault apps, and then trading those photos like baseball cards.
Some even have secret “burner” phones to avoid parental
monitoring, or share passwords with friends who can post on their accounts when
privileges are taken away.
David Coffey, a dad and tech expert from Cadillac,
Michigan, said he was floored when his two teens told him about some of the
sneaky things their peers are doing, even in their small, rural town.
“I gotta hand it to their creativity, but it’s only
enabled through technology,” says Coffey, chief digital officer at IDShield, a
company that helps customers fend off identity theft.
It’s difficult to say how many kids are pushing digital
boundaries this way, not least because the whole point is to escape adult
detection. Social media accounts are easy to establish and discard. Particular
apps also rise and fall out of favor among teens with lightning speed, making
them a moving target for researchers.
But academics, experts like Wistocki and Coffey, and many
teens themselves say it’s surprisingly common for kids to live online lives
that are all but invisible to most parents — for better or worse.
Parents are clearly outmatched. Exposed to tablets and
smartphones at an increasingly early age, kids are correspondingly savvier
about using them and easily share tips with friends. Parents, by contrast, are
both overwhelmed and often naive about what kids can do with sophisticated
devices, says Wistocki, whose packed schedule has him crisscrossing the country
to speak to parents and young people.
He often holds up a mobile phone and tells wide-eyed
parents that giving a kid this “ominous device” — and allowing them to have it
any time, including charging in their rooms at night — is like handing over the
keys to a new Mercedes and saying, “Sweetheart you can go to Vegas. You can
drive to Texas, Florida, New York, wherever you want to go.”
And kids are more than happy to oblige. At a separate
talk for students at Nathan Hale, a large K-8 public school near Chicago’s
Midway airport, Wistocki asked who had accounts on Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat
and other apps and games with social components. Most of the kids in
attendance, many younger than 13, raised their hands.
Afterward, one girl, all frizzy hair and braces,
approached a reporter with desperation. “Please, please, pleeeeease, don’t use
my picture or a video of me raising my hand,” the 13-year-old begged
repeatedly, despite assurances that she wasn’t caught on camera.
“Don’t use mine either,” a friend quickly piped in.
Throughout the day, kids said their parents either don’t know they’re on social
media or have little idea what they do with their accounts.
That exasperates Dawn Iles-Gomez, the school’s principal,
whose days are increasingly filled with drama that begins on social media.
And it’s often not the usual suspects in her office, she
says, but a diverse parade of students she sees acting one way in person and
very differently in the digital world.
“It’s shocking — the language and the threats and the
mean things that are said,” she says. “And I would say 75 percent of the time,
I call a parent and their parent will say, ‘Well, no, they said they didn’t do
that.’
“And I’m like, ‘Well — they did.’”
These kinds of incidents can turn particularly ugly,
sometimes involving surprisingly young participants.
In January, two 12-year-olds were arrested in Panama City
Beach, Florida, for cyberstalking that police said led to the suicide of a
classmate named Gabriella Green, who’d been repeatedly bullied.
In other instances, young people are buying drugs via
social media or encrypted websites. Or, as Coffey’s kids explained to him, they
can use prepaid “gift” cards for Amazon or eBay — available at most any
drugstore — to buy contraband. They order makeup, say, or vaping accessories,
and have them delivered to friends’ houses.
Law enforcement officials say the taking and sharing of
racy “sexting” photos and videos also has become a common and even expected
component of dating life for many teens.
Last year in Naperville, the Chicago suburb where
Wistocki worked as a detective for many years, a 16-year-old killed himself
after police discovered that he’d recorded himself having sex with a classmate
and then shared the recording with his hockey teammates. While searching his
phone, they also found photos of other partially nude girls in a secret photo
vault app disguised as a calculator.
And yet, Wistocki says, too often parents remain in
denial with what he calls “NMK — not my kid.”
To get parents to the meeting with Wistocki at Nathan
Hale, the principal offered extra 8th-grade graduation passes and other
incentives. Only about 70 parents showed up; the school has 930 students.
Kathleen Kazupski, a mom with two daughters ages 13 and
17, was one of them. “As parents, we need to wake up, no doubt,” she said
afterward.
She came, in part, because she discovered last fall that
her younger daughter was messaging with a boy she didn’t know — first on
Snapchat and then via text — until Mom put an end to it. “I scared the hell out
of her.”
Bivens, Ayrial’s mom, also attended. She uses an app
called MMGuardian, one of several available, to manage and monitor her
13-year-old daughter’s phone use. She shuts the phone down during the school
day (though her daughter can still call her) and at bedtime. She turns off
certain apps, sometimes as punishment, and monitors texts.
To closely watch most social media, though, she has to
use her daughter’s phone. When that’s not possible, she checks what she can see
from the accounts she knows exist, using her own accounts. Recently, she got
after her daughter for cussing on some of her video posts.
“It’s a full-time job,” Bivens concedes. “People laugh at
me because I monitor her stuff. But I don’t have the same problems as other
people do.”
A 2016 Pew Research Center survey found that only about
half of parents said they had ever checked their children’s phone calls and
text messages or even friended their kids on social media. They were even less
likely to use tech-based tools to monitor their teens or block certain apps.
Android phones now offer some parental restriction
options, including screen time limits and app blocking, via a service called
Google Family Link — though it’s designed specifically for kids younger than
13. An upcoming update to iPhone system software, which already allows for
parental approval of app and music purchases, will give parents more control
over screen time, app usage and web surfing on iPhones, iPads and iPods.
Independent monitoring apps also have proliferated. Some
give parents more options for viewing and managing what their kids are posting
on services such as Instagram or Snapchat — often for a monthly fee. These tend
to be more effective on Android phones, says Wistocki, who recommends such
tools in his talks with parents.
He closely monitored his own sons until they turned 18,
and tells parents they should do the same.
Other tech experts agree that monitoring makes sense for
younger kids. But Pam Wisniewski, a computer-science professor at the
University of Central Florida, is among those who suggest a gradual loosening
of the strings as teens prove they can be trusted.
“I’m almost to the point where I feel like the world
would be better off without social media,” says Wisniewski, who studies human
computer interaction and adolescent online safety. “But I’m also a pragmatist.”
Rather than cutting off kids from social media, she
encourages parents to look for teachable moments. When inappropriate material
runs through their feed, for instance, she suggests discussing coping
strategies, such as hiding that person’s posts or blocking them.
Sarita Schoenebeck, an assistant professor and director
of the Living Online Lab at the University of Michigan, says her research also
has found that shutting teens out of social media only tends to make them sneakier.
“No kid wants to be pulled over and told not to do this,”
Schoenebeck says. “Try to figure out how to talk about it in an open-minded
way.”
Even Wistocki, while hardcore on monitoring, tells
parents to offer their children the “Golden Ticket” — no punishment when they
come to them about mistakes they’ve made online or help they need with a social
media problem.
Ayrial’s mom is all for that, especially having learned
that monitoring and blocks on apps aren’t foolproof. Recently, Ayrial started a
live videostream on Twitter and encountered a stranger who asked her to show
her bare feet. It was a “creepy” request, the teen said, that caused her to end
the connection quickly.
She had sidestepped a block on social media by using a
tablet. But she did tell Mom what happened soon after.
Ayrial still isn’t happy that her mom is going through
her contacts with her. The soon-to-be eighth-grader appreciates that “she cares
about me,” but hopes Mom will eventually “back up” a bit.
“When I’m in high school, that might get embarrassing
sometimes, you know?” she says. “You need to learn your own — how do I put
this? — discipline. . You need to learn from your own mistakes.”
If Mom doesn’t give her that space, she says, she’s
always coming up with new tricks to get online secretly, just as her friends
do.
And no, she won’t share how.
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