By MARRI Intern
Recently
on Slate, author Amy Webb
recounted the story of a friend who frequently posts pictures of her young
daughter on Facebook. In her opinion, these digital memories are irreversibly “preventing [the daughter] from any hope of future
anonymity.” In reaction to this modern way of public life, before Webb’s
daughter was even born she and her husband created social media profiles and a
Gmail account for their child. When she is old enough their daughter will have
access to an online presence, if she so chooses. Now that their daughter has
been born, they diligently monitor social media websites to ensure that none of
their friends or relatives posts pictures or personal information about their
child.
While Webb’s prerogative as a parent is not in question, she does
raise an interesting (and rather concerning) question: what are parents doing
to children’s futures by putting them in the public spotlight before they are
conscious of the decision? In the past, baby pictures were kept at home in an
album; today they are broadcast on the internet. Before modern technology, a
person had to know the parents to be able to see a child’s pictures; now,
depending on your internet privacy know-how, anyone can see them, including
corporate face recognition software. There are babies and children on social
media news feeds that users have never met and likely never will because they
are the step-nephew-in-law of their college roommate’s best friend (or
something like that). While there are cynical
applications to remove babies from their news feeds, this is not the point. The
point is that society has changed. Americans are increasingly willing to share
private details of their lives in a public forum, sometimes with unfortunate
negative consequences.
There are countless stories of parents finding pictures of their
children being used for advertising, for fake online accounts or even for child
pornography. Furthermore, many children born into this generation will have had
an online presence since before they were
born (think sonogram pictures). American parents have shifted from protecting
their children’s privacy to publicly displaying their children. Sons and
daughters have arguably become yet another possession that one may flaunt
before neighbors. How many “likes” will I get if I post a picture of my child
doing x? Look at my baby’s adorable new clothes! And on it goes. Even celebrities
effectively place a dollar value on their children by selling the rights to
their baby’s first pictures. Parents’ love for and adoration of their children
is certainly not in question here, but are these parents devaluing their child
by sharing him or her with the world?
Perhaps these parents could instead spend their efforts on become
more actively involved in their children’s lives and education to ensure the
best chance for their success. Click here for more information
from MARRI on what involvement in your child’s life at a young age can mean for
his or her development.
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