Parents Oversharing Kids on Social Media – aka “sharenting”
Celebrities …
Hilaria Baldwin controversy – Instagram feed filled with photos of her infants and growing children
Tamara Ecclestone
Chrissie Teigan
Elizabeth Hurley
No clear roadmaps – “owning your story vs. paparazzi”
People say they stalk instagram and Facebook to stay connected, but without actually connecting, it’s just voyeurism.
Legal issues regarding posting of child photos
Kids currently have no legal right to prevent their parents from posting photos of them online
Parents may have legal recourse if someone (even a family member) posts photos of their children without their consent
A grandmother in the Netherlands forced to take down photos of her grandchildren from Facebook
In general, thanks to the First Amendment, speech outweighs privacy concerns in the U.S. The European Union is the reverse – no First Amendment and very strong protections for individual privacy
Practical risks
Data harvesting – there is a vast industry, from social media sites outward, eager to harvest personally identifying information about your children, which will affect their entire lives. Why not slow down the process?
Misappropriation of images
Digital kidnapping
Impact on children
Psychological cost of relying on external gratification
Impact on body image – dysmorphia
Ethical considerations
Bad role modeling – if your child is too young to consent, then you are posting without the conscious agreement of your child. If your child is old enough to express an opinion and you ignore them, you are teaching them that consent is not important.
Lack of respect / use of social media to punish or shame child
Preemption or co-option of the child’s own formation of identity
Whose brand is it anyway? Economic motivations for using children in social media
There are alternatives
Think about online “friendships” and who can see your stuff.
Put family photos in a password-protected folder in a cloud storage or online photo service