As parents in the digital age, we’re likely to see troubling things online about other children in our community. Your son or daughter may proactively show you another kid’s post, or perhaps you discover something concerning when monitoring your own child’s social media accounts and devices. It could be sexually suggestive images, photos of teens engaging in illegal behavior, an offensive meme, cruel comments, thoughts about self-harm, or unusually violent videos. When should one parent contact another parent about something she saw online? And when is that likely to just make everything worse? On this episode, Marc and David explore these controversial and emotionally-charged issues with two California Moms, Michelle Dennedy and Sharon Anolik. Michelle is the Vice President and Chief Privacy Officer of Cisco, published author, and advocate. Sharon is an award-winning data strategy, compliance and ethics executive and frequent presenter on privacy, information security, and Internet safety.
Like Adolescence, Season One Ends At 25
It's Complicated: Societal Norms, Teens and Tech
Ready Parent One: Learning Fortnite
Different Homes, Different Devices, Different Rules
There's No Delete Button on the Internet
Finstas: The "Real" Instagram Account
Talking About Cyber Hate
The Social Media Generation
The Truth About "Internet Addiction"
How Smartphones and Media Influence Kids’ Behavior
Teen Sexting: A Girl's Perspective
Teen Dating in the Digital Age
What Our Kids Post Online Matters, Maybe Forever
Spying or Parenting - Do We Need to Respect Our Kids’ Digital Privacy?
Sandbox v. Xbox: The Role of Digital Play
Teen Sexting – Flipping Out Is Not the Answer
Is sexting a "normal" part of growing up digital?
How to Be a Digital Role Model for Your Kids
The Magical Age of 13.
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