WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
How to (kindly) ask people not to post your kids' photos on social media
close Sens. Fetterman, Britt seek 'Common Ground' tackling the harmful side effects of social media use Sens. John Fetterman, D-Pa., and Katie Britt, R-Ala., discuss bipartisan efforts to protect children and teenagers using social media on 'Special Report.' A 27-year-old grad student was just caught using pictures of real kids on the internet to make AI child porn for pedophiles. Even more disgusting? He worked by request. This story made my skin crawl, and it brings me to a question Ive been asked more and more often."Kim, I don't want pictures of my kids on social media. How do I tell friends and family not to post them without sounding preachy?"Im giving away an iPhone 16 Pro with Apple Intelligence. No purchase necessary; enter now!Your kids, your rulesYoure totally justified in wanting your kids faces off the web.pose as a kid and groom your child on Snapchat, Roblox you name it.BIOMETRIC DATA: IS IT SAFE TO HAND IT OVER TO ANY COMPANY THAT ASKS?Posting your kids to Facebook or Instagram basically gives Meta the thumbs-up for using those images totrain its AI models. The law is way behind here. As a parent, its up to you to protect your kids.Related:Stop Facebook from using your data to train AI Social media applications on an iPhone screen. (Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)Keep things drama-freeSave yourself an awkward situation by telling people before a big get-together. Most folks mean well, but they might not know the risks of sharing kids photos online, especially if theyre not parents themselves.Its about you, not them. This is for your kids. Use "I" and "we" statements, and dont tell anyone else how to parent.Share your reasoning. Or just send them a link to this story!Be clear and firm. Dont leave any wiggle room on public posting.Do it one-on-one. If you have the convo over email or text, do it privately, not in a group message.SMARTPHONE TRICKS EVERY IPHONE AND ANDROID USER SHOULD KNOWI wrote up an example you can copy:"Hey, I wanted to let you know ahead of time wed like to keep photos of the kids off the internet for privacy and safety reasons. (We saw some stories that really spooked us!) If you could avoid putting pics of them on social media, wed really appreciate it!"Related:The secret to get better pics of you and your familyIf its already posted Dont panic. Reach out ASAP and ask them to remove it with a link to the specific post. Id go with a text. A comment on a public post feels like youre calling them out. As a parent, its up to you to protect your kids online. (iStock)Use this: "Hey, I totally forgot to mention this, but we're keeping pictures of the kids offline for now. Could you take this post down or repost it with their faces hidden? An emoji works great!Related:Posting pics of kids on social media: Dos and dontsThe safest way to share pics with friends?Not sharing photos of your kids publicly doesnt have to mean not sharing at all. My suggestion: Make an invite-only album for close family and friends.In Google Photos: You can do this on your phone or computer. Just open the Google Photos app orwebsite.THE $40K SCAM THAT ALMOST GOT ME + 3 MORE SPREADING NOWOn a computer: Click Photos and select one you want to share. At the top, click the + icon> Shared album > New shared album. Add a title, then hit Share. You can choose Create link, search for contacts or share on social media.On mobile:Tap the + icon > Album. Name your album and add the photos you want to share. Select Get Link to generate a private link, add specific email addresses or share through a messaging app or social media.Final step: Make sure the Link Sharing toggle is off for maximum privacy, so only invited users can view the album.In Apple Photos: You can create and share on your iPhone, iPad or Mac using the Photos app.First, you need to enable Shared Albums.On iPhone or iPad:Go to Settings > [your name]> iCloud > Photos, then turn on Shared Albums.On a Mac:Open the Photos app. From the menu bar at the top, choose Photos > Settings. (In macOS Monterey or earlier, choose Photos > Preferences.) Select the iCloud tab, then Shared Albums. The Instagram logo on a cellphone. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)Now create and share your album.On Mac or iPhone/iPad running iOS 18: In Photos, scroll down to Shared Albums > Shared Albums > Create. Add a name, images and then choose people from your contacts, type an email address or add iMessage phone number. Tap Done.On iOS 17 or earlier:Go to Albums > + (add button) > New Shared Album. Add a name, images and then choose people from your contacts, type an email address or add iMessage phone number.Get tech-smarter on your scheduleAward-winning host Kim Komando is your secret weapon for navigating tech.National radio:Airing on 500+ stations across the U.S. Find yours or get the free podcast.Daily newsletter:Join 559,000 people who read the Current (free!)Watch: OnKims YouTube channelPodcast: "Kim Komando Today" Listen wherever you get podcastsCopyright 2025, WestStar Multimedia Entertainment. All rights reserved.
0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 18 Views