Iran Daily

Parents need to monitor kids’ cellphone use

-

Most teenagers, and some kids younger than 10, have smartphone­s, and the police say that parents should strictly monitor their children’s phone usage for safety risks.

Sgt. Kenneth Sanger of the Montgomery County Police Department’s Special Victims Investigat­ions Division said, “I tell parents it’s my recommenda­tion that they control the passwords to everything on that phone, including the password to the android or Apple phone itself, the password to any emails, the password to any apps.”

According to wtop.com, cellphones have been involved in several high-profile cases in the Washington DC area in which children were made victims by adult predators.

“There are bad actors out there specifical­ly looking for our children,” said Sanger, who supervises the division’s Exploitati­on and Registry Section.

“Children and teenagers will make mistakes … we have a lot of children victims that are making mistakes by sending inappropri­ate images or videos out to people they know and to people they don’t know,” he said.

The old saying goes ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’, and in the special victims investigat­ions world, Sgt. Sanger said, seemingly innocent pictures on kids’ cellphones might convey too much informatio­n. The picture background or a T-shirt the child is wearing could convey the school the child attends, a home address or a favorite hangout.

“Parents should monitor — strictly monitor. They should review the device, go through it, actually in front of the child, or when the child’s asleep, or both,” Sanger said.

Sanger said it’s wise for parents to read their children’s’ texts, know all of their contacts, review their pictures and check which apps they’re using.

“Parents should know every single contact … know who their (Facebook) Friends list is, know their contacts in Instagram, in Snapchat, in Kik,” Sanger said.

Police express particular concern about the Kik app.

“With Kik — that seems to be where many of our problems occur … Kik is a conduit or an applicatio­n that the predators are on, in my opinion, because that’s what the kids are on,” Sanger said.

Sanger also offered a warning about the live video streaming service Omegle.

“It’s basically Skype, but you’re live streaming with complete strangers. So it’s a video-based app, and the predatorst­rangers out there are very good at manipulati­ng children to do things they wouldn’t normally do,” Sanger said.

Sanger points out that smartphone­s are extremely powerful communicat­ions devices that allow kids to reach out to people around the world. Parents, he said, need to know who their kids are communicat­ing with, what they’re saying and what pictures and videos are being exchanged.

 ??  ?? wtop.com
wtop.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran