The Herald (South Africa)

Tips for parents after online suicide scare

- Nivashni Nair

Activate parental controls‚ get involved and find alternativ­es.

These are some of the tips that South African social media law expert Emma Sadleir is endorsing after parents raised alarm over hidden suicide tips in YouTube Kids videos.

Parents have been worried sick after Florida mom and paediatric­ian Free Hess‚ founder of child safety website PediMom‚ revealed there were videos glorifying suicide‚ sexual exploitati­on and violence on the app aimed at children.

“My research has led me into a horrifying world where people create cartoons glorifying dangerous topics and scenarios such as self-harm‚ suicide‚ sexual exploitati­on‚ traffickin­g‚ domestic violence‚ sexual abuse and gun violence, which includes a simulated school shooting.

“All of these videos were found on YouTube Kids‚ a platform that advertises itself to be a safe place for children‚ eight years’ old and under‚” Hess wrote on PediMom.

The resurrecte­d Momo Challenge added to parents’ worries when North Ireland police issued a public warning on the creepy game that targets young children.

A doll encourages them to add a contact on messaging service WhatsApp‚ then hounds them with violent images and dares. It encourages self-harm and ultimately tells them to commit suicide.

On Wednesday‚ Sadleir posted tips on Facebook for parents who “have seen some of the really scary stories circulatin­g about content on YouTube Kids”.

Sadleir recommende­d tips from Code9 Parent‚ an online service for parents to have an active role in monitoring their children’s online activity.

Code9 Parent recommends that parents turn off the “allow searching” feature to prevent children from searching for content within the app.

Parents should turn on the “approve content only” feature.

The “pause watch history” feature should be turned on to prevent suggested videos showing.

Parents should also look for alternativ­es such as Kids Netflix‚ ABC Kids‚ Amazon Prime and even old-school DVDs.

Code9 Parent said nothing replaced parental supervisio­n and vigilance.

“All devices should be in a public space in your home. Talk to your children about online safety and what to do if they see something upsetting online‚” it advised. –

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