Chattanooga Times Free Press

Home alone, with a spy cam

- BY RONDA KAYSEN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

The message is clear: Home security is about keeping tabs on the people inside your house, not the strangers lurking outside.

My son is off the leash. Now that he has started middle school, he will have the house to himself after school on the days when I am not working from home.

I could let him revel in this preadolesc­ent milestone where he gets to play “Splatoon 2” all afternoon with no one yelling at him. Or I could fill my house with smart devices and watch him do whatever it is an 11-year-old does when he thinks he is alone.

Sure, he could pick up the phone and call me to let me know he has arrived home, but why rely on such an archaic option when I could instead turn my front door into Big Mother?

I could install a keyless lock, like Kevo by Kwikset, and receive a text message when he unlocks it. With a digital home security system, like SimpliSafe, I could get an alert that he has disarmed the system and a video clip of him walking in. I could use SimpliSafe door sensors to warn me if he opens anything off limits — that will keep him out of the cookie drawer.

With a microphone-enabled camera, like Canary, I could talk to him from the mantel. Imagine his reaction when he hears my disembodie­d voice emanating from a little box ordering him to put down the Nintendo Switch. “We see lots and lots of family members using this as a tool to monitor their kids,” says Bob Stohrer, chief marketing officer for Canary.

While parents of young children have long used nanny cams to keep tabs on baby sitters, companies are now marketing these products to parents of older children, too. This time the camera is pointed not at the untrustwor­thy caregiver but at the potentiall­y rebellious adolescent.

“Parents use it to better understand when they come and go, what they’re doing, what time they go to sleep, when they have friends over,” Stohrer says.

A Canary television ad trades the creepy home invader in the bushes for the wild teenage baby sitter who invites her boyfriend over and, while they canoodle on the couch, the unsupervis­ed children flood the bathroom and take the car out for a spin. The message is clear: Home security is about keeping tabs on the people inside your house, not the strangers lurking outside.

More than half the parents who use Canary cite a need to monitor their children as a primary reason for buying the device. SimpliSafe reported similar behavior, finding that the safety alerts were particular­ly popular among parents, who primarily use their products to “keep their kids safe,” says Melina Engel, the company’s chief marketing officer.

These new surveillan­ce options come at a time of heightened angst about parental supervisio­n. In her memoir “Small Animals: Parenthood in the Age of Fear,” released in August, Kim Brooks chronicles being charged with contributi­ng to the delinquenc­y of a minor after she briefly left her small child alone in a car. She argues that her odyssey through the criminal-justice system was a product of a culture convinced that our children are in a constant state of peril and only a vigilant parent can protect them.

“We are living in an age of fear,” she writes. Most of the dangers our children face — a changing climate, a vanishing middle class, spiraling health-care costs — are beyond our control. And so our grip on the things we think we can control — like what our children do with their afternoons — grows tighter.

Gone are the days of riding your bike around the neighborho­od on your own until dusk. A 2014 Reason-Rupe poll found that 68 percent of Americans thought that a 9-yearold should not be allowed to play in a park unsupervis­ed, and just over half of Americans thought a 12-year-old deserved such independen­ce. Yet more than 40 percent of children are left home alone at times, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychology.

Since we are expected to always be watching even when we can’t, we look to technology to solve the impossible. If we download the right app, maybe we can keep harm at bay and no one can call us a neglectful mother. Just as parents use GPS tracking devices on cellphones to monitor their children out in the world, parents can point to that camera on the bookshelf as proof that our attention is squarely focused on home, even when it isn’t. With enough devices, we can constantly guard the roost.

But do I really want to know about everything that is happening in my house? A live feed into my living room means my home is only as safe as the last time I checked. Sure, my son was fine when he arrived, but is he now? How about now? And should he decide to go play with a neighbor, I will get a fresh alert reminding me that until that next one chimes, I should be on, well, alert.

“The more you engage in this sort of fear-driven buying and reacting, the more scared and worried and distrustfu­l you’re likely to become,” says Barry Glassner, author of “The Culture of Fear: Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things.”

Yet, our children are alone sometimes, and technology can help us know when they have gotten home safely. A microphone-enabled camera could make it easier to help children with homework or to intervene in a sibling dispute.

Ann Marie Luft, who lives with her husband and two daughters near Orlando, Florida, used a camera to check in on her older daughter, Hannah, now 15, when she first started coming home from school alone four years ago. Luft, a registered nurse, would check the camera, scanning the room for her daughter and talking to her through the smartphone app. The camera helped ease the transition to independen­ce, Luft says.

Eventually, it no longer felt necessary. Now, Hannah texts her mother when she gets on or off the bus, although she sometimes forgets. Luft says she tolerated the flakiness as part of the price of adolescenc­e. “When we were kids, we never had our parents spying on us,” she says.

I think back to my own adolescenc­e and mostly remember hours spent hanging out with friends, calling my mother once and then making it home by dinnertime. I was no angel, but I somehow muddled through. If my son were to know that a camera was pointed at him, he might feel the need to find ways around it. Or, perhaps worse, not bother to step outside at all.

“These technologi­es and their use have a potential to erode that gray-area zone where we actually do a lot of learning about ourselves and our family and friends, where we learn how to deal with questions about what should I do? When it is right for me to break the rules?” says Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney and the Adams Chair for Internet Rights at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “Those are important parts of growing up.”

 ?? PAULO CAMPOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Smart devices make it possible for parents to keep close tabs on their latchkey children, but is it really a good idea?
PAULO CAMPOS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Smart devices make it possible for parents to keep close tabs on their latchkey children, but is it really a good idea?

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