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Should Kids Under 13 Be Allowed to Use Facebook?

SodaHead Living 2012/06/05 17:00:00
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It's well known that Facebook does not permit users under 13 years old -- and that many kids find a way to use the social networking site anyway. All that could change, though, now that Facebook is developing technology that would allow kids under 13 to use the site under parental supervision, The Wall Street Journal reports.

kids facebook

According to the WSJ, there are a few possibilities in the works. One would connect
children's accounts to their parents', allowing mom and dad to decide whom their kids can "friend" and what applications they can use.

It does seem incumbent upon Facebook to come up with something, since many kids lie about their ages to get accounts. Last year, Consumer Reports said 7.5 million children under the age of 13 were using the site, including more than five million under the age of 10. And last fall, a study sponsored by Microsoft Research found that 36 percent of parents were aware that their children joined Facebook before age 13, and many even helped their kids to do so.

But given that adults have privacy concerns about Facebook, is the site safe for kids? And could it make them vulnerable to predators and bullies?
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Top Opinion

  • Bob P. Clarkson 2012/06/05 20:04:22
    No
    Bob P. Clarkson
    +23
    Adults have no concept of security on the Internet and children of all ages almost universally trust that everyone is as "nice and good" as they are. My now 15 year old granddaughter got on Facebook at 13, and even though her Dad took her off Facebook, she got on under another name using a friend's computer.
    Grandpa has been playing with computers since we were using punch cards, and even though I no longer write programs, I stumble my way through the computer world.
    I established an account as a fifteen year old boy with pictures I borrowed from a neighbors son, then "stalked" her and convinced her to meet me at a mall - it was really safe that way. When she walked in to the food court, she was surprised to see me and acted like she wanted me to disappear before "Steve" got there.
    I showed her the file on her and "Steve" and she was P.O.'d I had spied on her.
    I showed her where her school was, where her best girlfriends lived, where she lived and gave her my "On-line Security" talk.
    She listened as a know-it-all 13 year old listens, which to say is, not at all, and continued to hammer me about "spying" on her. I logged on to Facebook with my laptop, and when I signed in to my Steve persona, she got very quiet. Then I retold her what I had done and showed her how "unsafe" th...

















    Adults have no concept of security on the Internet and children of all ages almost universally trust that everyone is as "nice and good" as they are. My now 15 year old granddaughter got on Facebook at 13, and even though her Dad took her off Facebook, she got on under another name using a friend's computer.
    Grandpa has been playing with computers since we were using punch cards, and even though I no longer write programs, I stumble my way through the computer world.
    I established an account as a fifteen year old boy with pictures I borrowed from a neighbors son, then "stalked" her and convinced her to meet me at a mall - it was really safe that way. When she walked in to the food court, she was surprised to see me and acted like she wanted me to disappear before "Steve" got there.
    I showed her the file on her and "Steve" and she was P.O.'d I had spied on her.
    I showed her where her school was, where her best girlfriends lived, where she lived and gave her my "On-line Security" talk.
    She listened as a know-it-all 13 year old listens, which to say is, not at all, and continued to hammer me about "spying" on her. I logged on to Facebook with my laptop, and when I signed in to my Steve persona, she got very quiet. Then I retold her what I had done and showed her how "unsafe" the Internet was, again.
    Since a number of her friends had "friended" me, and some friends of the real Steve, kind of computer specialists, I showed her how easier it was to track her, and them, using Facebook and Google Earth.
    She was still put out with grandpa when she left, but two days later she took down her Facebook account - and so did two of her friends. She now gives security lectures to her friends that want to know why she doesn't have a Facebook page.

    She now has unlimited minutes on her iPhone, and actually likes it better than Facebook. I'm sure she and all of her friends will have arthritic thumbs when they get older, and I'm sure they will figure out something else that is probably just as dangerous, but parents and grandparents can only deal with what we know.
    Oh, it took her only a week to forgive me, but when she told her dad why she took down her Facebook page, he was bent out of shape for about a month for sticking my nose in. It was "his job" to guide and guard her through to adulthood. When my quick statement about I did what he would have to have hired someone else to do and didn't charge him for my work finally sunk in.
    I was guilty that I usurped his parental job, but I've always been a Type A, so it never even dawned on me to consult him - I just did it to protect my granddaughter.
    I'm not sure I would do it much different, anyway.










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Opinions

  • Nezkeys79 2012/06/05 17:20:33 (edited)
    No
    Nezkeys79
    +4
    Anyone under 16 shouldn't use it. Instead they should create a Facebook for kids which would be for all under 16.

    Why did they make 13 the cut off point anyway?
  • catrina Nezkeys79 2012/06/05 17:31:10
    catrina
    Ok when u turn 13 u r a teenager it meens u can make the right choises and take responsiblitie
  • jimih67 catrina 2012/06/05 17:36:41
    jimih67
    Trouble is a lot of them don't. I think they should be able to get on there younger when they actually still listen to their parents. At 13 its all about how many friends you can get, and a lot of 13 year olds have over 200 friends, and you can count the ones they actually know on your fingers.
  • Lord Em... catrina 2012/06/05 17:43:14
    Lord Emperor of Dune
    +1
    But not spell properly. So much of civilization hinges on using written language correctly
  • Nezkeys79 catrina 2012/06/05 17:44:07
    Nezkeys79
    I think this so too (was just being a smartass) but why are they still classed as not being able to until 18 then?
  • Nezkeys79 Nezkeys79 2012/06/05 17:56:08
    Nezkeys79
    I agree the child's account should be linked to their parents account so that means all under the age of 18 then? If the law wants to state certain guidelines then there should not be other guidelines that contradict them.

    I believe that teenagers can make all these decisions by themselves so they should not be treated as / classed as children for 13-18. many people are treated as a pediphile because of the stupid legal boundaries.

    Search ephebophile on Wiki or something
  • Ryan Cl... catrina 2012/06/05 18:28:20
    Ryan Clarke
    Um, right choices? Responsibility?

    Yeahhh No.
  • boiyaza Nezkeys79 2012/06/05 19:26:48
    boiyaza
    yea a pedophiles dream site
  • Nezkeys79 boiyaza 2012/06/06 03:29:27
    Nezkeys79
    Oh yeah that's really gonna be a dream for a pedo...

    Facebook for kids launched
    Pedo friend requests a bunch of pre-pubescents he doesn't know. angry parents report him. end of his account
  • boiyaza Nezkeys79 2012/06/06 17:06:21
    boiyaza
    yea anyone can post a fake picture of them selves and we both know young children are idiots
  • catrina boiyaza 2012/09/18 00:14:19
    catrina
    dont call us idiots you must let children make their own mastakes not make them suffer
  • boiyaza catrina 2012/09/20 14:19:10
    boiyaza
    well wen your child is talking to a 50 old man who want to take your child out
  • anna.stinson.39 2012/06/05 17:19:58
    Yes
    anna.stinson.39
    +1
    I allowed my children, but set it up to be private and I had complete access to the accounts. I was always looking over my children's shoulders.
  • Apricotz 2012/06/05 17:16:53 (edited)
    Yes
    Apricotz
    I don't see anything bad about it. If we say that the kid might get to know strangers or get cyber bullied we could also say that to about anything. No phone, don't go outside, so the case isn't about the subject it's about how it's being used. Parents should first teach their children about facebook and have them to tell if they encountered anyone they don't know and it should be fine.
  • ShaZakLar 2012/06/05 17:12:59
    Yes
    ShaZakLar
    absolutely.. it's unfair to kids under 13 and there are many things for them to do on there. My brother got facebook when he was like 9 so he could play games and later to connect with family and relatives easily.
  • 666_Maggots~PassionForGlory... 2012/06/05 17:12:46
  • catrina 666_Mag... 2012/06/05 17:34:47
    catrina
    Yo its not bad for u u just talk on line is that bad parents do on dating sites so y can't we have r own
  • 666_Mag... catrina 2012/06/05 17:36:26
    666_Maggots~PassionForGlory BN-1
    Becuase you do not know proper english, yo.
  • Sister Jean 2012/06/05 17:10:39
    No
    Sister Jean
    +1
    or here

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