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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Facebook Terms of Service VS. Mom's Terms of Service

    By Carissa Rogers for GalTime.com


    Many kids and their parents ignore the Facebook Terms of Service (TOS) completely. The kid fudges his or her age and mom allows it-or isn't aware. "I want to play games" and "I want to connect with my older cousins" are two excuses I've heard recently. Remember, though, in four years: your now 10-year-old (posing as 13-year-old) will look like a 17-year-old to his or her actual "same-age friends."


    Facebook age requirements exist for good reason: 13 is a nice age to join. It gives a parent time to talk with their kid. It also gives the child a chance to mature and be able to handle inappropriate online conversations and understand the dangers of giving out personal information. I want my daughter, who's nearly 13, to clearly understand the consequences, both good and bad, before she launches her own account.

    Internet safety expert Mary Heston, one of the founders of WiredMoms.com and the voice behind @WiredMom (with its 60,000+ followers), has three rules for parents whose kids are 13+:

    Related: 4 Real Ways to Reduce Cyberbullying

    1. Sit down with your child and go through the Facebook profile set-up together from start to finish.

    2. Make sure all the security setting are at the most private, from the start.

    • At the top right hand side of the page you will see Account.
    • Under the drop-down menu, work through the Account Settings, the Applications Settings, and most importantly the Privacy Settings. Make sure the privacy settings are set to Custom Settings.
    • Then click on the Custom Settings link on that page. That will take you to another page where you can select who can see information you place in your account.

    3. Be sure to set your child's account to:
    • Only Me for Places I Check Into, because the newest Facebook option is to let people know where you are.
    • Disable People Here Now.
    • And in the section allowing other people to share information about you, be sure to disable Friends Can Check Me In To Places.

    Related: Why Protecting Your Teen's Online Reputation is Critical for SCHOOL!

    After several interesting and even rewarding conversations with my tween, we've decided that YESS, she can have a Facebook account when she turns 13, providing that she understands and agrees to additional Mom TOS:

    • I will have access to my child's password for Facebook and she will not share it with anyone else. We will write it down and put it in a private location (not on a sticky note on the fridge, where anyone visiting could see it).
    • We will work through the Account & Application Settings together, never including home address or phone numbers even if she is just sharing her page with friends.
    • MOST IMPORTANTLY: We will work through the Privacy Settings together and set everything to either "Friends Only" or "Only Me".
    • Kids need to understand it's okay to have fun, but to always remember they are building their Permanent Record. Future bosses and college acceptance boards may someday look at their Facebook account as a reference.
    • Mom will be monitoring the site regularly, and must be allowed to "Friend."
    • She is only allowed Friends she (and I) know in real life.
    • She is only allowed Friends spanning 1 year younger or older. (Negotiable after a few years.)
    • There are photo limitations. She must consider content (is anyone in the picture going to be embarrassed by it?) and be aware of tagging (unless privacy is set correctly, everyone will see your photo and can add tags of their own).

    Once all these settings and rules are agreed to, she'll be Facebooking up a storm. Her next question: "Can I have a smart phone with Facebook access?"

    Welcome to the new connected teenager.

    What are YOUR TOS for your kids on Facebook and other social networks?

    More from GalTime.com

     

    7 comments

    • Cougiex  •  1 year 6 months ago
      "She is only allowed Friends spanning 1 year younger or older. (Negotiable after a few years.)"

      So by you forcing her to accept you as a "Friend" you make her to break your own TOS????
    • katie  •  1 year 6 months ago
      If I had a teenager, I'd be leery about letting them use Facebook before the age of sixteen. And even then I'd make them tell me their password and have me added as a friend. Facebook is much safer than Myspace, but it's still the internet.
    • RedStar  •  1 year 6 months ago
      My dad didn't let me have a Myspace until I was 16 (before I knew about Facebook) and he didn't ask for my password or even request he be one of my friends. He and I had multiple conversations about what is appropriate and what was not. He trusted me enough because he gave me the information and we talked about it. Plus being 16 is whole different ball game than 13. I think I understood the importance of what he was saying at 16 rather than 13.
      And in the end, everything turned out fine.
    • Frack  •  1 year 6 months ago
      Seems most of the comments that balk at the "parent's TOS" are from teenagers. Give it a few years, kids. You don't have to cram every single life experience into the six years between your 13th and 19th birthdays.
    • slim  •  1 year 6 months ago
      First of all, how about giving your kid some credit? If you raised her the way she should have been raised, she deserves to have her own privacy. Its ridiculous that you expect to have her facebook password. If you're her friend, you can monitor her activity without being a helicopter parent. Parents today are obsessed with their kids. They have to know where they are at all times, who they're with, who ALL of their friends are... etc. Its gotten out of hand. Your daughter will be going into high school soon. She will make new friends every single day and I doubt they will ALL meet you. Not to mention the fact that as your daughter gets older, she will resent the fact that you treat her like... well... a 13 yr old. Allow her some freedom. Facebook isnt the porn site that most adults make it out to be.
    • Paper Aeroplane  •  1 year 6 months ago
      "She is only allowed Friends spanning 1 year younger or older. (Negotiable after a few years.)"
      -so what happens when the freshman becomes good friends with a senior through sports or school like i did?
    • Jessica  •  1 year 6 months ago
      "She is only allowed Friends spanning 1 year younger or older. (Negotiable after a few years.)"

      So by you forcing her to accept you as a "Friend" you make her to break your own TOS???

      ^ I agree with that, it's hypocrisy. Also, she wouldn't be allowed to friend relatives that are adults.

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