this post was submitted on 05 Nov 2025
1 points (100.0% liked)
528 readers
1 users here now
This is a place to discuss everything related to Reddit, including recent executive decisions impacting accessibility and other problematic leadership.
Memes are allowed.
Rules
- Stay on topic: All posts should be related to Reddit.
- Respectful discussions: Treat fellow community members with respect and engage in constructive discussions. Avoid personal attacks, harassment, or offensive language.
- No spam or self-promotion: Do not post spam or self-promotional content. This includes links to personal websites, blogs, or products/services.
- No illegal content: Do not share or discuss illegal content, including piracy, hacking, or copyright infringement.
- No misinformation: Avoid spreading false or misleading information.
- No inappropriate content: Do not post or link to any inappropriate or NSFW (Not Safe for Work) content.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
God forbid you tell parents to start parenting and, I don't know... watch what their kids do online?
You’re obviously a great parent. I’d love to know what tips you have.
Certainly, allowing your kids to browse all the internet, including cesspools such as reddit, facebook and twitter unwatched is a great way of parenting!
If only we had things such as parental controls on these devices and filters to block harmful sites... But alas, none of that exist, so we have to rely on a nanny state.
You're not wrong, but it's buying in to the 'think of the children' misdirection while privacy rights are snatched away from the entire population. Fight this on privacy (on the internet) grounds, find better ways to require effective moderation (for example) instead, if it's bad for kids it's likely bad for adults, but not for the profit of the corpos that will just step around or wear the fines while hoovering more personal data. Think in terms of car companies creating jaywalking and then getting the scouts to promote the idea.
I agree with you. We are losing our privacy "because of the children"
My point is that there are websites that shouldn't be visited by a 10yo. And that's enterely on their parents. You shouldn't let your child browse the internet completely unsupervised if you don't even bother on setting some filters for their own safety.
Never! How can they scroll their own social media if they have to manage their kids?
The biggest excuse you have as a kid is "all my friends have it" with this, there's no hiding