Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Beware! This Blue Whale Online Suicide Challenge Is Scaring Parents World Over

IANS, 02 May, 2017 12:16 PM
    A new online gaming challenge called Blue Whale has reportedly been challenging kids to commit suicide at the final stage. 
     
    Khaleej Times reported that a WhatsApp alert has been doing the rounds which reads: “Any parents out there or anyone that knows of any kids playing an online game called ‘Blue Whale’, please get your kids off this game. It sets them 50 challenges and the last one is to commit suicide.”
     
    According to online reports, Blue Whale initially sets challenges ranging from watching psychadellic horror movies to cutting shapes into their skin, with the final challenge being suicide.
     
    To complete each challenge, users are urged to send photographic evidence back to the game creators as proof, or they will send threats.
     
    It is thought the creators of the application-based game prey on vulnerable teens online before asking them to download the app and take the challenge. Once downloaded the user's phone is then hacked and the game cannot be deleted, meaning they can access all your details.
     
    In 2015, authorities here cautioned parents, teachers and schools against a game promising contact with spirits and demons. Called the 'Charlie Charlie Challenge', the game went viral over the Internet, reaching school students in the UAE too.
     
    The game required two pens placed on top of each other creating a grid with the four sectors labelled yes and no. The players then posed a question to the 'supernatural being' named Charlie by saying "Charlie, Charlie, come play with me".
     
    As a result, police organised awareness lectures in schools and told students that the game was just a cinema trick and to avoid playing it with friends.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Why No Alien Is Calling Us From Space, Explains Indian-Origin Scientist

    Why No Alien Is Calling Us From Space, Explains Indian-Origin Scientist
    The universe is probably filled with habitable planets, so many scientists think it should be teeming with aliens

    Why No Alien Is Calling Us From Space, Explains Indian-Origin Scientist

    Playboy Suing Two Canadian Web Publications Over Kate Moss Nude Spread

    The copyright suit against Toronto-based Contempo Media and Montreal's Indecent Xposure seeks up to $50,000 in damages from each outlet.

    Playboy Suing Two Canadian Web Publications Over Kate Moss Nude Spread

    Apps Take Planning On Road For Tasks From Finding Best Hotel Deals To Translation

    Apps Take Planning On Road For Tasks From Finding Best Hotel Deals To Translation
    When looking for help communicating with locals during a recent trip that took her to remote regions of Central America, she turned to a Spanish dictionary app on her phone.

    Apps Take Planning On Road For Tasks From Finding Best Hotel Deals To Translation

    Chipotle Stores To Open At 3 P.m. Local Time On Feb. 8

    Chipotle Stores To Open At 3 P.m. Local Time On Feb. 8
    NEW YORK — Chipotle says its stores will open several hours later than normal for one day next month so it can hold a meeting following a series of food scares.

    Chipotle Stores To Open At 3 P.m. Local Time On Feb. 8

    So Long, Selfie Sticks: Travellers Hiring Photographers To Take Vacation Photos

    So Long, Selfie Sticks: Travellers Hiring Photographers To Take Vacation Photos
    Even with the popularity of selfie sticks, some travellers are still yearning to come home with good old-fashioned photos not captured on a smartphone — and they're willing to pay for them.

    So Long, Selfie Sticks: Travellers Hiring Photographers To Take Vacation Photos

    European Court Rules Employer Can Read Private Employee Messages

    European Court Rules Employer Can Read Private Employee Messages
    PARIS — Europe's top human rights court has ruled that an employer that accessed the private messages of an employee to check if he was completing his work was acting within its rights.

    European Court Rules Employer Can Read Private Employee Messages