Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Stop Posting Photos Of Kids On Facebook, French Cops Warn Parents

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2016 11:15 AM
    In its bid to save children from online sexual abuse, France's national police has urged parents to stop posting photos of their children on Facebook and other social media platforms.
     
    According to the technology website The Verge, such images can put privacy and security of the kids in danger and, if shared widely, such photos can reach sexual predators.
     
    France's data protection authority has also urged parents to implement stronger privacy controls to limit the audience for their photos.
     
    Jay Parikh, Facebook's vice president of engineering, recently wrote in a blog post that Facebook is planning a new feature that will automatically alert parents before they share photos of their kids with larger audiences.
     
    "If I were to upload a photo of my kids playing at the park and I accidentally had it shared with the public, this system could say: Hey wait a minute, this is a photo of your kids, normally you post this to just your family members, are you sure you want to do this?," Parikh told a gathering at a media event in Bloomsbury in London recently.
     
     
    More than two billion photographs are uploaded to Facebook every day and the social media giant will automatically warn you before you share images that features children or other family members, he added.
     
    "Protect your children! You can all be proud moms and dads to your magnificent children, but be careful. We remind you that posting photos of your kids to Facebook is not without danger!," France's national gendarmerie wrote in a Facebook post.
     
    A gendarmerie is, in principle, a military force charged with police duties among the civilian populations. Members of such a force are called "gendarmes". 
     
    In another post, a regional branch of the gendarmerie even cautioned parents to "STOP" the practice altogether.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Headband to save drowning kids

    Headband to save drowning kids
    For swimmers, the device sits around the head and for non-swimmers, it could be worn on the wrist....

    Headband to save drowning kids

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?
    The sheer biological mass of ants working in rhythm could have removed significant quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere since the insects...

    Can tiny ants save us from global warming?

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust
     Microsoft filed a case against Samsung Electronics in a US court over breach of contract. The lawsuit accuses the South Korean company of not paying for...

    Warring Giants: Microsoft sues Samsung for breach of trust

    A 'surface' that controls fluids

    A 'surface' that controls fluids
    Defying gravitational forces, an Indian-origin scientist-led team has developed a new way of making surfaces that can actively control how fluids...

    A 'surface' that controls fluids

    Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown

    Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown
    Will you call 911 if Facebook goes off the radar? This is exactly some users in Los Angeles did when the popular social networking site Friday suffered its second brief outage in two months.

    Facebook Users Dial 911 Over Outage, Cops Frown

    Virtual friendship in, personal connect out

    Virtual friendship in, personal connect out
    Time was when Friendship Day meant hanging out with buddies and wearing colourful friendship bands. But now virtual connect through forwarded...

    Virtual friendship in, personal connect out