granola
Member
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2012
- Messages
- 373
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- 14
All this talk about wifi and apps on phones reminded me of something. Recently, my 15 y/o asked permission to download an app to her phone called SnapChat. I refused to allow it. In researching this app, I learned that the user can send and receive pictures and text messages using this thing, and it leaves no trace on your phone, nor does it impact your message allowance on your cell phone plan. You can send and receive videos too. You set a timeframe- say, 5 seconds- that the message is visible on the recipient's phone, and then the thing just self-destructs and disappears altogether.
You would send a message/pic/video to whoever, and they'd get a notification on their phone that they have a new snapchat message. Once they open the message, it's visible on their screen for however many seconds you determine you want it visible to them, and then it disappears. They no longer have access to it.
I monitor my kid's phone and internet activity pretty heavily, and the idea that she could send potentially inappropriate messages and/or pics to friends (or worse- BOYS!! ) was something I just couldn't reconcile. I told her no way.
The app is really popular with her friends- and free- so I wonder if Abigail had it as well.
Most teens use it to send pics of their faces with words printed over it. My sister has been spying on our teen cousins' snapchat while I've been watching Instagram. (Someone has to!)
Inappropriate pics can be sent but SnapChat notifies a user if someone takes a screenshot of the pic. It cuts down on the bad stuff but still, it's not a great app.
I don't get why it's a thing. I think it's the stupidest idea for an app. But yes, Abby could have been using it... likely was, since it's such a big thing for kids right now. But would someone outside of the age of say, 20, really know about it and use it to target her? I feel doubtful on that.