15 most popular apps and websites for kids after Facebook
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TEXTING APPS
Kik Messenger is an app that lets kids
text for free. It's fast and has no message limits, character limits, or fees if
you only use the basic features. Because it's an app, the texts won't show up on
your kid's phone's messaging service, and you're not charged for them (beyond
standard data rates).
What parents need to know:
It's loaded with ads and in-app-purchases. Kik specializes in "promoted chats"
-- basically, conversations between brands and users. It also offers specially
designed apps (accessible only through the main app), many of which offer
products for sale.
There's some stranger danger. An app named OinkText, linked to Kik, allows
communication with strangers who share their Kik usernames to find people to
chat with. There's also a Kik community blog where users can submit photos of
themselves and screenshots of messages (sometimes displaying users' full names)
to contests.
ooVoo is a free video, voice, and messaging
app. Users can have group chats with up to 12 people for free -- and it's common
for kids to log on after school and keep it open while doing homework. Maybe
they're using it for group study sessions?
What parents need to know:
You can only chat with approved friends. Users can only communicate with those
on their approved contact lists, which can help ease parents' safety concerns.
It can be distracting. Because the service makes video chatting so affordable
and accessible, it also can be addicting. A conversation with your kids about
multitasking may be in order.
WhatsApp lets users send text messages,
audio messages, videos, and photos to one or many people with no message limits
or fees.
What parents need to know:
It's for users 16 and over. Lots of younger teens seem to be using the app, but
this age minimum has been set by WhatsApp.
It can be pushy. After you sign up, it automatically connects you to all the
people in your address book who also are using WhatsApp. It also encourages you
to add friends who haven't signed up yet.
MICRO-BLOGGING APPS AND SITES
Instagram lets users snap, edit, and
share photos and 15-second videos, either publicly or with a private network of
followers. It unites the most popular features of social media sites: sharing,
seeing, and commenting on photos. It also lets you apply fun filters and effects
to your photos, making them look high quality and artistic.
What parents need to know:
Teens are on the lookout for "likes." Similar to the way they use Facebook,
teens may measure the "success" of their photos -- even their self-worth -- by
the number of likes or comments they receive. Posting a photo or video can be
problematic if teens post it to validate their popularity.
Public photos are the default. Photos and videos shared on Instagram are public
unless privacy settings are adjusted. Hashtags and location information can make
photos even more visible to communities beyond a teen's followers if his or her
account is public.
Private messaging is now an option. Instagram Direct allows users to send
"private messages" to up to 15 mutual friends. These pictures don't show up on
their public feeds. Although there's nothing wrong with group chats, kids may be
more likely to share inappropriate stuff with their inner circles.
Tumblr is like a cross between a blog and
Twitter: It's a streaming scrapbook of text, photos, and/or videos and audio
clips. Users create and follow short blogs, or "tumblelogs," that can be seen by
anyone online (if made public). Many teens have tumblelogs for personal use:
sharing photos, videos, musings, and things they find funny with their friends.
What parents need to know:
Porn is easy to find. This online hangout is hip and creative but sometimes
raunchy. Pornographic images and videos and depictions of violence, self-harm,
drug use, and offensive language are easily searchable.
Privacy can be guarded but only through an awkward workaround. The first profile
a member creates is public and viewable by anyone on the Internet. Members who
desire full privacy have to create a second profile, which they're able to
password-protect.
Posts are often copied and shared. Reblogging on Tumblr is similar to
re-tweeting: A post is reblogged from one tumblelog to another. Many teens like
-- and, in fact, want -- their posts reblogged. But do you really want your
kids' words and photos on someone else's page?
Twitter is a microblogging site that allows
users to post brief, 140-character messages -- called "tweets" -- and follow
other users' activities. It's not only for adults; teens like using it to share
tidbits and keep up with news and celebrities.
What parents need to know:
Public tweets are the norm for teens. Though you can choose to keep your tweets
private, most teens report having public accounts (Pew Internet & American Life
Project, 2013). Talk to your kids about what they post and how a post can spread
far and fast.
Updates appear immediately. Even though you can remove tweets, your followers
can still read what you wrote until it's gone. This can get kids in trouble if
they say something in the heat of the moment.
Vine is a social media app that lets users
post and watch looping six-second video clips. This Twitter-owned service has
developed a unique community of people who post videos that are often creative,
funny, and sometimes thought-provoking. Teens usually use Vine to create and
share silly videos of themselves and/or their friends and families.
What parents need to know
It's full of inappropriate videos. In three minutes of random searching, we came
across a clip full of full-frontal male nudity, a woman in a fishnet shirt with
her breasts exposed, and people blowing marijuana smoke into each other's
mouths.
There are significant privacy concerns. The videos you post, the accounts you
follow, and the comments you make on videos all are public by default. But you
can adjust your settings to protect your posts; only followers will see them,
and you have to approve new followers.
Parents can be star performers (without their knowledge). If your teens film you
being goofy or silly, you may want to talk about whether they plan to share it.
SELF-DESTRUCTING/SECRET APPS
Burn Note is a messaging app that erases
messages after a set period of time. Unlike many other apps of this sort, it
limits itself to text messages; users cannot send pictures or video. That may
reduce issues such as sexting -- but words can hurt, too.
What parents need to know:
It allows kids to communicate covertly. To discourage copying and taking
screenshots, a spotlight-like system that recipients direct with a finger (or
the mouse) only reveals a portion of the message at a time.
It may encourage risky sharing. The company claims that its "Multi-Device
Deletion" system can delete a message from anywhere: the device it was sent
from, the device it was sent to, and its own servers. But it's wise to be
skeptical of this claim.
You don't have to have the app to receive a Burn Note. Unlike other apps -- for
example, Snapchat -- users can send a Burn Note to anyone, not only others who
have the program.
Snapchat is a messaging app that lets users
put a time limit on the pictures and videos they send before they disappear.
Most teens use the app to share goofy or embarrassing photos without the risk of
them going public. However, there are lots of opportunities to use it in other
ways.
What parents need to know:
It's a myth that Snapchats go away forever. Data is data: Whenever an image is
sent, it never truly goes away. (For example, the person on the receiving end
can take a screenshot of the image before it disappears.) Snapchats can even be
recovered. After a major hack in December 2013 and a settlement with the FTC,
Snapchat has clarified its privacy policy, but teens should stay wary.
It can make sexting seem OK. The seemingly risk-free messaging might encourage
users to share pictures containing sexy images.
Whisper is a social "confessional" app that
allows users to post whatever's on their minds, paired with an image. With all
the emotions running through teens, anonymous outlets give them the freedom to
share their feelings without fear of judgment.
What parents need to know:
Whispers are often sexual in nature. Some users use the app to try to hook up
with people nearby, while others post "confessions" of desire. Lots of
eye-catching nearly nude pics accompany these shared secrets.
Content can be dark. People normally don't confess sunshine and rainbows; common
Whisper topics include insecurity, depression, substance abuse, and various lies
told to employers and teachers.
Although it's anonymous to start, it may not stay that way. The app encourages
users to exchange personal information in the "Meet Up" section.
Yik Yak is a free social-networking app that
lets users post brief, Twitter-like comments to the 500 geographically nearest
Yik Yak users. Kids can find out opinions, secrets, rumors, and more. Plus,
they'll get the bonus thrill of knowing all these have come from a 1.5-mile
radius (maybe even from the kids at the desks in front of them!).
What parents need to know:
It reveals your location. By default, your exact location is shown unless you
toggle location-sharing off. Each time you open the app, GPS updates your
location.
It's a mixed bag of trouble. This app has it all: cyberbullying, explicit sexual
content, unintended location-sharing, and exposure to explicit information about
drugs and alcohol.
Some schools have banned access. Some teens have used the app to threaten
others, causing school lockdowns and more. Its gossipy and sometimes cruel
nature can be toxic to a high school environment, so administrators are cracking
down.
CHATTING, MEETING, DATING APPS AND SITES
MeetMe Chat and Meet New People," says it
all. Although not marketed as a dating app, MeetMe does have a "Match" feature
whereby users can "secretly admire" others, and its large user base means
fast-paced communication and guaranteed attention.
What parents need to know:
It's an open network. Users can chat with whomever's online, as well as search
locally, opening the door for potential trouble.
Lots of details are required. First and last name, age, and ZIP code are
requested at registration, or you can log in using a Facebook account. The app
also asks permission to use location services on your teens' mobile devices,
meaning they can find the closest matches wherever they go.
Omegle is a chat site (and app) that puts
two strangers together in their choice of a text chat or video chat room. Being
anonymous can be very attractive to teens, and Omegle provides a no-fuss
opportunity to make connections. Its "interest boxes" also let users filter
potential chat partners by shared interests.
What parents need to know:
Users get paired up with strangers. That's the whole premise of the app. And
there's no registration required.
This is not an app for kids and teens. Omegle is filled with people searching
for sexual chat. Some prefer to do so live. Others offer links to porn sites.
Language is a big issue. Since the chats are anonymous, they're often much more
explicit than those with an identifiable user might be.
Skout is a flirting app that allows users to
sign up as teens or adults. They're then placed in the appropriate peer group,
where they can post to a feed, comment on others' posts, add pictures, and chat.
They'll get notifications when other users near their geographic area join, and
they can search other areas by cashing in points. They receive notifications
when someone "checks" them out but must pay points to see who it is.
What parents need to know:
Skout is actually OK for teens if used appropriately. If your teens are going to
use a dating app, Skout is probably the safest choice, if only because it has a
teens-only section that seems to be moderated reasonably well.
There's no age verification. This makes it easy for a teen to say she's older
than 18 and an adult to say she's younger.
Tinder is a photo and messaging dating app
for browsing pictures of potential matches within a certain-mile radius of the
user's location. It's very popular with 20-somethings as a way to meet new
people for casual or long-term relationships.
What parents need to know:
It's all about swipes. You swipe right to "like" a photo or left to "pass." If a
person whose photo you "liked" swipes "like" on your photo, too, the app allows
you to message each other. Meeting up (and possibly hooking up) is pretty much
the goal.
It's location-based. Geolocation means it's possible for teens to meet up with
nearby people, which can be very dangerous.