878 research outputs found

    Parenting Program to Protect Children's Privacy: The Phenomenon of Sharenting Children on social media

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    Sharenting is a habit of using social media to share content that disseminates pictures, videos, information, and parenting styles for their children. The purpose of this article is to describe the sharenting phenomenon that occurs among young parents, and the importance of parenting programs, rather than protecting children's privacy. Writing articles use a qualitative approach as a literature review method that utilizes various scientific articles describing the sharenting phenomenon in various countries. The findings show that sharenting behaviour can create the spread of children's identity openly on social media and tends not to protect children's privacy and even seems to exploit children. Apart from that, sharenting can also create pressure on the children themselves and can even have an impact on online crime. This article is expected to provide benefits to parents regarding the importance of maintaining attitudes and behaviour when sharing and maintaining children's privacy and rights on social media.  Keywords:  Sharenting on social media, Children's Privacy, Parenting Program References: Åberg, E., & Huvila, J. (2019). Hip children, good mothers – children’s clothing as capital investment? Young Consumers, 20(3), 153–166. https://doi.org/10.1108/YC-06-2018-00816 Altafim, E. R. P., & Linhares, M. B. M. (2016). Universal violence and child maltreatment prevention programs for parents: A systematic review. Psychosocial Intervention, 25(1), 27–38. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psi.2015.10.003 Archer, C., & Kao, K.-T. (2018). Mother, baby, and Facebook makes three: Does social media provide social support for new mothers? Media International Australia, 168(1), 122–139. https://doi.org/10.1177/1329878X18783016 Bartholomew, M. K., Schoppe-Sullivan, S. J., Glassman, M., Kamp Dush, C. 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    Sharenting, Parenting, and Identifying: Can Privacy Prevail?

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    Technology and privacy are intertwined and often in conflict with each other. Nowhere is this more evident than in sharenting, the transmission of private details about children (e.g., pictures) via digital channels (e.g., social media) by an adult in charge of their well-being (i.e., parent or guardian). Sharenting can offer comfort to a parent, a sense of belonging to a community, and can give children a sense of pride from likes from family and friends. However, there are privacy and developmental risks for children from sharenting. We explore the relative roles of parent identity verification and the calculus of behavior in affecting sharenting decisions. Using data collected from 309 parents, we find that only perceived risk of sharenting affects the frequency of deleting posts while benefits and parental identity lead to a positive affect towards sharenting. Positive affect, however, is not linked to changes in frequency of deleting posts

    Analisis Praktik Sharenting Orang Tua Milenial di Provinsi Riau, Indonesia

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    Saat ini orang tua terbiasa memposting informasi anak secara rinci ke media sosial hingga melanggar privasi anak, fenomena ini dikenal dengan istilah sharenting. Sharenting marak dilakukan oleh orang tua milenial yang sangat melek dengan teknologi informasi. Tujuan penelitian ini untuk mengetahui seberapa besar praktik sharenting orang tua milenial di provinsi Riau. Jenis penelitian deskriptif kuantitatif ini menggunakan teknik sampling area sehingga hanya diambil 3 kabupaten yakni Pekanbaru, Indragiri Hilir dan Bengkalis. Sampel dalam penelitian ini berjumlah 79 orang dengan syarat: orang tua kelahiran 1981-1996 yang memiliki anak usia 0-6 tahun. Pengumpulan data dilakukan dengan penyebaran angket melalui google formulir. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan, praktik sharenting yang dilakukan orang tua milenial di provinsi Riau sebesar 75,9% dan berada pada kategori sedang. Temuan ini diharapkan dapat disosialisasikan secara lebih luas dan ditindak lanjuti oleh pemangku kepentingan sebagai bahan rujukan untuk membuat kebijaka

    Share with care: negotiating children’s health and safety in sharenting practices.

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    Sharenting – a new term emerged over the past 10 years – refers to the practice of sharing textual and audiovisual contents concerning children online by their parents or guardians, potentially impacting the construction of children’s digital identity before they can reach the age of consent. Based on a passive virtual ethnography carried out comparatively in Italian-speaking and English-speaking virtual communities focusing on children’s wellbeing and health, this paper offers an empirical contribution to the study of sharenting. While contributing to the wider debates on the practices and discourses about sharing in digital media, this paper provides an analysis of how online and offline parenting cultures affect sharenting practices; how the consequences of sharenting are addressed in online communities; and how the privacy vs openness tension about sharing contents is negotiated by parents with regards to their own and children needs even in terms of digital security

    Sharing images or videos of minors online: Validation of the Sharenting Evaluation Scale (SES)

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    Sharenting is a current phenomenon of online communication, which is related to the sharing of images of the youngest members of the family (often minors) by parents or relatives, mainly on social networks. However, this constitutes a series of consequences that compromise privacy and may put the child at risk. The aim of this work was to validate the Sharenting Evaluation Scale (SES), designed to assess the degree of sharenting in the adult population, in order to catalogue the type of practice performed through ranges. A rigorous process of design and validation of the scale was carried out on a sample of 146 Spanish adults. Different strategies were used, such as expert judgement, exploratory factor analysis (EFA), confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and reliability analysis using Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. After that, the scale was composed of 17 items configured in three factors: implications, social behaviour, and self-control. Finally, the scale showed good psychometric properties, providing a unique and reliable instrument to assess the degree of sharenting performed by an adult.Project E-Safety: Risky behaviour in online environment for students and teachers of the Ministry of Education of Czech Republic (PRCH-IP-organizace_0014/2021I+D+I Project Research of Results Transfer Office (OTRI) of the University of Granada (Reference: 4439)

    SHARENTING YANG DILAKUKAN OLEH IBU MUSLIM DI INSTAGRAM DITINJAU DARI AL QURAN

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    Perkembangan teknologi berpengaruh terhadap pola sosialisasi masyarakat, temasuk penyebaran informasi dan interaksi antar orangtua seputar pengasuhan anak. Situs jejaring sosial menjadi media untuk orangtua melakukan sharenting salah satunya adalah instagram. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menunjukan fenomena sharenting yang dilakukan oleh ibu muslim dan bagaimana fenomena sharenting ini ditinjau dari al quran terutama dari QS. Lukman. Metode penelitian ini menggunakan kualitaif deskriptif, pengambilan data dilakukan dengan menganalisis akun instagram ibu muslim yang melakukan sharenting. Hasil penelitian menunjukan bahwa sharenting yang dilakukan oleh ibu muslim di instagram telah sesuai dengan pola asuh yang diterapkan oleh Luqman Hakim terhadap anak-anaknya sebagaimana terkandung dalam Q.S Lukman. Technological developments affect the pattern of socialization of society, including the dissemination of information and interactions between parents around childcare. Social networking sites become a media for parents to do sharenting, one of which is Instagram. This study aims to show the phenomenon of sharenting conducted by Muslim mothers and how this sharenting phenomenon is viewed from the Koran, especially from the QS. Lukman. This research method uses descriptive qualitative, data collection is done by analyzing the Instagram account of Muslim mothers who do sharenting. The results showed that the sharenting conducted by Muslim mothers on Instagram was in accordance with the parenting applied by Luqman Hakim towards his children as contained in Q.S Lukman

    The oversharenting paradox: when frequent parental sharing negatively affects observers’ desire to affiliate with parents

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    Modern-day parents increasingly engage in sharing of their children’s information and photos on social media. However, when parents post about their children on social media with high frequency, the phenomenon of “oversharenting” occurs. This research explores the impact of oversharenting on others’ desire to affiliate with parents. While parents post about their children to socialize with others, three experimental studies conducted with U.S. residents recruited via Amazon Mechanical Turk demonstrate that parents who oversharent are viewed as less desirable acquaintances than parents who do not. This effect is mediated by observers’ perception that oversharenting constitutes a social norm violation (Study 1; N = 147). Specifically, observers assume that parents who oversharent try to become the center of attention through their children (Study 2; N = 168). The negative effect of oversharenting on affiliation is mitigated in the case of observers who themselves post frequently on social media (Study 3; N = 478). In summary, this research contributes to the understanding of parental sharing in social media environments by demonstrating that, paradoxically, parents’ oversharenting behavior may negatively affect the very goal that parents attempt to fulfill through social media sharing

    Cross-Cultural Similarity and Differences in Parents “Sharenting” Using Online Social Media from Information Privacy Perspective: The Case of Snapchat

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    Online communication using social networks represents a major risk for users in terms of information privacy. While the trend for social network use becomes more popular, it has already created new social risks in the form of information overuse such as sharenting. The term “sharenting” denotes the correlation between sharing and parenting and represents the overuse of parents’ efforts in distributing digital content about their children. To date, sharenting was not actively explored within the information research context and its risks to the user privacy, as well as demonstration of sharenting in various cultures. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to provide a proposal for the cross-cultural study of sharenting from a privacy perspective using the context of the social network Snapchat

    ‘When you realise your dad is Cristiano Ronaldo’: celebrity sharenting and children’s digital identities

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    Sharenting, or the practice of sharing one’s parenting or information about one’s children on social media, occurs in an increasingly platformized digital culture, where visual formats are central across participatory and commercial repositories. This paper investigates the articulation between sharenting as performed by celebrities and the wider construction of children’s digital identities. Through qualitative content analysis, this research looks at how Cristiano Ronaldo, the most-followed individual on Instagram since 2018, his partner, and his mother shared information about his children on that social media platform between 2018 and 2020. Through manual exploration, we searched for Ronaldo’s children across a variety of digital spaces. Our analysis reveals that sharenting on Instagram engages audiences through the portrayal of children as the parents’ extended self. Content from Instagram and news media is appropriated in vernacular and commercial digital spaces for conflicting affects: the cute father-son dyad, and the son as extension of the uber-famous, vain father. This extreme case shows how the digital identities of children of celebrities are widely public, formed by the everyday, intimate content of the family’s life, which is persistent and collectively recreated by news media, vernacular culture, and commercial platforms.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Description of the exposure of the most-followed spanish instamom's children to social medias

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    There is evidence of the risk of overexposure of children on social networks by parents working as influencers. A cross-sectional study of the profiles of the sixteen most-followed Instamoms in Spain was carried out. An analysis of these profiles was performed over a full month (April 2022), three times a week, to describe the representation of influencers’ children in the posts shared by them, as well as their role in the Instamoms’ marketing. A total of 192 evaluations of the profiles were performed in the study period. The average number of children exposed by an Instamom was three, generally preschoolers and schoolchildren. The children appear in a context of the family home and accompanied by their mother. The type of advertising that accompanies the appearance of underage children is usually women or children’s clothing, but also food products, leisure, etc. Appearance of children in the posts had a statistically significant influence on followers measured by the number of likes. Results provided the identification of two Instamom clusters with differentiated behaviors in relation to appearance of children in posts. It is important to involve Social Pediatrics in the protection of the privacy and interests of children given the increase in sharenting. The authors believe that there are concerns about their explicit consent to public exposure from early childhood and about the medium and long-term effect that this may have on their future well-being
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