Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
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

    Freedom 251: World's Cheapest 'Made In India' Smartphone Launched

    Freedom 251: World's Cheapest 'Made In India' Smartphone Launched
    Taking the world by surprise with the world's cheapest smartphone, a little known Noida-based start-up on Wednesday launched a Rs.251 (less than $4) "Made in India" smartphone that - if works well - will be a game changer.

    Freedom 251: World's Cheapest 'Made In India' Smartphone Launched

    Alibaba Buys Nearly 33 Million Shares Of Groupon

    Alibaba Buys Nearly 33 Million Shares Of Groupon
    Groupon Inc.'s stock jumped more than 40 per cent in afternoon trading Tuesday.

    Alibaba Buys Nearly 33 Million Shares Of Groupon

    Indian-Origin Engineer Discovers Ground Breaking 2D Semi-Conducting Material

    Indian-Origin Engineer Discovers Ground Breaking 2D Semi-Conducting Material
    A team led by an Indian-origin engineer from the University of Utah has discovered a new kind of 2D semi-conducting material for electronics that opens the door for much speedier computers and smartphones that consume a lot less power.

    Indian-Origin Engineer Discovers Ground Breaking 2D Semi-Conducting Material

    Young Adults Swipe Right On Tinder, But Is It Just A Game?

    Young Adults Swipe Right On Tinder, But Is It Just A Game?
    NEW YORK — Online dating services are now hip with young adults, but not always for dating.

    Young Adults Swipe Right On Tinder, But Is It Just A Game?

    Watch: Google Boss Asked 'What Do You Get Paid?' By UK Lawmakers

    Watch: Google Boss Asked 'What Do You Get Paid?' By UK Lawmakers
    A British parliamentary committee has grilled Google's president of European operations, questioning in blunt terms whether the Internet giant had paid its fair share of taxes.

    Watch: Google Boss Asked 'What Do You Get Paid?' By UK Lawmakers

    Magazine Publisher Time Inc. Buys What's Left Of MySpace

    Magazine Publisher Time Inc. Buys What's Left Of MySpace
    It does, and the company that owns the once-ubiquitous social network is being bought by Time Inc. to help the magazine publisher target ads.

    Magazine Publisher Time Inc. Buys What's Left Of MySpace