Importance of Online Privacy

On social media, who can see your posts can be just as important as what you post. It’s important for parents and guardians to help their teens understand how to make choices about their privacy settings, and take control over their online experiences.

Over time, a teen’s privacy needs and expectations may change, so it’s helpful to check-in with them on a regular basis, and make sure that their privacy settings meet their own standards, and that they understand they can update their settings at any time.

5 Tips for Talking With Your Teen About Their Online Privacy

It’s never easy to get the conversation about online privacy started, but it’s important that it takes place. Here are some tips to guide your conversation with your teen.

  1. Help your teen understand privacy settings in relation to the information they want to control. If your teen (or anyone!) is going to use social media, they have to know what their privacy settings are and how to change them to suit their particular needs. When you talk to your teen, help guide them through some of the basic questions people have about privacy settings, like:

  • Will these privacy settings let me choose which audiences can see what I share?
  • What personal information (such as name, location, phone number or email address) will these settings help me keep private?
  • Can I control who contacts me — including people I don’t know?
  • Are there settings to keep the app from tracking my physical location?

    Learn more about privacy settings across Meta’s technologies:

    Instagram
    Facebook
    Messenger
    WhatsApp
    Oculus

2. Ask your teen about their expectations of privacy online in relation to you and your family. Anyone with an account on a Meta technology can control settings like: who sees their content and who is on their friends’ or followers’ lists. Every family will have different rules, guidelines and perspectives about what information their teens may keep private from their parents and guardians — and each teen’s expectations of privacy will also change over time.It can be a challenge to strike the right balance between keeping your teens safe and respecting their privacy. The key to establishing a relationship based on trust is to continually have conversations about what privacy means to them and the boundaries they value (such as what they feel comfortable sharing online, and the rules you’ve set with them).

3. Ask your teen about the privacy settings they have or plan to set on their social media accounts. One of the first things you may want to ask is whether their account is going to be available to everyone or to a select group. For example, accounts on Instagram can be public or private. Understanding that they have control over who sees and interacts with the things they post online will empower them to be themselves on social media — safely.For example, Instagram offers several tools that give your teen control over their privacy and digital footprint. When teens under the age of 16 (or under 18 in certain countries) sign up for Instagram, their accounts are automatically defaulted into private. If they then choose to switch their account to public, they can still remove followers, choose who can comment on their posts, and turn off their activity status (so people can’t see when they are active on the app) by visiting their app settings.

4. Ask your teen what information they want to keep private, and what they’re comfortable sharing with others online. Different people have different comfort levels with sharing things on the internet. As teens grow up and learn more about themselves and what they value, their definition of online privacy can change quite a lot! It’s important to set ground rules about what kind of information they should and shouldn’t share publicly (like their phone number, address, schedule, location and other sensitive information), and how to enable more private experiences.On Instagram, teens can create a Close Friends list and share their Stories with only the people on that list — which they can edit at any time. This gives teens the flexibility to share more personal moments with only a smaller group of their choosing.

5. Encourage your teen to do regular privacy check ups. Online privacy choices don’t stop at registration. Because available privacy settings may change over time, as do our choices, talk with your teen about the importance of reviewing and making regular changes to their privacy settings, as needed.

Additional Privacy Tips for Teens

On Instagram, everyone who signs up for an account and is under 16 years old (or under 18 in certain countries) is defaulted into a private account. We want young people to easily make new friends and keep up with their family, but we want to help them deal with unwanted DMs or comments from strangers. So, we think private accounts are the right choice.

Still, we recognize some young creators might want to have public accounts to build a following, build a community, or advocate for issues they care about. So, we make that option available after equipping them with information about what that choice means.

As you and your teen connect and share more online, keep having conversations about what privacy means to you, and how to continue thinking critically before you post.

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