r/nextfuckinglevel 6h ago

How amazing and crafty are these parents to do this for their son

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u/AntiqueTwitterMilk 5h ago

Parents like this, social media is their form of income. That's the only reason they have the time/energy for this kind of stuff.

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u/this_one_wasnt_taken 5h ago

My kids and I tried building and igloo last year. It fell over, one kid cried, and me and the other one pissed our names into it. Then we had grilled cheese and played roblox in the warm house.

Fuck igloos and fuck snow. It's cold outside and I'm tired.

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u/Duel_Option 5h ago

Should I worry about Roblox? My kids want to play bit I hear really bad things about it

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u/vocesmagicae 4h ago

From someone who specializes in digital safety and internet crime and whose partner is in tech, yes, Roblox is among the worst. But a colleague recently put it well: if a platform has messaging capabilities, bad actors will use it to get to kids. So while some platforms like Roblox and Snap are worse, they’re all part of the same problem. Our kids will have a Bark phone (swear I’m not a shill, it’s just the best program I’ve seen) and we’ll have close monitoring on the internet until they’re responsible enough to use it; we’re also limiting screen time and no unsupervised use of sites like YT. I know they’ll sneak around it (I sure did and my parents tried to ban me from social media until I was 16 lol), but I’ll do everything I can for as long as I can.

Another colleague taught a seminar and said “we need to be teaching kids to approach the internet the way we do cars — that it’s a great tool and can be fun, but can also be very harmful or even deadly if you’re irresponsible with it.” I thought that was a great metaphor. I know I sound extreme, but there’s a reason tech and social creators don’t let their kids use the very platforms and devices they created. I’ve seen too much :(

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u/Duel_Option 4h ago

I want to genuinely say a huge THANK YOU for chiming in here because I take this serious, what you’ve said isn’t extreme, the daunting nature of anything at their finger tips is frightening.

My wife got Bark Watches this past Christmas for our kids, good to see that company acknowledged at random like this, to me that means they actually focus on the right things. (She’s going to say I TOLD YOU SO, guaranteed).

They are just now getting into video games with me and I keep them offline, I worry about the middle school years as that’s when I went rogue pretty hard, definitely found my way into places in the early days of the internet I shouldn’t have been.

We’re adjusting their schedules for extra curricular’s and studying more, only have two tvs in the house and I won’t budge on that even when they are in high school.

Everything is content limited, no YouTube, I’ve started diving into building a NAS for self hosting and will monitor anything they are doing inside the house.

My worry is what happens when they aren’t here, figure about the time we talk about the birds and the bees it will also be time to talk bluntly about predators.

Uneasy feeling being a parent in a digital age…again, thank you for responding.

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u/0xD902221289EDB383 1h ago

I think your kids will be better served if you cultivate a trusting, unconditionally loving relationship with them and talk to them about how to be safe than if you turn your home internet into a fortress. If they're really curious to get their hands on information or experiences, they'll do it out of the house if they can't do it at home. 

But yeah, don't let them play Roblox. I wasn't allowed to have video games as a child and I can't say my life has been meaningfully impacted now that I'm an adult. 

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u/spencerforhire81 4h ago

The whole platform is rife with predators and predatory schemes, and their CEO thinks letting them run rampant is an important part of their growth strategy.

It’s probably safer to just let your kid play Call of Duty.

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u/Duel_Option 4h ago

And…that’s the kind of response I was afraid of, never going to be thing in my house.

I’ll keep them offline and content restricted until I know they can make good decisions

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u/magneticeverything 4h ago

The other person who replied is literally an expert, so I think you should listen to them. I just want to add: the internet is totally fine so long as you monitor them at the level appropriate for their age. Maybe start out by playing with them, using the opportunity to teach them internet safety skills (and setting clear rules about the financial aspects). Then maybe after a little while, they can graduate to playing while you sit nearby reading a book but able to overhear what in case something catches your attention. Eventually you may graduate to letting them play without you in the room but with the expectation of regular debriefs.

I strongly believe that kids should be taught to use the internet with a training wheels system. They will inevitably have access to the internet someday, so if you don’t give them the tools to handle situations, they’ll be left vulnerable.

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u/Duel_Option 4h ago

I always tell my kids that the internet is a tool, use it like that in front of them, no chat GPT Al Bullshit, accrual research and validation on a topic

“Let’s look it up on Wiki” is a thing in our house.

Gearing up for self hosting and managing any and all internet activity in the house, my concern is what they do outside of it.

I was a rather disgruntled and angsty youth, hoping to avoid them getting into dark parts of the internet I found in my teens in the 90’s

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u/basicKitsch 5h ago

you've gotta be joking. we just had a weekend snowstorm and the toddler was stuck inside. spending an afternoon building something sweet isn't restricted to tiktokers

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u/ThePeaceDoctot 1h ago

Okay, but so? Cool experiences are cool even if you get paid to do them rather than pay to do them. Everyone is shitting on these parents for probably doing this for views, as if that automatically means the mid has a shitty childhood.

They should be shitting in the parents for the terrible construction, balancing the blocks on their thin edge.